Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative Too Expensive For Virginia, According To Youngkin Report
5:06 PM
Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative Too Expensive For Virginia, According To Youngkin Report
Jacob Fenston |
https://twitter.com/JacobFenston
For less than the price of a small, monthly Starbucks latte for each residential power customer, the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative promises to cut emissions from power plants by 30% over the next decade, putting the Commonwealth on track to meet its zero-carbon goals by 2045. Additionally, the proceeds go towards mitigating flooding and other impacts of global warming in Virginia.
That might sound like a bargain, if youre looking to invest in a planet with a livable and sustainable future for all, in the words of
the U.N. climate panel. ... But
a new report from Gov. Glenn Youngkins Department of Environmental Quality argues that the cost to consumers isnt worth it. The report also questions whether RGGI (pronounced Reggie) will really lead to reduced emissions, dismissing as insignificant the reductions already made in the first year of Virginias participation in the program.
Participation in RGGI is in effect a direct carbon tax on all households and businesses, reads the report, which Youngkin requested in a
first-day-in-office executive order. RGGI is a bad construct that taxes consumers without providing incentives for change to the electricity producers.
RGGI was created more than a decade ago as a collaborative effort among East Coast states to cut carbon pollution from power plants in the region. After years of back-and-forth among lawmakers,
Virginia joined the initiative on Jan. 1, 2021. ... In participating RGGI states, emissions have
dropped by 50% since the programs inception, according to program administrators twice the national rate of emissions reductions.
Emissions from power plants in Virginia have remained flat over the past decade, even as coal is phased out for cleaner sources.
Virginia DEQ
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