MacDonald carbon emissions bill receives unanimous support
A bill sponsored by Rep. Bruce MacDonald, D-Boothbay, that would limit
carbon dioxide emissions from coal burning power plants in Maine received
unanimous support Thursday from the Legislature's Natural Resources
Committee. The bill would close what MacDonald says is a loophole in
Maine's laws regarding carbon emissions.
Sen. John Martin, D-Aroostook, Senate chair of the Natural Resources
Committee, offered an amendment to the original legislation to put in
place a state-wide three-year moratorium on building any new coal
gasification plants in Maine, instead of the interim rules originally
proposed. The committee voted unanimously to support the bill as
amended.
"Even with Maine's new Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative law, under
current cap levels there are enough surplus allowances to allow for
construction of one or more major new coal power plants in our region,"
said MacDonald. "Currently, there are no CO2 limits for gasification
facilities or refineries, but there should be. We need to protect Maine's
quality of place."
If approved by the Legislature and signed by Governor Baldacci, the
legislation would require the Maine Board of Environmental Protection to
establish strict new CO2 emission standards for gasification facilities
and for new power plants that exceed 25 megawatts in capacity. There had
been language in the bill that would require that CO2 emissions from
gasification facilities and major new power plants be no greater than
emissions from existing technologies, such as natural gas power plants and
petroleum refineries. The moratorium now replaces that language. The bill
also encourages the industry to develop means to capture and sequester CO2
to reduce emissions of it and other greenhouse gasses.
Representatives of the Maine Medical Association, the Maine Audubon
Society, the Natural Resources Council of Maine, the Conservation Law
Foundation and the Back River Alliance joined with townspeople from Alna,
Damariscotta, Edgecomb, Westport Island and Wiscasset to testify in
support of the bill last week at the public hearing. The Maine State
Chamber of Commerce joined with coal industry representatives in opposing
the bill.
At an earlier work session on Wednesday, a lobbyist for Verso Paper
informed the committee that the company hoped the bill would be amended in
such a way that no existing energy producing facilities would be impacted.
MacDonald worked with their representative, clean energy advocates and
the Department of Environmental Protection to amend the bill to further
protect existing facilities insofar as they did not change over to an
unclean coal gasification technology.
Members of the committee expressed concern that if some version of the
bill does not become law, a plant like that proposed in Wiscasset last
year could be built in any other town in Maine that allowed it. The idea
that one municipality's decision could have regional, if not global,
environmental impacts was unacceptable to a majority of the committee.
"I am glad that the committee understands the need to close this
loophole and has suggested guaranteed protection until the rules can be
developed by DEP," said MacDonald. "This would allow our Department of
Environmental Protection to set emission standards for the most dangerous
climate changing gas, carbon dioxide."
Sen. Doug Smith, R-Piscataquis, expressed concern that the bill is
another barrier to economic development in Maine, but ended up voting in
favor of the bill with the moratorium on building the plants for the next
three years.
Last year, MacDonald joined with local fishermen, real-estate
professionals, environmental organizations and other citizens of Wiscasset
and surrounding towns to express his concerns about the impacts of the
proposed coal gasification plant at the former Maine Yankee nuclear power
site.
More information about the bill is available at
http://janus.state. me.us/legis/LawMakeWeb/summary.asp?ID=280027687
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