FOR RELEASE
10:00 AM, Wednesday, March 7, 2007
CONTACT:
Michael Shore,
Environmental Defense, 828-582-3141
Ivan Urlaub, NC Sustainable Energy Association, 919-923-4332
NC Coalition Says Strong Clean Energy
Policy Can Boost Economy, Reduce Pollution
Thirteen Groups Release Recommendations for Renewable and Efficiency
Measures
(March 7, 2007
- Raleigh, NC) Thirteen North Carolina
organizations today issued recommendations that would help clean energy play a
bigger role in meeting the state's growing demand for electricity. The coalition of environmental, faith and
health groups said renewable energy and efficiency is quicker, cheaper and
healthier to use than other sources, such as coal and nuclear power, and can
reliably meet the state's rising electricity consumption. The report concludes that the state can meet
10% of future energy demand with efficiency and 10% with renewable energy. The recommendations are included in a report,
"The Power to Choose: North Carolina's
Clean-Energy Future" (www.environmentaldefense.org/go/cleanenergync).
The report says most of the fuels used to generate electricity
in North Carolina are purchased
from out of state, draining $1.6 billion from the economy each year. Clean energy can keep more of those dollars
in state, creating jobs and business opportunities. Nearly 40,000 jobs could be created by
pursuing an aggressive set of policies to reduce global warming pollution,
making the renewable energy and efficiency sector larger than several
traditional sectors, including hog farming, tobacco and paper manufacturing.
The coalition recommends:
- Securing
at least 20% of the state's energy from renewables and efficiency by 2020.
- Creating
a public benefits fund to promote efficiency programs.
- Implementing
programs to promote high-performance buildings, particularly in the public
sector.
- Simplifying
the rate structure for utilities to align incentives with increased
efficiency.
"Losing a billion dollars from our economy each year is
staggering. The quickest and most
cost-effective thing for North Carolina
to do is to create a renewable energy and efficiency standard and keep more of
those dollars inside our state lines," said Michael
Shore, senior air policy analyst
with Environmental Defense. "More
than 20 states already have such standards.
Jobs, economic growth and a clean energy future are at hand. Let's not let this opportunity slip through
our fingers."
"North Carolina's
regulations and laws have failed to recognize the real value of renewable
energy and efficiency to our economy," said Ivan Urlaub, executive and
policy director of the NC Sustainable Energy Association. "It's time for the state to put
renewables and efficiency at the top of the energy list, instead of the
bottom."
Organizations endorsing the report are Environmental
Defense, NC Sustainable Energy Association, American Lung Association of North
Carolina, Carolinas Clean Air Coalition, Conservation Council of North
Carolina, Environment North Carolina, NC Conservation Network, NC Council of
Churches, NC Sierra Club, NC Waste Awareness Reduction Network, Southern
Alliance for Clean Energy, Southern Environmental Law Center, and Students
United for a Responsible Global Environment.
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