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Energy Efficiency in the American Clean Energy and Security Act of 2009: Impacts of Current Provisions and Opportunities to Enhance the Legislation
2009-09-09
Energy-Efficiency-Report.pdf
News Release
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Executive Summary
In June 2009,
the House of Representatives passed the American Clean Energy and
Security Act of 2009 (ACES). This climate and energy legislation
included a number of provisions intended to help the U.S. reduce energy
use through various energy efficiency measures. Foremost, the bill
requires utilities to obtain 20% of their energy through a combination
of renewable energy and energy efficiency by 2020, with energy
efficiency allowed to meet up to 8% of the 20% goal. Other energy
efficiency provisions are designed to improve energy savings associated
with improved building codes and retrofits, and appliance standards.
The bill also facilitates energy savings within the transportation and
industrial sectors. Additionally, the cap and trade provisions of the
bill dictate how carbon allowances will be apportioned.
These
energy efficiency provisions have largely been overlooked in recent
discussions and analyses of ACES. When analyses ignore the readily
available benefits from energy efficiency they distort how energy and
climate legislation, such as ACES, could affect American consumers and
the U.S. economy. Experience in the states that have energy efficiency
programs demonstrates that efficiency is the quickest and most
effective way to reduce energy usage and address climate change. This
analysis evaluates the energy efficiency provisions in ACES and finds
that, in 2030, such provisions can:
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save American consumers an average of $486 per household;
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create over 600,000 jobs;
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reduce carbon dioxide emissions by over 500 million metric tons (MMT); and
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avoid the need for 419 medium-sized coal-fired power plants.
This
analysis also demonstrates that improving the energy efficiency
provisions in ACES by including a stand-alone energy efficiency
resource standard (EERS) requiring 10% cumulative savings by 2020
(instead of the ACES Combined Efficiency and Renewable Electricity
Standard, or CERES), directing one-third of electric local distribution
company allowances to energy efficiency, and sustaining State Energy
and Environmental Development funding at 9.5% of allowance revenue
through 2030 provides significant additional consumer savings and
carbon reductions and creates more jobs than the original bill. As the
Senate begins to consider climate and energy legislation, it has the
opportunity to incorporate these suggested improvements. This analysis
estimates that, by 2030, including these improvements can:
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save American consumers an average of $832 per household;
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create over 1 million jobs;
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reduce carbon dioxide emissions by over 900 MMT; and
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avoid the need for 512 medium-sized coal-fired power plants.
This
report discusses these national-level impacts, breaks them down on a
state-by-state basis, and describes the methodology for how these
values were determined.
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