Reconciliation and a Clean
Electricity Standard
The Biden Administration and Democratic members of Congress have supported
including a clean electricity standard (CES) in the upcoming reconciliation
bill. A CES is an alternative to pricing carbon dioxide through a tax or
cap-and-trade program and focuses on reducing greenhouse gas emissions produced
during electricity generation by establishing targets. In principle, it is a
technology-agnostic approach. In practice, however, it pushes particular
technologies out of the market.
The details of the CES are still being developed, but recent legislation may
provide insight into how the CES could operate. In May, Senator Tina Smith and
Representative Ben Ray Luján introduced the Clean Energy Standard Act of 2019
(CESA) and in January 2020, the House Energy and Commerce Committee released a
discussion draft of the Climate Leadership and Environmental Action for our
Nation’s (CLEAN) Future Act. Both bills increase the clean energy target
annually until 2050 in order to phase out emissions. Both bills also create a
credit system where clean sources of electricity as determined by a benchmark,
carbon dioxide emitted per kilowatt-hour, receive credits. These credits may be
transferred, sold, and auctioned so utilities that fail to meet targets can
procure credits from others.
The bills’ benchmarks vary, and while the CLEAN Future Act allows natural
gas-fired generators to receive partial credits, CESA does not. Under both
bills, these generators would be expected to install carbon capture technology
to continue meeting increasing targets for clean electricity generation. Both bills
go beyond considering the emissions resulting from generation and include
upstream emissions for natural gas-fired generators. Natural gas, a greenhouse
gas, that is leaked upstream of a generator during transportation is to be
included among its emissions. The CLEAN Future Act also calls for newly
constructed hydropower generators to account for the emissions associated with
the facility’s construction despite producing clean electricity. These
additional provisions demonstrate not only the CES’s inability to fully address
the issue of emissions but also the slippery slope of expanding the program to
include other markets.
A majority of states have adopted clean energy, electricity, or renewable
portfolio standards, leaving legislators with plenty of examples to consider.
As they weigh their options, legislators should consider if they are
effectively addressing the problem at hand, economy-wide emissions reductions,
and at what cost.
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Monday, August 2, 2021
Reconciliation and a Clean Electricity Standard
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