Emulating California's Renewable Energy Initiatives

Deck: 

Challenges for Mass. and New York

Fortnightly Magazine - July 2017
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California has long been the leader in utilizing state-level governmental mandates as a means of meeting environmental goals. Indeed, the state's energy policies have flooded the wholesale market with subsidized renewable generation, wreaking havoc on the economics of merchant generation with a large oversupply of electricity in the state. Moody's Investors Service now sees Massachusetts and New York emulating California's policies as a means of stimulating renewable generation.

Charles Berckmann, an assistant vice president at Moody's, coauthored a report examining both states' initiatives, and here addresses some key questions for PUF.

What are New York and Massa­chusetts doing to stimulate the growth of electricity generation from renewable sources?

In the second half of 2016, both states signaled their renewable energy aspirations for the near future. Massa­chusetts passed the "Act to Promote Energy Diversity" on August 1, 2016. That requires utilities operating in the state to generate at least twenty-eight hundred megawatts of clean energy from solar, wind and hydro over the next decade.

On the same day, New York adopted a Clean Energy Standard, which requires among other things that fifty percent of New York's electricity come from solar, wind and hydro by 2030.

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