Political divide emerges over Minnesota energy policy

House bill would let utilities decide which renewable energy sources are cheaper.

April 10, 2015 at 2:07AM
The University of Minnesota's new Clipper Liberty 2.5 megawatt turbine photographed on Monday, October 31, 2011 at the University of Minnesota's UMore Park in Rosemount, Minn. The turbine generates electricity but is primarily for research with wind industry and other corporate partners.
The solar industry needs protections like those wind power had in the 1990s, DFL Rep. Melissa Hortman said. (Dml - Star Tribune/The Minnesota Star Tribune)

State Rep. Pat Garofalo says he's not trying to undo decades of progress on energy conservation and renewable energy in Minnesota.

That's been the reaction from clean-energy interests to the House energy committee chairman's proposed revision of state renewable energy policy released this week.

One solar manufacturer says it would shut down its Mountain Iron, Minn., production plant if the House measure becomes law.

"Never have I seen some people so upset over a bill that reduces energy pollution and lowers energy costs," tweeted Garofalo, R-Farmington, who drives a Tesla electric car and believes such innovative technology is part of the solution.

The flap over energy policy reflects the political divide at the State Capitol. Much of the energy plan being considered in the Republican-controlled House is the polar opposite of that pending in the DFL-controlled Senate.

"This bill results in carbon dioxide reductions," Garofalo said in summing up his approach.

Critics say Garofalo's package would undercut the mandate that investor-owned utilities get 1.5 percent of their power from solar, end rooftop solar rebate programs, including one for Minnesota-made panels, and repeal mandatory conservation programs by electric and natural gas utilities in 2016.

"If any large part of this were to become law, it would be going backward, not forward," said Michael Noble, executive director of Fresh Energy, a St. Paul-based nonprofit that helped draft the 2013 state law that has triggered increased investment in solar power across the state.

If even one of Garofalo's solar-related policies passes, "every segment of Minnesota solar market would be damaged," said Lynn Hinkle, policy director for the Minnesota Solar Energy Industries Association, a trade group. He said the industry employs 1,800 people in Minnesota, and needs policy certainty to grow.

Silicon Energy, which invested $10 million and received state assistance to build a solar panel manufacturing plant on the Iron Range, would shut it down if the Minnesota-made solar subsidy is repealed, company director David Streier said at a Capitol hearing.

A Senate bill, supported by Gov. Mark Dayton, would raise to 40 percent the share of electricity utilities must get from renewable energy by 2030, while increasing to 2 percent the annual mandated reduction in power consumption through utility-sponsored conservation programs.

Letting market decide

Garofalo, defending his plan to energy interests on Wednesday, said the goal is to promote the lowest-cost renewable energy. His strategy is to let electric utilities decide if wind farms and hydropower, for example, are cheaper than solar to meet state renewable energy targets.

But Rep. Melissa Hortman, DFL-Brooklyn Park, who championed the 2013 solar bill, said solar-specific requirements will help drive down solar energy's price over time. She compared current solar policies to Minnesota's embrace of wind power in a 1994 deal over storing nuclear waste at the Prairie Island nuclear power plant in Red Wing.

"It is exactly this type of policymaking that drove the market in wind, which now makes it the cheapest power added on the system," she said. "That was not the case before the 1994 deal resolving the Prairie Island storage matter and providing the incentive payments."

Garofalo's bill also would reopen the door for imported coal-generated electricity and end the state's ban on constructing new nuclear power plants.

Expanded rebates

While eliminating existing solar incentives, Garofalo proposes new consumer rebates not only for solar power, but also for geothermal heating, thermal solar, small wind turbines, battery storage for the power grid and plug-in electric and compressed natural gas vehicles. Much of the $45 million for these rebates over two years would come from Xcel Energy customers, whose existing contributions to a utility-run renewable development fund would be transferred to a state energy fund.

Sen. John Marty, sponsor of the Senate energy bill and chairman of the Senate Energy and Environment Committee, said in an interview that he likes Garofalo's idea for a task force to study energy conservation. But Garofalo also wants to repeal existing utility conservation programs after 2016 to motivate energy interests and legislators to find a better replacement. Marty said that's a mistake.

"That is like firing all the cops while setting up a task force to study how to do law enforcement better," said Marty, DFL-Roseville.

With such wide differences, any energy bills that pass the House and Senate likely will end up in a conference committee. Marty said he couldn't predict the result.

David Shaffer • 612-673-7090 Twitter: @ShafferStrib


Rep. Pat Garofalo, R-Farmington, new chairman of the House Energy committee, which has been renamed "Job Growth and Energy Affordability Policy and Finance." He talked about his energy agenda, and his new all-electric Tesla auto. ] GLEN STUBBE * gstubbe@startribune.com Tuesday, December 30, 2014
Rep. Pat Garofalo, R-Farmington (The Minnesota Star Tribune)
Governor Mark Dayton was on hand as it was announced that Minneapolis St. Paul International Airport will house a 3-megawatt solar installation on the top deck of two Terminal 1 parking structures. It will provide 20 percent of the peak energy consumed at the airport. ] Wednesday, October 2, 2014 Provided by Ameresco
Gov. Mark Dayton supports a Senate bill requiring utilities to get 40 percent of their electricity from renewable energy by 2030. (The Minnesota Star Tribune)
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