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                                                    Prop C: Missouri's Renewable Energy Standard

                                                    Take action to protect Prop C! Click here!

                                                    _PRESS RELEASE
                                                    February 23rd, 2011                                                    
                                                    Contact: PJ Wilson, co-director of Renew Missouri
                                                    417-459-7468, pj@renewmo.org

                                                    Missouri lawmakers outsource renewable energy, jobs to other regions of the country

                                                    Jefferson City (February, 23rd 2011) - Missouri lawmakers have rolled back key provisions of the voter-approved Renewable Electricity Standard (RES), effectively driving jobs and economic development out of the state.  SCR1, which went into effect today, removes the requirement that utilities generate renewable electricity, like wind, solar, and biomass, from in-state projects or from projects from surrounding states that deliver power into Missouri.  Utilities will now comply with the RES by paying to outsource development of renewable energy projects to places like California, South Dakota, and Canada.

                                                    “We should be focused on development in Missouri,” said PJ Wilson, co-director of Renew Missouri.    “Developing projects across the state in places like Neosho or Nodaway County could result in more than $4 billion in economic investment for our state and thousands of new jobs.”

                                                    Legislators need look no further than Columbia for the benefits of requiring renewable energy standards to come from locally sourced projects.  Last week, MFA Oil of Columbia announced its plans to create jobs in Missouri by investing in a large biomass project.  The biomass project is expected to directly create more than 900 jobs and more than $150 million in annual economic development.  The company states within its press release the investments are being made to help the City of Columbia meet its own municipal renewable electricity standard.   

                                                    A University of Missouri - St. Louis study from 2008 calculated Missouri’s RES would create 9,591 jobs and generate $2.86 billion in economic activity in Missouri over the next 20 years.  The study assumed power was being generated in state or delivered into Missouri from surrounding states.      

                                                    “This is just a matter of common sense.  When spending ratepayer dollars on new projects, why outsource the projects and not build them here locally?” questioned PJ Wilson.

                                                    Missouri’s RES, seen on the ballot as Prop C, which was passed into law in November 2008 with the support of 66% of voters statewide, requires that investor-owned utilities produce or buy no less than 15% of their electricity from renewable resources like wind, biomass, and solar by 2021.   The Missouri RES includes strong consumer protections limiting any increase in costs to just 1% as a result of the state’s RES.

                                                    Leaders on both side of the aisle have voiced strong support for a legislative solution to Missouri’s RES and in response House Speaker Steven Tilley (R-Perryville) created a special Renewable Energy Committee to focus on the issue.   “At the end of the day, investment in Missouri is what we want. It’s what the intention of Prop. C was,” said Rep Jason Holsman (D-45th) the Chairman of the newly created Special Committee on Renewable Energy. “Prop C needed to be drafted a little tighter and better to make sure that was the end outcome, and now we’re going to seek a legislative solution to get the outcome that we were looking for which is more renewable energy for our state.”

                                                    In response to SCR1, Gov. Nixon sent a letter last week to the entire General Assembly in which he says, “Now is not the time to abandon this critical opportunity to accelerate the development of renewable energy in Missouri.  Renewable energy must be a cornerstone of our economic future.”

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                                                    History

                                                    In 2007 and 2008, Renew Missouri spearheaded the Missouri Clean Energy initiative via the statewide ballot process. The initiative, which was called Proposition C, passed with 66% of the vote makes Missouri the 27th state to have a renewable electricity standard (RES), and only the 3rd to pass it by ballot initiative.
                                                    • Prop C requires investor-owned utilities to get 15% of their electricity from clean energy sources by 2021, 2% of which must come from solar.
                                                    • Through 2030, Prop C is expected a carbon reduction equivalent to permanently removing 2 million cars from the road by 2021.
                                                    • Prop C includes a solar rebate program that will make it cheaper for most Missourians to install a solar system on their home or business.
                                                    • Over the next 20 years, Prop C is predicted to save Missourians $331 million on their electric bills and is expected to stimulate in-state generation of renewable energy sources resulting in thousands of new “green-collar” jobs.
                                                    Explanation of Prop C Language

                                                    Prop C Electric Rates Analysis: Summary |  Full Report

                                                    Prop C Economic Impact Study Summary | Full Report

                                                    Missouri Legislators Attempt to Gut Prop C
                                                    July 1, 2010

                                                    Jefferson City, MO -- The Joint Committee on Administrative Rules (JCAR) voted yesterday to remove a key job-creating provision from Proposition C, the Missouri Renewable Electricity Standard.
 


                                                    Prop C was approved by voters in 2008 with 66% of the vote.  It requires investor-owned electric utilities to get at least 15 percent of their energy from local, renewable energy resources such as solar panels and wind turbines by 2021.  It made Missouri the 27th state to have such a law.
 


                                                    Over the last 19 months, the Public Service Commission (PSC) has heard input from hundreds of stakeholders on how Prop C should be implemented.  On June 2, 2010, the PSC approved a set of rules that were favorable to the development of renewable energy within Missouri.
 


                                                    But yesterday, a group of 10 legislators called the Joint Committee on Administrative Rules (JCAR) stepped outside their legal authority and removed the provision of Prop C that requires that the renewable energy to actually come from within, or near, the state of Missouri.  


                                                     
JCAR was created as a check and balance on laws created by the legislature, but because this law was passed by Missouri voters, JCAR's authority to hear the rule at all is questionable.  It is unclear whether the Public Service Commission will implement the JCAR suggestions into their rule or not.

                                                    
"JCAR's revision of the rule could potentially allow utilities to buy renewable energy credits from anywhere in the world to meet the renewable energy goals of Prop C," says Jason Hughes of Renew Missouri.  "Millions of Missourians voted for Prop C because of its promise jumpstart in-state development of renewable energy, and it would put Missourians to work.  I am frustrated by their actions at a time when Missouri needs new jobs and new industry the most."

                                                    
"Missourians put Prop C on the ballot because the General Assembly had failed to pass a renewable electricity standard for eight straight years.  Even after it passed overwhelmingly, Missouri legislators are again undercutting our chance to catch up with the rest of the country on renewable energy," said Erin Noble of the Missouri Coalition for the Environment.  "If the JCAR ruling stands, we will continue to lose the race to transition to a clean energy economy costing the state jobs and in-state investment."
  


                                                    A 2008 Economic Impact Study by the University of Missouri-St. Louis estimated that Prop C will create 9,591 jobs and generate $2.86 billion in economic activity for Missouri by 2010.

                                                    Renew Missouri is a project of the Earth Island Institute, a 501c(3) non-profit organization.