New U.S. Clean Energy Standard Bill before the Senate

At the end of last year the Energy Information Administration (EIA) released an assessment of the impact of a potential national Clean Energy Standard as requested by the Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources.  Based on this analysis, a new Clean Energy Standard Bill has been introduced in the Senate.

The new CES defines clean energy very broadly to include not only wind, solar, geothermal, solid waste, and landfill gas, but also new and incremental hydro and nuclear, coal and gas plants with carbon sequestration (CCS), natural gas combined cycle (GCC) plants, and coal gasification combined cycle plants.

The EIA analysis also predicted that a properly designed CES would have almost zero impact on GDP growth, and little to no impact on national electricity rates for the first decade of the program.

CES impacts

Clean energy standard energy mix IEA Nov 2011According to the EIA analysis, the CES changes the generation mix, reducing the role of coal technologies and increasing reliance on natural gas, non-hydro renewable and nuclear technologies.  Coal-fired generation decreases by 41 percent in the BCES case betwwen 2009 to 2035. Natural gas generation increases by 53 % in 2035. Non-hydro renewable generation grows at the fastest rate, becoming 75 percent greater in 2035 than in the AEO2011 projection.  Nearly 65 GW of new nuclear capacity are installed by 2035. 14 GW of existing nuclear capacity are taken out of service.  47 GW of coal capacity is retrofitted with carbon capture and sequestration (CCS) equipment by 2035. Most of these retrofits occur in the final 10 years with less than one gigawatt of capacity retrofitted by 2025.

Geoff Zeiss

Geoff Zeiss

Geoff Zeiss has more than 20 years experience in the geospatial software industry and 15 years experience developing enterprise geospatial solutions for the utilities, communications, and public works industries. His particular interests include the convergence of BIM, CAD, geospatial, and 3D. In recognition of his efforts to evangelize geospatial in vertical industries such as utilities and construction, Geoff received the Geospatial Ambassador Award at Geospatial World Forum 2014. Currently Geoff is Principal at Between the Poles, a thought leadership consulting firm. From 2001 to 2012 Geoff was Director of Utility Industry Program at Autodesk Inc, where he was responsible for thought leadership for the utility industry program. From 1999 to 2001 he was Director of Enterprise Software Development at Autodesk. He received one of ten annual global technology awards in 2004 from Oracle Corporation for technical innovation and leadership in the use of Oracle. Prior to Autodesk Geoff was Director of Product Development at VISION* Solutions. VISION* Solutions is credited with pioneering relational spatial data management, CAD/GIS integration, and long transactions (data versioning) in the utility, communications, and public works industries. Geoff is a frequent speaker at geospatial and utility events around the world including Geospatial World Forum, Where 2.0, MundoGeo Connect (Brazil), Middle East Spatial Geospatial Forum, India Geospatial Forum, Location Intelligence, Asia Geospatial Forum, and GITA events in US, Japan and Australia. Geoff received Speaker Excellence Awards at GITA 2007-2009.

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