星期四, 6 3 月, 2025
Home PV Finance North Dakota Alliance for Renewable Energy pushes green goals

North Dakota Alliance for Renewable Energy pushes green goals


A coalition promoting renewable energy in North Dakota is pushing a slate of initiatives that include requirements for biofuels and new energy conservation standards for buildings.


The North Dakota Alliance for Renewable Energy, whose members include farm groups and utility companies, rolled out its goals in advance of the 2009 North Dakota Legislature’s opening day Jan. 6.


The recommendations include a state standard requiring 10 percent ethanol gasoline blends and 5 percent biodiesel fuel blends to spur demand for homegrown biofuels.


“The view is if we as a state think these things are important, let’s require them,” Brad Crabtree, an alliance board member, said Monday.


Mike Williams, a Fargo city commissioner and a fellow member of the alliance’s board, said renewable energy mandates also would help reduce dependency on foreign oil.


Both concede that the deep drop in oil prices – with gas in Fargo at around $1.55 a gallon – and the global recession will make some of the alliance’s goals difficult to sell.


But they argue that public investments in new energy sources and conservation will save money in the long run.


The group proposes a 30 percent increase in energy efficiency requirements for buildings, and adopting Energy Star programs for appliances.


North Dakota is one of the few states with no building codes for energy efficiency, Williams said. The state routinely ranks at or near the bottom in energy efficiency ratings, Crabtree said. That translates into unnecessary waste, both said.


“From an economic standpoint, we’re just leaving money on the table,” Crabtree said. “It’s low-hanging fruit with very big payback.”


Utilities would be allowed to recoup their investments in conservation measures from ratepayers, under the alliance’s proposal.


To help finance initiatives, the coalition advocates spending $8 million from the state’s Resources Trust Fund, which never has been tapped for renewable energy development.


The group also supports Gov. John Hoeven’s recommendation of $3 million in funding for the Renewable Energy Council and $2 million for a biomass energy grant program.


To encourage community-owned energy projects, including wind farms, the alliance urges incentives and other measures. A locally owned 40-megawatt wind farm generates $4 million in local income, compared to $1.3 million for one owned by outside investors, government figures show.


The alliance also advocates a series of steps to enable capture and storage of carbon dioxide from burning coal, including a state carbon registry and advisory council to expand markets for agricultural carbon offsets, as well as participation in regional policy initiatives.


 



 

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

- Advertisment -

Most Popular

Romania subsidizes municipal authorities with 86% for solar power investments

The Ministry of Energy provided EUR 28.8 million for 105 photovoltaic projects of 23.1 MW in total in almost all counties of Romania. The...

Sungrow supplies inverters, battery system for hybrid solar park in Sweden

One of Sweden’s first hybrid solar parks has been deployed in Halmstad. Sungrow, which provided the inverters and battery system, said it is a...

Pertamina NRE to build solar panel assembly plant in W. Java, to be operable by 2026

Pertamina New and Renewable Energy (Pertamina NRE), a renewable energy subholding of State energy company PT Pertamina, is currently constructing a solar panel assembly...

Vietnam triples its clean energy goals, aims to get 16% of its power from solar

Vietnam is revising its energy plans to focus more on large solar farms and less on reliance on coal and natural gas. The fast-growing...