CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, OCTOBER 27, 2017, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“ALL-RENEWABLE POWER: REACHABLE GOAL FOR STATE”
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, OCTOBER 27, 2017, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“ALL-RENEWABLE POWER: REACHABLE GOAL FOR STATE”
Back
in 2002, when California set its first statewide renewable energy goals, the
petroleum industry and others said it would be impossible for 20 percent of all
electricity to come from solar, wind, hydro power and other forms of green
energy by 2017 – now. But that goal was achieved long ago, with the
state now getting well over 25 percent of its energy from renewables, and far
more on many days.
Then
the goal was upped under former Republican Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger to 33
percent by 2020, a mark that will easily be surpassed well in advance of the
deadline. Again, that’s after industry said it would be impossible.
Now
those same natural gas and oil interests claim a legislative bill setting a
goal of 100 percent renewables by 2045 is unattainable. The bill was held up in
committee last summer, but seems certain to be back in January’s new session.
This
whole scenario is reminiscent of resistance steadily provided by carmakers as
California gradually cut its automotive emission standards over the decades
starting in the 1970s. Each time a new standard was proposed, General Motors,
Ford, Toyota and others resisted, claiming they just couldn’t do it.
But
they did it somehow, and in the process California and the world acquired a
huge fleet of hybrid, electric and plug-in hybrid cars, cutting gasoline
consumption and cleaning many thousands of tons of smog from the air.
There’s
absolutely no reason to believe things will be any different in electricity
generating than they have been with cars. Rather, there’s room for a lot of
optimism.
For
example, long before the deadline for 50 percent of power to come from green
sources, California in May experienced several days when more than 60 percent
of its electricity came from such places. This figure did not even include
energy from hydroelectric dams, one of the greenest of power sources.
That
period of sunny days enabling full use of both solar thermal arrays and
photovoltaic panels demonstrated that the 2020 goal is well within reach and
will be achieved despite all the industry whining when the goal was set.
Another
milestone came on March 11, when for a span of three hours, solar power alone
met about half of all electricity demand across the state.
All
this makes it wholly sensible for the Legislature to adopt the 100
percent-renewables-by-2045 standard. The bill, sponsored by Democratic state
Senate President Pro-Tem Kevin de Leon passed the Senate before getting delayed
in the Assembly, where industry pressure can be stronger and more effective.
One
objection is that green energy often costs more than conventional power
produced in California mainly from gas-fired generating plants. This is
correct, but costs figure to drop as the scale of renewable energy production
increases. The state will also need to develop better battery technology to
store power produced by solar and wind facilities and not let it dissipate
before it can be added to the overall power grid.
And
when the clean-power goals become reality, excess solar capacity could be
re-purposed and used the way “peaker” power plants are now – fired up during
times of the heaviest electricity use on the hottest summer days when the grid
is taxed nearly to its capacity.
The
benefits, besides fighting climate change at a time when President Trump’s
administration seems to want to encourage it, include things like tens of
thousands of new jobs, less smog, less carbon pollution and more diversity in
overall energy supplies, making California less and less dependent on foreign
sources.
This
will come about through massive building projects, a process now well under way
as the state has more than doubled renewable energy installations over the last
four years, according to the California Energy Commission.
Like
zero emission electric and hydrogen cars, 100 percent renewable energy is an
idea whose time has plainly come, no matter what the owners and fuelers of
increasingly outmoded traditional energy sources may claim.
-30-
Email Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough, The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch It" is now available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias columns, visit www.californiafocus.net
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