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Atlanta, GA | Posted: December 16, 2010
The South could pay less for its electricity in 20 years than is currently projected if strong public policies are enacted to spur renewable energy production and use, according to a report released today by researchers at the Georgia Institute of Technology and Duke University. The 190-page report, “Renewable Energy in the South,” builds on a short policy brief released last summer and provides an in-depth assessment of the scope of renewable energy resources in the South and their economic impacts on electricity rates and utility bills in the region.
Skeptics of renewable energy production often cite the South as lacking renewable resources. However, the new report confirms that the right mix of public policies could drive the region to produce as much as 30 percent—up from less than 4 percent—of its electricity from renewable sources by 2030. Wind, biomass, hydro power and customer-owned renewables stand out as cost savers and are detailed for both utility-scale and customer-owned renewable, based on their cost-competitiveness.
“While the South enjoys some of the lowest electricity rates in the country, there is resistance to developing new technologies that seem much more costly than coal based electricity,” said Etan Gumerman of Duke University’s Nicholas Institute for Environmental Policy Solutions and a co-lead researcher on the study. “In reality, that’s not the case.”
With a customized version of the economic modeling system used by the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA), researchers found that if supportive policies and tax incentives are implemented or extended, total regional energy costs would be 7 percent less by 2030 than they are projected to be if policies do not change. If no new policies are adopted, the EIA predicts the average electricity rates in the South will rise from the current 7.9 cents to 9.7 cents per kilowatt hour in 2030 – a 23 percent increase. The study finds that with a mix of policies designed to promote renewable energy, rates would rise to only 9 cents per kilowatt hour in 2030, saving electricity users in the region $23 billion a year.
The report examines the economic impact of a number of renewable energy policies, including expanded research funding and tax incentives (such as those debated in several recent legislative initiatives) and the enactment of a national Renewable Electricity Standard (RES). In addition to considering the potential for large-scale energy producers to generate renewable energy, the report finds that end-users, such as households equipped with solar panels and industry with the ability to recycle waste heat, could generate a significant amount of the South’s renewable electricity.
“This study takes a unique approach by considering both traditional, utility-scale renewable power production as well as renewable systems owned by consumers,” said Dr. Marilyn Brown of the Georgia Institute of Technology and co-lead author of the study. “Our analysis shows that renewable energy could be a real economic boon to the Southern states, but only if elected officials, and consumers, take action to unlock the region’s renewable energy potential.”
Read the full report here: http://www.seealliance.org/PDFs/RENEWABLE%20ENERGY%20IN%20THE%20SOUTH.pdf
About Dr. Marilyn Brown and Georgia Tech:
Dr.
Marilyn Brown, an endowed professor of energy policy in the School of
Public Policy at the Georgia Institute of Technology is an
internationally recognized leader in the analysis and interpretation of
energy futures in the United States. In 2007, Brown was a co-recipient
of the Nobel Peace Prize along with the other members of the
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change and Vice President Al Gore.
She was recently confirmed by the U.S. Senate to serve on the Board of
Directors of the Tennessee Valley Authority, the nation’s largest public
power producer. Additional information about Brown and her research can
be found at http://www.spp.gatech.edu/faculty/faculty/mbrown.php.
Georgia
Tech’s Ivan Allen College of Liberal Arts offers one of the world’s top
public policy programs. The research-intensive and globally engaged
curriculum aims to solve complex problems in the public interest related
to issues of research and technology, energy and sustainability,
economic development and governance. The School of Public Policy is
dedicated to scholarship and learning that is reflective, effective and
sustainable.
About Etan Gumerman and Duke University’s Nicholas Institute for Environmental Policy Solutions:
Etan
Gumerman helps direct Duke University’s Climate Change Policy
Partnership and leads energy and climate policy research projects for
the Nicholas Institute for Environmental Policy Solutions. Other recent
research topics have included: assessing cost-effective energy
efficiency potential in the South, employment impacts from energy
policy, and advising Utah as to GHG emissions reduction policies.
A
non-partisan Institute founded in 2005, Duke University’s Nicholas
Institute for Environmental Policy Solutions helps decision makers in
government, the private sector, and the nonprofit community address
critical environmental challenges. The Institute responds to the demand
for high-quality and timely data and acts as an “honest broker” in
policy debates by convening and fostering open, ongoing dialogue between
stakeholders on all sides of the issues and providing policy-relevant
analysis based on academic research. The Institute’s leadership and
staff leverage the broad expertise of Duke University as well as public
and private partners worldwide. Since its inception, the Institute has
earned a distinguished reputation for its innovative approach to
developing multilateral, nonpartisan, and economically viable solutions
to pressing environmental challenges.