Clean Energy 2017: States and Cities Shine Despite Trump
Published by the Natural Resources Defense Fund
Part of NRDC’s Year-End Series Reviewing 2017 Energy & Climate Developments
The Trump administration and Congress leveled attacks this year on the environment, public health and social justice while Hurricanes Harvey, Irma and Maria wreaked havoc on Florida, Texas, Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands, wildfires raged in the West, and evidence mounted that climate change is here and harming tens of millions of Americans. NRDC has already brought some 39 lawsuits against the Trump administration for its illegal attacks on the environment. In my long career as an environmental advocate, I can’t remember a darker or more intense year than 2017.
But this has also been the best of times for state and local climate action, as city and state leaders across the country, supported by NRDC advocacy, delivered a stream of bipartisan victories, that flew in the face of Trump’s climate denial and rollbacks. While we still need strong federal policies to meet our long-term climate goals, these local, state and regional initiatives are laying crucial groundwork for a cleaner energy future. NRDC is building its work with cities and states to keep this train moving, and ensure that Trump can’t stop climate and clean energy progress. Here’s a sampling of some of the top regional, state, and local climate and clean energy victories that NRDC and our partners played a key role in achieving over the last twelve months.
Northeast
NRDC’s home state of New York and its neighbors have long been leaders in clean energy policy. Over the past year, state and regional initiatives reached for ever-stronger climate and clean energy goals.
- The governors of New York, California, and Washington created the U.S. Climate Alliance, now including 13 states and Puerto Rico, which is committed to meeting U.S. Paris climate accord goals, despite Trump’s announcement that he intends to withdraw from the agreement.
- The nine states participating in the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (RGGI) agreed to cut power plant carbon pollution by at least 30 percent more through 2030 — approximately 60 percent below where the program started in 2009.
- Connecticut, Delaware, D.C., Maryland, Massachusetts, New York, Rhode Island, and Vermont announced that they will hold a series of public listening sessions to explore regional solutions to improve transportation and reduce emissions. Through this effort, the states have an opportunity to replicate RGGI’s success and many benefits in the transportation sector, the largest source of carbon pollution in the Northeast and Mid-Atlantic region.
- New York committed to developing 2400 megawatts (MW) of offshore wind by 2030 — enough to power 1.25 million homes, announced a plan to close the risky Indian Point nuclear power plant by 2021 and blocked development of the Northern Access Project natural gas pipeline that would have moved fracked gas from Pennsylvania to Canada. (But the state still lags behind on energy efficiency and needs to catch up in 2018).
- The first U.S. offshore wind project started operation off Rhode Island.
- Massachusetts approved a plan to install more than 4,000 electric vehicle charging stations, the largest program of its kind outside of California.
Southeast
States and cities across the region are increasingly embracing renewable energy — and seeing the benefits of job creation.
Midwest
- In the heartland, Republican governors are moving forward on clean energy policies that create jobs and help the environment. At this time last year, the region scored a trifecta of clean energy wins following a huge effort from NRDC’s Midwest team:
- Illinois passed the Future Energy Jobs Act, a groundbreaking bill that will jumpstart energy efficiency and renewable energy growth after a long period of stagnation. My colleague Toba Pearlman will explain what followed s here.
- Ohio’s governor vetoed legislation that would have extended a freeze on state energy efficiency and renewable energy mandates, citing economic concerns. My colleague Samantha Williams will explain how clean energy fared in Ohio over the year here.
- Michigan enacted legislation to increase investment in energy efficiency and expand renewable energy. My colleague Ariana Gonzalez highlights the Michigan clean energy advances that followed in 2017 here.
West
California continues to set the bar on climate action, but energy efficiency, renewable energy, and climate leadership is taking off across the West.
- California enacted an air quality and climate package that will extend its market-based cap-and-trade program to 2030 and improve air quality in neighborhoods plagued by traffic and industrial pollution.
- California approved some of the nation’s strongest state limits on methane emissions that apply to both new and existing oil and gas facilities.
- With strong support from the City Energy Project, a joint initiative of NRDC and the Institute for Market Transformation, Los Angeles passed one of the nation’s most ambitious building energy and water efficiency policies.
- The Washington state utility commission approved a landmark $10 million “just transition” plan to assist the workers and the communities impacted by the impending closure of a massive four-unit coal-burning power plant in Colstrip, Montana. Input from NRDC and our allies helped to shape the plan.
- Colorado approved energy efficiency legislation with bipartisan support and committed to reducing statewide greenhouse emissions by more than 26 percent from 2005 levels by 2025. The business community, led by NRDC’s business affiliate E2, strongly supported this bill.
- Nevada, with broad support, adopted a new law to increase energy efficiency. We expect the legislation to roughly double utility investment in energy efficiency between now and 2020.
- Salt Lake City (also part of the City Energy Project) passed a city law aimed at cutting energy costs, improving local air quality, and reducing the city’s carbon footprint, which is projected to save local building owners $15.8 million in annual energy costs and eliminate over 29 tons of air pollution.
As 2017 concludes, let’s celebrate the hard work, bipartisan cooperation and strong and broad partnerships that make victories like these possible. And let’s redouble our efforts in 2018 to build on these successes and accelerate the clean energy revolution in states and cities across the United States – while we continue the good fight to resist Trump administration rollbacks.
Read the full article at: https://www.nrdc.org/experts/kit-kennedy/clean-energy-2017-states-and-cities-shine-despite-trump