Trenton, NJ – Governor Corzine released a draft of his
15-year Energy Master Plan today, and a broad coalition of environmentalists
and clean energy advocates faulted the plan for lacking in vision and failing
to realize New Jersey’s full clean energy potential.
“This was an important test of Governor Corzine’s commitment
to clean energy, and we have to grade him a D,” said Matt Elliott, Global
Warming and Clean Energy Advocate at Environment New Jersey. “His plans to reduce energy demand and
promote clean alternatives fall short of our state’s potential, and he has
failed to minimize our reliance on dirty and dangerous power plants.”
Nine months ago, Governor Corzine signed the historic Global
Warming Response Act and committed the state to reducing greenhouse gas
emissions by nearly 20% by 2020, and by at least 80% by 2050. The law is the toughest global warming law in
the nation, and Corzine pledged to use his Energy Master Plan to detail
strategies to meet the 2020 goals and set the state on track to meet the 2050
goals.
“Unfortunately, despite Governor Corzine’s promises on global
warming and clean energy, this plan fails to measure up,” said Elliott. “The
challenges presented by global warming demand a visionary plan and
unprecedented political leadership. This plan lacks both.”
While the plan calls for renewable energy and greater energy
efficiency, environmental leaders said the governor’s goals fall far short of
the state’s potential. In addition, they
said, the plan fails to detail the specific steps the state will take to
achieve its goals.
The groups put out an alternate vision, calling upon the
governor to increase his wind, solar, and efficiency goals, and to support
emerging clean energy technologies.
With the right plan from the Governor, they argue, the state
could:
- Promote
highly efficient homes, buildings, and appliances and cut energy demand
10% below today’s levels. The
Governor’s goal will stabilize demand at current levels.
- Generate
1750 megawatts of clean electricity by harnessing New
Jersey’s offshore winds – enough to power at
least 450,000 New Jersey
homes per year. Their plan would generate 75% more wind energy than the Governor’s
proposal.
- Bring
solar panels to tens of thousands of rooftops within the decade.
- Eliminate
the need to expand fossil fuel or nuclear power plants.
“The new Energy Master Plan - or EMP
- is missing the TY. The Plan is EMPTY
on leadership for renewable energy and energy efficiency,” stated Jeff Tittel,
Director of the NJ Sierra Club.
“Governor Corzine needs to step up and lead New
Jersey to a cleaner, greener future with more wind,
solar and better energy efficiency goals.”
The coalition also criticized the plan for failing to assess
the state’s current fleet of power plants.
The plan does not determine which current power plants the state should
plan to keep online, which it should clean up, or which it should aim to phase
out. It skips such an assessment, assumes
none of the current capacity can be counted on in the future, and concludes
that new power plants and additional transmission lines are needed.
“New Jersey is
at a historic crossroads,” said Dave Pringle of the NJ Environmental
Federation. “Governor Corzine is missing the opportunity to truly go
green, drive the 21st century economy, and rid ourselves of the 19th
and 20th century technologies that saddle the state
with so many environmental, public health and security
problems. The question is not coal versus nuclear to keep the lights on, but
rather those antiquated, dangerous technologies versus cutting edge clean
renewable and efficient solutions.
Added Michael Pisauro of the New Jersey Environmental Lobby:
“Goals without a road map on how to achieve them are worse than empty
promises. You will never realize you are lost until it is too late.
The EMP’s goals for renewable energy can
never be met without the State’s active involvement. With this EMP
the State is not involved.”
The Governor’s plan comes at a time when New Jerseyans are
saddled with a host of energy-related issues.
The cost of traditional fuels has risen sharply in recent years, with no
end in sight. Consumers are paying record prices to fuel up their cars and to
heat their homes. The cost of
electricity has risen significantly as the cost of coal, gas, and uranium makes
power plants increasingly expensive to operate.
And global concerns of foreign imports, global security, and global
warming, have left the public clamoring for energy alternatives.
“With $4/gallon gas, double digit increases in energy costs,
and a global market competing for finite fossil fuel-based energy sources, we
need to think differently about energy,” said Pam Frank of Sun Farm
Network. “We need to start aggressively harnessing
renewable, price-stable, carbon-neutral sources of energy as part of our
overall energy architecture. Wind, solar, and other renewable sources
must be central to any Energy Master Plan.”
The Energy Master Plan is currently in draft form and open
for public comment.
“Governor Corzine needs to hear that the public expects more
leadership from him,” said Elliott. “His
draft plan is not nearly green enough, but that can change with enough citizen
input.”
Fletcher Harper, Executive Director of GreenFaith, said his
network of faith-based institutions plans to weigh in on the plan. “Global warming is one of the most important
moral issues of our time, and New Jersey
has an obligation to offer strong leadership. Unfortunately, the Energy
Master Plan falls short. Future generations will look at it and ask what
we were thinking.”
Citizens can comment on the Energy Master Plan by calling
the Governor’s office at 609-292-6000.
ENERGY MASTER PLAN REPORT CARD:
|
WIND
Maximize the
state’s offshore and onshore wind potential
C
|
|
SOLAR
Develop concrete
strategies to maximize NJ’s solar potential D
|
|
ENERGY
EFFICIENCY
Detail concrete
plans to promote all available energy efficiency strategies, reducing overall
consumption by at least 10% below current levels D
|
|
FOSSIL FUEL POWER PLANTS
Minimize NJ’s
dependence on fossil fuels F
|
|
NUCLEAR POWER
PLANTS
Reduce New Jersey’s
dependence on nuclear energy, an unsustainable power source F
|
|
INNOVATION
Support innovation
of new renewable technologies F
|
|
LONG TERM
Set New Jersey on
track to meet its 2050 global warming reduction goals
|
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