Tuesday, February 24, 2009

EPA moving toward regulation of greenhouse gases

Agency will decide if emissions blamed for global warming are a danger to human health and welfare.

Environmental Protection Agency administrator Lisa Jackson says the agency is moving toward regulating the gases blamed for global warming.In an interview on Tuesday with the Associated Press, Jackson said the agency would decide whether greenhouse gases are a danger to human health and welfare, the legal trigger for regulation under federal law.

Jackson said the EPA owes the American people an opinion. "We are going to be making a fairly significant finding about what these gases mean for public health and the welfare of our country," Jackson said.Recent EPA decisions have hinted that the agency was leaning toward using the Clean Air Act to regulate the gases, a step the Bush administration refused to take despite prodding from the Supreme Court.Jackson took a different position Tuesday during one of her first interviews since winning Senate confirmation Jan. 23."

It is clear that the Clean Air Act has a mechanism in it for other pollutants to be addressed," she said."If EPA is going to talk and speak in this game, the first thing it should speak about is whether carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases endanger human health and welfare," she said. "It is a very fundamental question."Jackson, a Princeton University-educated chemical engineer, headed the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection from 2006 until 2008.

Click here for the full LA Times article.

Friday, February 13, 2009

Southern California Edison Signs Solar Power Contract

Edison International's (EIX) Southern California Edison unit, the largest electric utility in California and a major U.S. purchaser of solar energy power, has contracted with privately-held BrightSource Energy for 1,300 megawatts of solar power, or enough to serve nearly 845,000 homes.

The first of the solar power plants could be operating within four years, said the utility, which serves a population of more than 13 million, signed two contracts on Tuesday for almost 2,000 gigawatt-hours of wind power. Terms of the agreement were not disclosed.

The deal comes as the solar-power industry has become increasingly pessimistic about the sector's short-term future, with many in the industry cutting production or lowering their outlook to reflect lower demand. Clean energy's momentum is also being stalled by the financial meltdown and lower oil and gas prices. Still, longer term the companies are expected to profit as governments seek to cut greenhouse gas emissions.

Meanwhile, demand for solar power in California is soaring despite the economic downturn, according to a report state regulators issued in late January. California homeowners, businesses and local government agencies installed 158 megawatts of solar panels in 2008, double the amount installed the previous year, the California Public Utilities Commission said.

Click here for the full CNN article.