Massive Illinois energy bill divides clean energy groups
November 17, 2016
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POLICY: A six-hour hearing Wednesday over a proposed massive energy bill in Illinois leaves clean energy groups divided due to the complex and vast mosaic of interests at play. (As reported by Kari Lydersen at Midwest Energy News).

As reported by E&E News, in an article entitled "Does Trump's wind upend or aid Exelon and its nuclear subsidy plan?":

The NRDC [Natural Resources Defense Council] joined the Sierra Club and Environmental Defense Fund this week in support of key pieces of the bill, including the nuclear subsidies and renewable energy and energy efficiency provisions in Commonwealth Edison's service areas in northern Illinois. The environmental groups continue to oppose provisions that support southern Illinois coal plants and less-aggressive efficiency goals. (emphasis added)

The E&E article also reported:

"...[Cara] Hendrickson from the [IL] attorney general's office said the nuclear provision alone would add $285 million a year to Illinois utility bills."

Given it's a six-year long scheme, that amounts to a $1.6 billion nuclear power bailout in IL.

One clean and safe energy group that adamantly opposes Exelon's nuclear power subsidies is the 35-year watchdog on Nuclear Illinois, the Nuclear Energy Information Service (NEIS) of Chicago. NEIS has issued action alerts opposing the massive proposed nuclear power subsidies, intended by Exelon to prop up age-degraded, financially failing atomic reactors that would otherwise permanently close (please spread word to everyone you know in IL, and urge them to take action):

NEIS ACTION ALERT --  IMMEDIATE ACTION NEEDED!

Exelon's $1.6 Billion Bailout Up for a House Committee Vote Wednesday, Nov. 16 - Say "NO!" to Nuclear Bailout!
 
The Final Battle is upon us.  The Exelon Legislation, now going by the number SB 2814 Amendment 2, and the name of "the Future Energy Jobs Bill," will be heard in the House Energy Committee at 2 p.m., Wednesday Nov. 16th, in Springfield.
It is imperative that calls go in to your legislators the morning and afternoon of Nov. 16th, with the messages below.
 
What you can do:
 
1.)    Contact your State Legislators with this message: Simply say NO to Exelon's Nuclear Bailout!
  • NO bailouts for Exelon's aging, money losing reactors
  • Fix the Renewable Portfolio Standard (RPS), once and for all
  • Oppose ComEd's  "demand charge" and monopolistic  community solar plan; and preserve solar net-metering
  • Support community created and controlled jobs in renewable energy and energy efficiency
  • Enact a "just transitions" program for reactor communities and displaced workers; 
  • Enact strong reactor decommissioning laws
 
To find out who your State Legislators are, click here:
 
2.)   and also call...
 
3.)   IMPORTANT ADDITIONAL ACTION:  file your opposition with the House Energy Committee, especially if you represent an organization, by going to this link and following the instructions for filing a "witness slip" in opposition (you do NOT need to be present at the hearing to do this):
 
Some Background:
 
The Veto Session of the Illinois legislature begins this Tuesday, Nov. 15th, and it is expected that Exelon's $1.6 billion bailout bill - almost comically named "The Future Energy Jobs Bill" - will be voted on.  While the language of this Frankensteinian conglomeration of several pieces of previous legislation is still being discussed, enough of the "bads" are sure to remain in it to outweigh whatever "goods" might be promised (and then, at a later date, removed, sabotaged, "swept", or ignored).  We ask you to say "NO!" to Exelon's nuclear bailout bill.
 
The "bads" are expected to include:
  • A $1.6 billion bailout for three of Exelon's money-losing reactors
  • ComEd's universally unpopular "demand charge" way of billing customers
  • The elimination of solar "net metering" in its present form
The "bads" are all being sold to uninformed legislators as creating and preserving jobs, supporting (no joke!) renewable energy, and keeping electric rates "competitive."
 
The facts are that, for three years, Exelon has worked in Illinois and nationally to promote three goals: 1.) bail out their money-losing nuclear plants at ratepayer expense; 2.) kill, marginalize or control renewable energy and energy efficiency; and 3.) maintain the current and anachronistic "big box" utility model where they remain in virtually monopolistic control.
 
No amount of beads and trinkets offered in exchange can compensate for the long-term damage to a renewable energy future their game plan will lock in place.
NEIS will be providing updates as the Veto Session progresses.  Thanks for all you do!

For more information, contact:  NEIS, neis@neis.org,  www.neis.org, (773)342-7650 

--
David A. Kraft, Director
NEIS
3411 W. Diversey #16
Chicago, IL  60647
SKYPE address:  davekhamburg
NEIS is a member of EarthShare Illinois
Update on November 17, 2016 by Registered Commenteradmin

Thanks for Scott Stapf of the Hastings Group for these related Tweets:

Attention climate hawks: Exelon just did deal with dirty coal in hopes of getting nuclear bailout in Illinois.

Editorial: 446-page nuclear, coal bailout bill fails to put Illinois customer first.

Update on November 18, 2016 by Registered Commenteradmin
Comment by Dave Kraft, NEIS, posted at Midwest Energy News in response to Lydersen's article linked above:

Conspicuously absent from this otherwise excellent reporting job of the 6-hour marathon House Energy Committee meeting was the one issue that launched this whole process into being in the first place -- Exelon's nuclear bailout provisions.
House Committee Chair Linda Chappa LaVia placed the bailout's most severe critics at the very end of the session (including us, THE VERY last witness of the day), in Panels 10 and 11.  The only questions asked by exhausted legislators had to do with a petty squabble over who the funder and member groups were of one of the nuclear critic groups, not substance about the bill.
The Exelon nuclear bailout bill is a 446-page Frankenstein concoction of greed and competing, often mutually exclusive and nullifying energy issues and interests.  Nuclear critics pointed out that there is no rational, economic, or environmental basis left to award Exelon $1.6 BILLION of ratepayer money, simply because they are losing money at their nuclear plants.  But the politics of Springfield seems to demand that "everyone has to get something," no matter how ill-deserved (and whose money gets used -- in this case, Illinois ratepayers).  Imagine if legislators imposed that same methodology and (ill)logic to, say,  murderer or child molester legislation!

The State needs a forward-thinking, 21st Century energy policy, both to power the economy and simply to keep the lights on.  Many provisions in this legislation are truly innovative and progressive.  Many, like the nuclear -- and now coal -- bailout, are not.  The former should not be sabotaged by an unnecessary "nuclear hostage crisis," where the nation's largest utility and nuclear plant operator threatens to kill local economies if they don't get their way.

We often heard the word "leadership" while down in Springfield at the hearing.  We sure would like to see some of it soon regarding energy legislation.
Article originally appeared on Beyond Nuclear (https://archive.beyondnuclear.org/).
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