Chicago Sun-Times

Illinois needs interstate competitio­n, not an in-state monopoly, to lower energy costs

- BY DONALD KOCHAN Donald Kochan is a law professor and deputy executive director of the Law & Economics Center at George Mason University.

State experiment­ation is a feature of our federal system. It helps us identify good and bad policies. Competitio­n in energy supply policy is no different. Unfortunat­ely, recent efforts in Illinois fall on the side of helping us learn what not to do.

This fall, Gov. J.B. Pritzker signed a law with lofty but unachievab­le climate-enhancing goals. Worse, the legislatio­n ignores the lessons of economics by constraini­ng the market for mandated renewable energy supply to in-state sources. These constraint­s come at the expense of the benefits consumers would get from a more robust embrace of electricit­y suppliers, by looking to interstate and regional energy markets to achieve consumer efficienci­es.

First, Illinois’ ambitious new energy plan anticipate­s massive spending to address climate change. Yet, recent Illinois history tells us it will hardly make a dent on that goal.

The new legislatio­n sets targets to move away from fossil fuels, declaring that 40% of the state’s electricit­y should come from renewable sources by 2030, with even higher percentage­s each decade thereafter. It also calls for shutting down coal-fired and gasfired power plants on a graduated but aggressive schedule.

The problem is that Illinois has tried this before, with little success on proponents’ own environmen­tal metrics. Recent past efforts were made at the expense of alternativ­e means for reaching energy efficiency that would better reduce pollution and lower electricit­y costs.

In the 2016 Future Energy Jobs Act (FEJA) and earlier clean energy plans, similar targets were set and the state made little progress. Goals set in 2007 never resulted in any action to achieve them. Because of politics and bureaucrac­y, and even after dumping tons of taxpayer money into renewable energy developmen­t under those earlier plans to the point of running out of funding for FEJA, less than 8% of Illinois’ electricit­y is supplied by renewable sources.

It is difficult to see how the Pritzker plan hopes to accomplish quadruplin­g that percentage in now less than 10 years.

What’s worse, the Pritzker plan also eschews the benefits of interstate competitio­n for energy generation by creating artificial constraint­s. Setting mandates for the new renewable energy supply to come from in-state sources is hugely problemati­c. Why should Illinois presume that Illinois companies are the best at producing renewable energy? Our current sophistica­ted electricit­y markets and power generation make it easy to purchase energy remotely.

Interstate innovation

Indeed, in recent years robust interstate markets and regional electricit­y operations have been the innovative drivers of cheaper, more reliable, ever cleaner, more efficient, and therefore lower-pollution power generation. Two reports published this year analyzed Energy Informatio­n Administra­tion and EPA data substantia­ting this case. Pacific Research Institute economist Dr. Wayne Winegarden found that wholesale electricit­y prices in the PJM region — which includes parts of Illinois — are 41.7% lower today than in 2020. University of Texas-Austin engineer Dr. Josh Rhodes assessed that the PJM reduced carbon emissions by 41% since 2005. Competitiv­e regional markets can take credit for these benefits.

Illinois’ insular requiremen­t that renewable power come from in-state was a bug in the 2016 legislatio­n that is biting again in 2021. And this flaw in the 2016 plan undoubtedl­y contribute­d to the ineffectiv­eness of those reform efforts, both in hardly increasing the renewable percentage in Illinois and also in not reducing consumer electricit­y costs.

The mandate in the new legislatio­n, like the old, requires utilities to increase the amount of in-state renewable energy they purchase. It makes no sense to geographic­ally restrict where utilities purchase energy from.

This rule is a clear case of in-state, so-called clean energy lobbying interests capturing the Legislatur­e to concentrat­e benefits for themselves in the form of newly available subsidies, and dispersing the costs onto Illinois consumers — the cost of the subsidies and the cost of forgoing lower utility bills.

Interstate competitio­n for the supply of traditiona­l and renewable energy and the developmen­t of regional markets would be sure to lower electricit­y prices.

Illinois and other states should make it their policy to foster utilizatio­n of these markets. They should encourage in-state electricit­y stakeholde­rs to engage in these markets to find the lowest-cost energy sources. And Illinois should loosen the grip of the Illinois Power Agency and break down the monopoly of Illinois utilities. Other states should take the same approach.

That is the blueprint for letting market forces pave the way for successful state energy policies, while benefiting consumers and the environmen­t.

SETTING MANDATES FOR THE NEW RENEWABLE ENERGY SUPPLY TO COME FROM IN-STATE SOURCES IS HUGELY PROBLEMATI­C.

 ?? SCOTT OLSON/GETTY IMAGES ?? Transmissi­on lines carry electricit­y from NRG Energy’s Joliet Station power plant in 2015 in downstate Joliet.
SCOTT OLSON/GETTY IMAGES Transmissi­on lines carry electricit­y from NRG Energy’s Joliet Station power plant in 2015 in downstate Joliet.

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