The Low Carbon
Portfolio Standard bill backed by Exelon would have required the state's electric utilities to purchase credits from low - carbon energy sources, including nuclear energy, to match 70 % of the electricity used on the distribution system.
Not exact matches
The Sharpe ratio is calculated by subtracting the risk - free rate - such as that of the 3 - month U.S. Treasury
Bill - from the rate of return for a
portfolio and dividing the result by the
standard deviation of the
portfolio returns.
There is the precedent of 2005 when the Governor lined out language within the SBC - RPS (System Benefit Charge - Renewable
Portfolio Standard) Part of economic development Article 7
bill.
An Oregon
bill, signed into law this March, increases the state's renewable
portfolio standard to 50 percent by 2040 and would require utilities in the state to stop getting power from Colstrip by 2030 (E&EN ews PM, March 11).
Despite investing a portion of the
portfolio in Treasury
Bills, the long - term performance is excellent relative to the
Standard & Poor's 500 Index.
The original Energy
Bill passed in the House by a margin of 235 - 181 had called for a national Renewable
Portfolio Standard (RPS) that would require Investor Owned Utilities to produce 15 % of their electricity from Renewable Sources by 2020.
In 2002, the California legislature approved Senate
Bill 1078, which created the state's renewable
portfolio standard (RPS), one of the most ambitious of its kind in the country.
Illinois passed a
bill to fix the state's broken renewable energy mandate, and at the end of the year Ohio Governor Kasich (R) vetoed an effort to freeze his state's renewable
portfolio standard.
While many of the speakers at the National Clean Energy Summit in Las Vegas on Monday advocated regulation that already has some sort of legs in Congress, like putting a price on carbon and a national renewable
portfolio standard, former President
Bill Clinton suggested several alternative ideas that he said could help push clean power and energy efficiency in the U.S..
Senator Brian Feldman and Delegate
Bill Frick of Montgomery County are lead sponsors of the legislation to expand Maryland's Renewable
Portfolio Standard (RPS).
But parallel reductions to the fuel factor and renewable
portfolio standard (RPS)- RAC will combine to keep customers» total
bills flat relative to current levels.
Connecticut's governor has put forward a
bill to extend the state's Renewables
Portfolio Standard, but also to replace net metering with a system where customers with solar are paid for energy and RECs under a 20 - year contract.
* Planned, high cost «wind farms» would not be built if a large share of the cost were not being shifted to (and hidden in
bills paid by) taxpayers and electric customers via generous federal tax shelters and the Texas «Renewable
Portfolio Standard.»
The planned «wind farms» would not be built if a large share of the cost was not being shifted to (and hidden in
bills paid by) taxpayers and electric customers as a result of federal tax shelters and the Texas «Renewable
Portfolio Standard»
The planned «wind farms» would not be built if a large share of the cost were not being shifted to (and hidden in
bills paid by) taxpayers and electric customers as a result of federal tax shelters and the Texas «Renewable
Portfolio Standard.»
The
bill and its Senate companion (SB 338) echo Arizona's Clean Peak
Standard (CPS), a proposal introduced last year by the state consumer advocate that would amend the state's renewable portfolio standard to require utilities to obtain a specific portion of their peak demand generation from «clean peak resources
Standard (CPS), a proposal introduced last year by the state consumer advocate that would amend the state's renewable
portfolio standard to require utilities to obtain a specific portion of their peak demand generation from «clean peak resources
standard to require utilities to obtain a specific portion of their peak demand generation from «clean peak resources.»
Utility and fossil fuel - funded front groups are peddling disinformation to attack Ohio's Alternative Energy
Portfolio Standard (AEPS) and Energy Efficiency Resource
Standard (EERS) that should not be considered credible evidence as legislators debate a
bill to freeze the pro-clean technology laws.
The version of House
Bill 760 that passed the House and is now in the Senate freezes North Carolina's Renewable Energy and Energy Efficiency
Portfolio Standard (REPS) at 6 % by eliminating future planned increases to 10 % and 12.5 %, allows energy efficiency to meet 50 % of a utility's REPS requirement instead of 25 %, and decreases the residential cost cap from $ 34 to $ 12 per year.
On Monday, the California Legislature will vote on a
bill to raise California's Renewable
Portfolio Standard, potentially requiring 33 percent of electricity generated by the state's utilities to come from renewable resources by 2020.
In particular, they have examined the implications of a 15 percent renewable
portfolio standard (RPS) by 2020, as included in HR3221, the House Energy
Bill.
Clean energy policies, like the Renewable Energy and Energy Efficiency
Portfolio Standard (REPS), make up less than $ 1 on most customers» average $ 100 + monthly
bill.
* The «Losers» include: * Electricity consumers who are forced to bear higher costs of electricity when the use of wind energy and other renewables is mandated by a state - imposed «Renewable
Portfolio Standard» or who must pay «public benefits charges» (which is really just another tax added to taxpayer utility
bills) imposed on electricity use.
Among the
bills that failed were the Clean Jobs
Bill (CJB)(HB 2607 / SB1485)-- a proposal that would raise efficiency standards and the state RPS — and a bill that would establish a separate clean energy portfolio standard aimed at providing extra income for Exelon's Illinois nuclear plants (HB 32
Bill (CJB)(HB 2607 / SB1485)-- a proposal that would raise efficiency
standards and the state RPS — and a
bill that would establish a separate clean energy portfolio standard aimed at providing extra income for Exelon's Illinois nuclear plants (HB 32
bill that would establish a separate clean energy
portfolio standard aimed at providing extra income for Exelon's Illinois nuclear plants (HB 3293).
Lawmakers also passed
bills to modify the state's renewable
portfolio standards and for support of a pilot offshore wind farm.
New Jersey's Assembly and Senate are both poised to vote on controversial
bills that seek to subsidize the state's nuclear power plants, modify the renewables
portfolio standard, and support a pilot offshore wind farm.
Horner testified before the Kansas legislature on February 12 to encourage the false notion that the renewable energy
portfolio standard is going to make consumer electricity
bills skyrocket (again, there is no correlation between state RPS laws and electricity prices).
The Ohio House of Representatives just debated and passed another
bill to rollback the state's renewable energy
portfolio standard.
The
bill also includes changes to the state's renewable
portfolio standard intended to boost wind and solar development.
The
bill would have raised the state's Renewable Energy
Portfolio Standard (RPS) to 50 % renewable energy by 2030.
Portland, Oregon, March 11, 2016 — Oregon Gov. Kate Brown advanced the state's Renewable
Portfolio Standard (RPS) to 50 percent renewable energy by 2040 by signing Senate
Bill 1547 into law today.