ACEEE NEWS RELEASE
STATE
OFFICIALS WELCOME ACEEE'S NEW ENERGY EFFICIENCY "ROADMAP"
FOR MARYLAND'S CLEAN ENERGY FUTURE
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
February
19, 2008
Washington,
D.C. A new study
of energy efficiency opportunities in Maryland by the American
Council for an Energy-Efficient Economy (ACEEE) confirms that reducing
electricity consumption is the quickest, cheapest, and cleanest
way for policymakers to bring consumer bills down and keep the lights
on in a state where the demand for electricity has grown rapidly
since 1999.
"If we
are concerned about rising electricity rates, the increasing possibility
of power brownouts and the growing threat to our climate from power
plant emissions, then the solution we must embrace now is energy
efficiency," said Delegate Bill Bronrott (D-Montgomery) at
a news conference in Annapolis where key state policymakers joined
top ACEEE officials in a review of the study's major findings.
Senator Paul
Pinsky (D-Prince George's), a champion of energy conservation programs
in Maryland for more than 20 years, applauded the findings presented
in ACEEE's report entitled Energy Efficiency: The First Fuel
for a Clean Energy Future - Resources for Meeting Maryland's Electricity
Needs. "Clearly, energy efficiency should be our first
step," said Pinsky, echoing one of the report's main themes.
To overcome the daunting energy resource challenges facing Maryland,
Pinsky stressed, "we are going to have a take a long-term view
of what our citizens need to do over the next five, 10, 20, or 30
years. To get our efforts headed in the right direction, efficiency
is where we have to start."
Senator Robert
Garagiola (D-Montgomery) said the ACEEE report is "very timely"
in light of the energy issues the General Assembly is aiming to
address in the current session, including the prospect of rolling
blackouts beginning as early as 2011 "if action isn't taken
soon." Reducing energy consumption, said Garagiola, is the
quickest way to lower the likelihood of rolling blackouts
Release of
the ACEEE study coincided with the start of debate in the General
Assembly on a host of energy-related bills, including proposed energy
efficiency legislation introduced last month by Governor Martin
O'Malley. Delegate Brian Feldman (D-Montgomery) who has been a strong
supporter of energy efficiency initiatives and a sponsor of energy
efficiency legislation in prior sessions, stressed the importance
of the demand reduction policies contained in ACEEE's study.
ACEEE deputy
director Bill Prindle, presenting conclusions and recommendations
of the study, said ACEEE's analysis confirms that the Governor's
goal to achieve a 15 percent reduction in per capita energy use
by 2015 "is attainable cost-effectively with the energy efficiency
and demand response resources we have in Maryland today."
In addition
to programs that promote installation of energy-saving light bulbs
and appliances, the ACEEE report recommends a suite of energy efficiency
policies including:
- More stringent
residential and commercial building energy codes;
- Energy efficiency
standards for new appliances and equipment not already covered
by current state or federal standards;
- A clean
energy Research, Development, and Deployment (RD&D) initiative
funded by the state to meet the state's unique needs while helping
to build a "green collar" energy industry in the state;
- Policies
to encourage new Combined Heat and Power (CHP) systems in the
industrial, institutional and commercial sectors; and
- Expanded
demand response programs by electric utilities to reduce peak
demand for electricity.
Guided by these
recommendations, said Maryland Energy Administration director Malcolm
Woolf, the state could potentially go well beyond the Governor's
"15 by 2015" target. Woolf emphasized that "the full
potential, if we are able to take advantage of every energy efficiency
opportunity in Maryland, is a 32% reduction in peak demand by 2015
and a staggering 47% by 2025." ACEEE's report, said Woolf,
gives the Governor and state lawmakers "a roadmap that will
help us identify the most cost-effective ways to reach our goal
to provide reliable, affordable, and clean energy for all Marylanders."
The analysis "pinpoints where the energy efficiency opportunities
lie," added Woolf, and praised the ACEEE research team for
using a study methodology that "looked at actual programs other
states have implemented, and analyzed real-world results."
Prindle focused
on the following key findings in presenting ACEEE's analysis:
- Energy efficiency
and demand response are the only resources that can be mobilized
immediately, forestalling the prospect of power curtailments in
the next few years and keeping the lights on for consumers in
the state.
- Every dollar
invested in efficiency yields an impressive return of $4 in reduced
consumer electricity bills. Energy efficiency policies and programs
recommended by ACEEE will cut consumer electricity bills by a
net $860 million in 2015 and $2.6 billion in 2025.
- By 2015,
residential efficiency programs will reduce an average household's
monthly electricity bill by a net $8. Including the benefits of
lower wholesale prices, an average household will save a net $10
on monthly bills in 2015, or a 7% savings compared to forecasted
bills. These savings grow substantially by 2025.
- All consumers
benefit from energy efficiency. By reducing electricity demand,
energy efficiency creates a downward pressure on wholesale electricity
prices. By 2015, a typical residential consumer can save about
$24 a year on monthly electricity bills from lower wholesale prices.
- Investments
in energy efficiency create new, high-quality "green-collar"
jobs for the state. These investments will create more than 8,000
net new jobs by 2015 and 12,000 by 2025. "That's about the
same level of employment we would see if Maryland were able to
attract 100 small-sized manufacturing plants," observed Prindle.
This would yield more than $450 million in new wages, he said,
growing to almost $800 million by 2025.
One of the
fundamental conclusions of the ACEEE study, Prindle cautioned, is
that there are "no free or even cheap solutions" to the
supply and demand challenges in energy markets across the country.
"Everything costs money," he stressed. "What we found
in Maryland, as we have found in Florida, Texas, and other states,
is that the cost of doing nothing is the most expensive and riskiest
strategy to take. Focusing first on energy efficiency and other
resources on demand side of the market is in fact the lowest cost
and least risky way to address the energy problems we're facing
today."
Commenting
on the demand-side approach recommended by ACEEE, Senator Brian
Frosh (D-Montgomergy) observed, "Increasing energy efficiency
makes sense from a financial perspective and it makes enormous sense
from an environmental perspective. Every kilowatt that you are not
generating by burning fossil fuels eliminates greenhouse gases,
it reduces pollution of the Chesapeake Bay, and it makes us healthier."
Paula Carmody,
People's Counsel for the State of Maryland, serves as the voice
for Maryland consumers in two million households statewide. For
more than two years, she said, the consumers she represents "have
been hammered by dramatic increases in electricity prices."
During the past year, Carmody said her office has been helping an
increasing number of Maryland residents and businesses deal with
new issues related to the reliability of the state's power supply.
Carmody said her office "has looked at this issue over the
years and we are convinced that relying on energy efficiency and
conservation programs is a cheaper, faster, and healthier way of
meeting our energy needs. This approach provides a single solution
to the multitude of energy-related problems and challenges we are
currently facing in Maryland - price, reliability, environmental,
and health. Energy efficiency is an integrated solution to all of
these challenges."
Energy Efficiency:
The First Fuel for a Clean Energy FutureResources for Meeting
Maryland's Electricity Needs can be downloaded for free at http://aceee.org/pubs/e082.htm
or purchased for $50 plus $5 postage and handling from ACEEE Publications,
1001 Connecticut Avenue, N.W., Suite 801, Washington, D.C. 20036-5525,
phone: 202-429-0063, fax: 202-429-0193, e-mail: aceee_publications@aceee.org.
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The
American Council for an Energy-Efficient Economy is an independent,
nonprofit organization dedicated to advancing energy efficiency as
a means of promoting both economic prosperity and environmental protection.
ACEEE conducts research, education and advocacy on programs, policies
and technologies that advance energy efficiency. For more information
visit http://aceee.org.
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