NEWSROOM

Energy Commission Proposes Plan to Cut Total U.S. Climate Emissions in First Year of Program

Thursday, April 19, 2007
 

New Recommendations include Increased Auto Fuel Economy Standards, Interim Nuclear Waste Storage, Deployment of Carbon Capture and Storage Technologies, and National Renewable Energy Standard

 

For more information, contact:
Paul Bledsoe   202-637-0400

 

Download the Press Release Here

 

New Recommendations include Increased Auto Fuel Economy Standards, Interim Nuclear Waste Storage, Deployment of Carbon Capture and Storage Technologies, and National Renewable Energy Standard

 

Policies Would Reduce U.S. Emissions to 15% Below Current Levels by 2030 


 

(Washington, D.C.) - The National Commission on Energy Policy, a bipartisan group of top energy experts from industry, government, labor, academia, and environmental and consumer groups, today released a series of new, sweeping recommendations to address the nation's leading energy challenges.  In its new report, "Energy Policy Recommendations to the President and the 110th Congress," the Commission proposed revised policies regarding a cap and trade proposal for addressing global climate change, increases in fuel economy standards, approaches for the storage of nuclear waste, development and deployment of advanced coal technologies, adoption of a national renewable energy standard, and other major energy policy issues.

 

"We believe events of the last two years justify increasing the stringency of our initial recommendations on a number of major issues, especially climate change and automotive fuel economy," said William K. Reilly, former EPA Administrator and Commission co-chair.  "At the same time, as in our original report, these revised recommendations continue to emphasize market-based, cost-effective approaches that we believe can gain the political support to become law."


 

Most dramatically, a Commission analysis finds that taken as a whole its new policy recommendations would reduce the absolute amount of U.S. greenhouse gases emissions starting in the very first year such a program would be implemented (2012), and would lead to emissions reductions of 15% below current levels by the year 2030.

 

"The science is clear on the importance and value of serious steps to reduce emissions of climate-altering gases sooner rather than later" said John Holdren, Teresa and John Heinz Professor of Environmental Policy at Harvard University, Director of The Woods Hole Research Center, and Commission co-chair.  "The Commission's proposals for doing so can be implemented at low cost to the U.S. economy.  There is no good reason for our government to continue to dither while the world warms." 

 

While strengthening the overall stringency of its GHG mitigation proposal, the new Commission proposal continues to rely on the core program elements first articulated in its 2004 report, especially: emission targets within a cap and trade system; providing market-based incentives for deployment of low-carbon technologies; linkage to greenhouse gas mitigation action by major U.S. trading partners, including China and India; and a cost-containment mechanism to prevent undue harm to the U.S. economy.

 

The reductions in greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions would result from a series of new policies proposed by the Commission, beginning with a revision of key elements of its initial cap and trade proposal for mitigating U.S. emissions.  The proposal announced today increases the proposed "safety valve" or "cost cap" of the NCEP program from $7 to $10 per ton of carbon-dioxide equivalent emissions, and would increase the safety valve price by 5 percent above inflation per year.  In addition, the Commission's new carbon cap does not rely on an "emissions intensity" metric, but instead calls for specific numerical reductions in greenhouse gas emissions for a given year.  

 

The Commission's original proposal envisioned an initial ten-year implementation period during which program targets would first aim to slow the rate of growth in U.S. emissions before proceeding to "stop" and "reverse" phases in which emissions would stabilize and then begin to decline.


 

The Commission's new proposal strengthens the program targets to begin emissions reductions immediately upon implementation and achieve a 15 percent reduction below current emissions levels by 2030.

 

Business-as-usual projections for greenhouse gas emissions are taken from the Energy Information Administration's Annual Energy Outlook 2006.



A number of related policy proposals made by the Commission today would play a significant role in achieving the overall reductions in GHG emissions.   These include a Commission proposal for new vehicle fuel economy improvement targets of 4 percent (or approximately one mile per gallon) per year, as well as the NCEP recommendation that the United States adopt a federal renewable energy portfolio standard of at least 15 percent of electricity generated by 2020.


 

The Commission's current update also tackles critical design elements for a greenhouse-gas cap-and-trade program, including the highly controversial issue of allowance allocation.  For reasons detailed in a recent NCEP staff paper on allowance allocation (available at http://www.energycommission.org/), the Commission now recommends that at least half of the total pool of allowances available on an economy-wide basis be directed toward aiding the transition to a low-carbon economy, including to provide funding for advanced energy technologies and to mitigate impacts on low-income consumers.  This approach would leave more than adequate allowances to fairly compensate major energy industries for near-term economic dislocations while also avoiding the potential for substantial windfall gains. In this regard, the Commission recommends that carbon capture and storage projects should be eligible for incentives, including bonus emissions allowances at least equal in value to incentives currently provided under the renewable energy production tax credit.  

 

"The United States must implement specific policies to increase clean energy production if it is to achieve its broader energy policy and environmental goals," said John W. Rowe, Commission co-chair and Chairman and CEO of Exelon Corp.  "While the Commission believes it is necessary to place a price on carbon emissions and to increase production of renewable energy, these measures alone are not sufficient to encourage new production.  We also must implement policies that allow cleaner technologies to be deployed at affordable cost and without undue dislocation of existing energy infrastructure."

 

The Commission urged a series of other policy changes, including calling for five-year, rather than two-or-one-year, extensions of current federal production tax credits for renewable energy, aimed at promoting longer term investment.  On energy efficiency, the Commission calls for enhancing and extending recently introduced federal tax incentives and updating standards for appliances and equipment.  To help address the current impasse over the building of new nuclear power and specifically the disposal of nuclear waste, the Commission proposes that the Department of Energy (DOE) site and operate national or regional consolidated interim storage options, among other recommendations. NCEP called for a reevaluation of existing ethanol subsidies to ensure that public support is effectively targeted to meeting both energy security and climate change policy objectives.

 

The Commission's GHG emissions estimates are derived using the same economic models and technology assumptions as the "high technology case" used by DOE's Energy Information Administration.  The Commission recognizes that uncertainty exists about the rate of future market penetration of low- and zero- carbon energy technologies, and therefore believes the safety valve or cost cap provision is especially important if the cost of new technologies turns out to be higher than anticipated.


 

"A limit or safety value on the price of carbon remains an important feature, especially in the first phase of the plan, ensuring that there are not wild swings in the carbon price as happened in the early stage of the European plan," said former Congressman Philip Sharp, NCEP Congressional Chair and President of Resources for the Future.  "It will provide reassurance to those Americans who are very concerned that costs will dramatically escalate beyond the levels anticipated in economic forecasting."

 

 "While the Energy Policy Act of 2005 dealt with a number of major issues, the two mega-issues of climate change and oil security that were not effectively addressed, and have come to increasingly dominate national energy policy formulation," said Reilly.  "The Commission believes today's recommendations, if adopted, would put the United States is an extremely strong position to address these critical long-term challenges."



Additional discussion of the Commission's recommendations and supporting analytic materials may be found at the Commission website, http://www.energycommission.org/

Summary of Recommendations

 

  1. Oil Security

 


 


 

2. Climate Change

 


 

 

 

 


 

3. Energy Efficiency 


 

 


4. Natural Gas

 


5. Advanced Coal

 


 


 


6. Nuclear Energy

 

 

 

 

 

 


7. Renewable Energy

 


 

8. Biofuels 


 

 


 

9. Energy Technology Innovation 


 

The National Commission on Energy Policy was founded in 2002 by the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation, and its partners-The Pew Charitable Trusts, the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, the David and Lucile Packard Foundation, and the Energy Foundation.

 

NCEP Commissioners

 

JOHN P. HOLDREN
Co-Chair

Teresa and John Heinz Professor of Environmental Policy, Harvard University; Director of the Woods Hole Research Center

 

WILLIAM K. REILLY
Co-Chair
Senior Advisor, TPG, Inc.; former Administrator, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency

 

JOHN W. ROWE
Co-Chair
Chairman and CEO, Exelon Corporation

 

PHILIP R. SHARP
Congressional Chair

President, Resources for the Future; former U.S. Representative, IN


 

MARILYN BROWN
Visiting Distinguished Scientist, Oak Ridge National Laboratory; Professor, School of Public Policy, Georgia Institute of Technology

 

JOHN E. BRYSON*
Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer, Edison International; Chairman, Southern California Edison

 

RALPH CAVANAGH
Senior Attorney and Co-Director, Energy Program,
Natural Resources Defense Council

 

LEO W. GERARD
International President, United Steelworkers of America

 

ROBERT E. GRADY*
Managing Partner, Carlyle Venture Partners, The Carlyle Group; former Executive Associate Director of the OMB


 

F. HENRY HABICHT
Managing Partner of SAIL Venture Partners, LLC; former Deputy Administrator of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency 

 

FRANK KEATING*
CEO of the American Council of Life Insurers; former Governor of Oklahoma 


 

RICHARD A. MESERVE*
President of the Carnegie Institution; former Chairman of the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC)

 

MARIO MOLINA
Professor, University of California, San Diego

 

SHARON L. NELSON
Chair, Board of Directors, Consumers Union; former Chief, Consumer Protection Division, Washington Attorney General's Office

 

RICHARD L. SCHMALENSEE*
Professor of Economics, MIT and the John C Head III Dean, MIT Sloan School of Management


 

NORM SZYDLOWSKI*
President and CEO, Colonial Pipeline Company

 

SUSAN TIERNEY
Managing Principal, the Analysis Group; former Assistant Secretary of Energy

 

R. JAMES WOOLSEY
Vice President, Booz Allen Hamilton; former Director of Central Intelligence

 

MARTIN B. ZIMMERMAN
Clinical Professor of Business, Ross School of Business, University of Michigan; former Group Vice President, Corporate Affairs, Ford Motor Company


 

* Members have joined the Commission since the release of the December 2004 report, ending the Energy Stalemate: A Bipartisan Strategy to Meet America's Energy Challenges.

 

Download the Press Release Here