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4.01.2011

Efficiency First


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3/29 - Conservation Lobby Day

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Japanese Disaster is Yet Another Reason
Why Ameren Must Pursue Efficiency First

 

Our sympathy goes out those who lost loved ones in last week's devastating earthquake and tsunami. As the Japanese reel from this disaster, they are now also under high alert for a nuclear reactor meltdown and radiation exposure.  

 

While members of the U.S. Congress are discussing a possible moratorium on new nuclear reactors until safety issues are addressed, the Missouri General Assembly is considering legislation that would allow Ameren Missouri to charge ratepayers $40 million for a permit for a second nuclear reactor in mid-Missouri.  

 

The proposed legislation would chip away at a 1976 ballot initiative supported 2-to-1 by Missouri voters. This law protects Missourians from investor-owned utilities charging ratepayers up-front for the construction of a power plant until it is producing electricity.  

 

To understand the many other reasons why SB 321 and SB 406 are bad public policy, read Senator Joan Bray's guest column in the Joplin Globe last month.

In short, Ameren admits it cannot find investors to fund the nuclear plant because it is too risky and expensive.   

 

Therefore, Ameren must pass SB 321 or SB 406 which shifts the financial risk of investment of a new nuclear plant from shareholders to ratepayers.  But while shareholders dodge the risk, they still receive a financial windfall if/when the reactor comes online and Ameren then sells the excess electricity out of state for a premium.    

 

History tells us only 50% of proposed nuclear reactors are completed and produce electricity in the U.S. These are not good odds for ratepayers who will have to pay for a new reactor whether or not it actually comes online.

 

The most frustrating thing about this proposition is that Ameren can easily meet Missouri's energy needs through energy efficiency instead of raising your electric rates to pay for a $6 billion nuclear reactor.  In the St. Louis Post Dispatch on February 25, Steve Kidwell, Ameren Missouri Vice President of Regulatory Affairs, said:  

 

"If we went after the potential that we've seen in our own study,  

we wouldn't have to build another power plant for 20 years, and  

we could retire Meramec, and we'd be OK.  But we'd lose  

$30 million a year. And we just can't do that. It's that simple."  

 

So at the end of the day, Ameren's own numbers show that an aggressive energy efficiency plan will keep electric bills lower than other energy options. But, the company's sole concern is shareholder profits.

 

Kidwell's concern about loss revenue has been addressed through new rules developed by the Public Service Commission this year. Utilities are now reimbursed for costs associated with implementing efficiency programs and for revenue they lose when the efficiency programs cause customers to buy less power.  

 

Ameren's goal is to charge you, the ratepayer, millions of dollars up front for an unnecessary, risky, and expensive power plant rather than investing in the cheapest energy resource available, energy efficiency.    

 

Now is the time to get involved!  Attend Conservation Lobby Day on Tuesday, March 29 and speak to state legislators about this issue and other critical environmental policies.  

 

Ed Smith
Missouri Coalition for the Environment  

No-CWIP Coordinator 







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Scott's Contracting
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Latest News on Missouri Nuclear Reactor Agenda


Nuclear siting bill awaits committee action (AUDIO))

by Bob Priddy on March 31, 2011 cross-posted via: Missourinet

Four bills focused on how to pay to pick a site for a second commercial nuclear power plant are stuck in a Senate Committee.  Senator Jason Crowell, the sponsor of one of the bills, chairs the committee that held a seven-hour public hearing about three weeks ago. The committee has not considered whether to recommend full senate debate.

For him, the big issue is who will pay for the site selection.  He thinks the utility company and its stockholders should bear that cost.

The sponsor of one of the proposals, Jefferson City Senator Mike Kehoe, thinks most senators are comfortable with having consumers pay for the site selection—but be repaid if no site is picked or no plant goes into operation.

Crowell worries that having consumers pay for the site selection is the first step toward repealing the construction work in progress law that says consumers won't be billed for construction costs until the plant is running.  Kehoe says he favors whichever approach is the most economical way to build the plant.

Kehoe comments 7:38 mp3                   crowell comments 4:03 mp3


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Scott's Contracting
scottscontracting@gmail.com
http://stlouisrenewableenergy.blogspot.com
http://scottscontracting.wordpress.com




Electronic Recycling News for the St Louis Area

For People in the St Louis Area with Electronics ready for Recycling there are two future events to recycle your old Electrical Devices

Spectrum Ecycle

Saturday, April 9, 2011

12:00-3:00pm

Wildhorse Subdivision, Wildhorse Parkway

Chesterfield, MO 63005

Learn More

-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=

Saturday, May 21, 8am - 6pm

Kirkwood High School

Learn More

Original Content provided by:

weekly e-news from StLouisGreen.com!








--
Scott's Contracting
scottscontracting@gmail.com
http://stlouisrenewableenergy.blogspot.com
http://scottscontracting.wordpress.com


Solar Advocates Using Momentum from Fukushima Accident


As the Fukushima nuclear crisis grinds painfully on, advocates of solar power are using it as political ammunition to maintain government aid to the sector

Past aid is having an impact.

Bloomberg reports that our sunniest climes can now obtain solar energy for the same price as grid energy. It's no longer a niche product, and solar panel sales are growing as fast as the iPad.

The only clouds on the horizon come in the form of declining subsidies. But what bears don't realize is that, with better materials and scaled manufacturing, the need for such subsidies is also declining.

The excuse of fossil fuel advocates, that subsidies are unaffordable, now has a ready answer – China. You want to fall behind China? We're already behind China, according to a new Pew survey. You want to fall further behind? And China is doubling its targets for solar energy.

Who lost to China? Opponents of solar energy, that's who.

Not that die-hard fossil fuel advocates aren't trying. Douglas MacIntyre, former editor in chief of Financial World, insists it doesn't matter who leads in alternative energy, that coal and nuclear are the future, end of discussion full-stop.

That may be a practical argument, but it's a political loser, full-stop. The challenge for the renewable industry is to make those who make such arguments pay a political price for them, as happened over the weekend in southwest Germany, which actually put Greens in power for the first time over the energy issue.

This was no ordinary state election, by the way. I visited the state last year and have distant relatives there. It's a very prosperous and conservative place. Christian Democrats had a monopoly on power going back 58 years. You might compare the result to someone like Howard Dean winning the South Carolina governorship.

California knows which way the wind is blowing on energy. Its legislature has finally passed a bill aiming to bring in one-third of the state's energy from renewable sources by 2020. The state's utilities just missed their 2010 target of 20%, but that's still double other states' 2020 targets.

Thus solar bills are coming up in very unexpected places. South Carolina has considered a solar subsidy bill. North Carolina is looking to double its utilities' purchase of solar. Politicians who know which way the Sun is shining are climbing on board.

Now if we could just get the President off his natural gas kick...

What are you seeing on the ground, where you live? Are politicians talking up solar over nuclear? Are orders increasing? Or is this just another green mirage?

By Dana Blankenhorn
--
Scott's Contracting
scottscontracting@gmail.com
http://stlouisrenewableenergy.blogspot.com
http://scottscontracting.wordpress.com



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