© 2024 WBGO
Discover Jazz...Anywhere, Anytime, on Any Device.
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Lamakers Consider Requiring NJ To Rejoin RGGI

Supporters and opponents testify at Senate Committee hearing

In 2011, then Governor Christie pulled New Jersey out of the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative and vetoed three attempts by the legislature to rejoin it.

Lawmakers expect Governor Phil Murphy will be receptive to their latest effort to get back in.

Supporters and opponents for a measure that would require the state to be part of RGGI testified at a Senate Environment Committee hearing.

Environment New Jersey director Doug O’Malley says the RGGI program improves air quality and reduces pollution that contributes to climate change.

“RGGI is a program that helps us to start the fight the climate battle. It’s not a silver bullet but it’s a great start. If we don’t act and we don’t encourage other states to act, we’re going to see an economic catastrophe in our coastal communities.”

Sarah Bluhm with the New Jersey Business and Industry Association says a return to RGGI would increase costs by imposing a surcharge on carbon-generated electricity.

“We have cleaned up our power plants and we have the lowest emissions. Joining RGGI is not going to change emissions coming in from Pennsylvania or Ohio. But what it will impact is the cost of generation in New Jersey.”

New Jersey Sierra Club director Jeff Tittel says resident’s utility bills would only go up about $5 a year.

“It’s a small fee on that carbon where the money goes to do good things.”

Senate Environment Committee chairman Bob Smith believes the surcharge would provide 60-to-80 million dollars a year that could be used to encourage more use of zero-emission vehicles and other initiatives to combat climate change.

He says the surcharge also makes it’s easier for nuclear to compete with natural gas and that could have an impact on legislation lawmakers will reconsider that would give Public Service Enterprise Group a subsidy to ensure its nuclear plants in South Jersey stay open.

“If the competition with the fracked gas is that much more competitive, the need for the subsidy diminishes. And so it may mean a more modest subsidy or maybe no subsidy at all.”