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Message from GPACE Director Scott Allegrucci

Posted on 05 May 2009 by admin

We have met the enemy and he is us?

For any potential it offers, the governor’s coal plant deal appears to be an act of political expediency in the face of political extortion.  I fear it sacrifices policy in the public interest to appease those seeking to achieve their own ends.  At the very least, it is simply conducting Sunflower Electric’s resource planning on public time.

Okay, one of these things is not like the others:

compromise |ˈkämprəˌmīz| (noun)

1.     an agreement or a settlement of a dispute that is reached by each side making concessions : an ability to listen to two sides in a dispute, and devise a compromise acceptable to both

2.     a middle state between conflicting opinions or actions reached by mutual concession or modification

3.     the acceptance of standards that are lower than is desirable

Can you tell which one it is?

The same governor who called upon us to stand up against what he called bad policy and dishonest brokering, has now brokered his own back-room deal and calls upon us to “step aside” so that special interests can achieve their goals.  This is presented as a “compromise”, but the only people involved in the terms of the deal were Sunflower Electric and their allies.  Those of us advocating open and accountable government and truly comprehensive energy policy that maximizes our state’s renewable energy resources were locked out and misinformed.

At the end of the day, this deal looks a lot more like capitulation and coercion, than it does compromise.

The governor now asks Kansans to trade

·      900MW of unnecessary coal-fired power generation;

·      constraint of the powers of the agency charged with protecting our health and environment;

·      decreased oversight of electric coops;

·      a huge economic, pollution, and carbon liability;

·      non-existent or unproven technology;

·      transmission to send fossil fuel energy west, instead of lines east to our wind energy markets;

·      one of the weakest Renewable Energy Standards in the region; and

·      unspecified, limited energy efficiency standards applied only to government buildings;

in exchange for

·      decent net-metering – but not for rural coop customers; and

·      180MW of wind energy capacity (not even production) that was already planned.

These “renewable energy gains” are a good place to start a responsible comprehensive energy policy.  They are hardly where Kansas – with our abundant renewable energy resources – would hope to end up after years of wrangling with the issues, and especially given the current economic and energy priorities of the nation.  And they do not even begin to “offset”, “mitigate”, or “reduce” the costs of carbon emissions from the plant as suggested.

Talk about snatching defeat from the jaws of victory.

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Coal Plant Fact Sheets

  • Find out more about the proposed coal plant project, and inform your public comments, using the GPACE fact sheets below.
  • There are other resources and information on the GPACE website (especially in the Blog, at the bottom-right of the homepage, and at ReThinkRePowerKS.org)
  • If you have additional questions, contact us at info@gpace.org. Check back for updates and new resources.
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