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The 21st Century: Opportunities for Clean
Energy in Indiana
Page Three
Deploying Renewable Resources and Efficient Generation
Indiana has the opportunity to develop wind, biomass and solar
power, which provide environmental benefits, improved reliability,
and economic development in the growing renewable energy business
sector. Furthermore, Indiana can develop new efficient CHP, using
natural gas. Together, the opportunities shown in Figure 3 could
provide eight percent of Indiana's generation capacity by 2010,
and 23 percent by 2020.
The Clean Energy Development Plan's benefits can be achieved at
a modest cost, as energy efficiency savings offset the cost of new
generation. In Indiana, it would increase overall electricity costs
by about 1.5 percent in 2010, and 3.4 percent in 2020.
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21st Century Policies for Model Technologies
Smart policies can overcome the
many market and regulatory barriers that energy efficiency and renewable
resources face. To achieve the Clean Energy Development Plan in Indiana,
the key policy actions are to:
- Establish an Energy Efficiency Investment Fund to support energy
efficiency initiatives with a non-bypassable charge of 0.3¢/kWh.
- Manage the Indiana Energy Efficiency Investment Fund by an independent
third-party administrator overseen by a board composed of regulators,
state energy offices, and consumer, efficiency and environmental
advocates.
- Evaluate and update Indiana's efficiency standards and building codes. Establish or reinforce monitoring and enforcement practices.
- Establish an Indiana Renewables Portfolio Standard that requires all retail electricity sellers to provide eight percent of their electricity from renewable resources by 2010, and 20 percent by 2020.
- Establish a Renewable Energy Investment Fund to support emerging renewable technologies, with a non-bypassable charge of at least 0.1¢/kWh.
- Ensure that transmission pricing policies and power pooling practices treat renewable resources fairly and account for their intermittent nature, remote locations, or smaller scale.
- Remove barriers to clean distributed generation by: (1) expanding Indianapolis Power and Light's net metering policy to include wind, and to be offered by utilities statewide; (2) establishing standard business and interconnection terms; (3) establishing uniform safety and power quality standards to facilitate safe and economic interconnection to the electricity system; and (4) applying clean air standards to small distributed generation sources, thereby promoting clean power technologies, and discouraging highly polluting diesel generators.
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