Montpelier 5/21/2012
It is forcast to be Chance of Rain at 11:00 PM EDT on May 21, 2012
Chance of Rain
79°/57°

Run of Site Leaderboard

youtube

Shumlin signs renewable energy bill

For Immediate Release

May 25, 2011

Contact: Susan Allen

Gov. Shumlin signs renewable energy and efficiency bill

SOUTH BURLINGTON – As part of a celebratory commissioning of a major solar project in South Burlington, Gov. Peter Shumlin today signed into law a bill designed to expand renewable energy and efficiency projects in Vermont.

“There is a fiscal and environmental urgency for Vermont to move off fossil fuels and toward sustainable sources of power,” the Governor said at the bill signing ceremony, which was held at the Farm at South Village. The Village is a “new urbanist” sustainable community with a 150 kW net metered solar array to power an organic farming operation, wholesale production and refrigerated storage and distribution.

Also participating in the bill signing were representatives for Encore Redevelopment, which developed the Village project, Renewable Energy Vermont, Gardner’s Supply, Alteris Renewables and others. In addition, the secretaries of Agriculture and Commerce, as well as the Commissioner of Public Service, attended the event.

Among other measures, the new law will:

· Strengthen the Clean Energy Development Fund. This solar project benefited from both a grant and a low interest loan from the fund.

· Improve the net metering program. The bill makes it easier for Vermonters to group together to capture the benefits of clean energy with net metering and doubling the cap and size of allowed net meter systems.

· Requires Efficiency Vermont and the Department of Public Service to create an incentive for biomass heating systems.

* Expands efficiency measures by, for example, requiring each electric utility to put in a rate schedule for efficient street lighting for communities.
* Strengthen and update the PACE program – Vermont’s Property Assessed Clean Energy districts (PACE) Program, which allows homeowners to finance clean energy and efficiency over time – so that the upfront costs are less daunting and the payoff better realized.
* Move the CEDF under the purview of the Department of Public Service; provide bridge funding for CEDF programs though an innovative grant in-lieu of tax credit program that should cause almost $3million dollars to be invested into growing jobs in our green energy sector this year, and more.

Gov. Shumlin noted that the Department is coordinating a broad energy plan for the state that is due Oct. 15. That plan, he said, will likely spark more aggressive legislation for the coming session to move Vermont off fossil fuels.

“I very much hope and expect that we’ll have another signing ceremony next May for a bold and forward-looking piece of legislation moving Vermont to a clean, sustainable and secure energy future in a way that keeps us regionally competitive,” he said.

Leave a Reply

Comment policy

VTD requires that all commenters identify themselves by first and last name. You may wonder why we don't accept anonymous comments. The short answer is: We want to keep the discourse civil.

You might rightly ask, since most online newspapers accept anonymous posts from readers, what makes VTD so special?

The long answer is: Anonymous comments don't support our mission. We are a nonprofit news organization dedicated to enhancing democracy through in-depth journalism. Our role is to foster a civil online discourse, and one very simple and effective way to do that is to require commenters to identify themselves. This isn't a new idea, of course. This is the way newspapers have treated letters to the editor since time immemorial.

As a result of our comment policy, VTD has created a safe zone for readers who want to engage in a thoughtful discussion on a range of subjects. We hope you join the conversation.

Privacy policy

VTDigger.org does not share specific information about our readers with other entities. Email addresses we collect through our subscription list and comment submissions are kept private.

We use Google analytics to generate aggregated data regarding the size and geographic distribution of our readership. This information helps us gauge how many readers come to the website and what towns they live in. It does not include addresses or other identifying characteristics about our readers.

Donate Today

We're an independent nonprofit organization, your donation helps fund the digging, and, it's tax deductible.

Thanks for reporting an error with the story, "Shumlin signs renewable energy bill"