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“EERE inappropriately colluded with NRDC, and some in the electric industry, to its predetermined and self-serving conclusions. Clearly, EERE’s mission is to promote energy efficiency and renewable energy. This fact makes them biased, consciously or unconsciously. They are an inappropriate custodian of such metrics.”
“Originally limited to technology development, assessment and promotion, some offices in DOE are now using the cudgel of regulation and ‘guidance’ to ensure their favored technologies ‘win’ regardless of the national interest.”
“Taking the form of an RFI, the proposed change is both procedurally and technically deficient, resulting in regulatory guidance that is discriminatory and lacks basis.”
This is Part 1 in a two-part article about an abuse of the Request for Information (RFI) process at the Department of Energy’s Office of Energy Efficient and Renewable Energy (EERE).
The issue involves revising a decades-old accounting convention for site-versus-source energy calculations. With the subsidy- and mandate-driven growth in various renewables for electricity, EERE determined that the existing accounting did not fully capture renewables.
Taking the form of an RFI, the proposed change is both procedurally and technically deficient, resulting in regulatory guidance that is discriminatory and lacks basis. Today we cover procedural deficiencies; Part 2 tomorrow will cover technical deficiencies.
DOE’s RFI: Accounting Conventions for Non-Combustible Renewable Energy Use
On March 16, 2016, EERE published a Request for Information (RFI) titled “Accounting Conventions for Non-Combustible Renewable Energy Use” in the Federal Register (81 FR 7778). At the time of its publication, the RFI was not assigned a docket number. Consequently, there was no repository for comments received from the public. Well after the comment period ended, a docket number was assigned (EERE-2016-OT-0010-0001) and populated with some, but not all, of the comments filed via regulations.gov.[1]
In October 2016, EERE published a technical report titled “Accounting Methodology for Source Energy of Non-Combustible Renewable Electricity Generation.” The Technical Report reveals a “bait and switch” strategy that began by EERE’s soliciting public review and comment on various methodologies for accounting for renewable electricity source energy efficiencies. However, based on subsequent articles published on the Natural Resource Defense Council’s (NRDC) “expert blog” website and E&E Daily’s Energywire, the outcome was apparently predetermined to be “captured energy.” Key excerpts of these articles that lead to this conclusion are provided below:
EERE inappropriately colluded with NRDC, and some in the electric industry, to its predetermined and self-serving conclusions. Clearly, EERE’s mission is to promote energy efficiency and renewable energy. This fact makes them biased, consciously or unconsciously. They are an inappropriate custodian of such metrics. This is a result of mission creep over the years.
Originally limited to technology development, assessment and promotion, some offices in DOE are now using the cudgel of regulation and “guidance” to ensure their favored technologies “win” regardless of the national interest.
[1] https://www.regulations.gov/document?D=EERE-2016-OT-0010-0006
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Mark Krebs, an engineer by training, has been involved with energy efficiency design and program evaluation for more than thirty years. He has served as an expert witness in dozens of energy-efficiency filings, which he summarized in a Public Utilities Fortnightly article, “It’s a War Out There: A Gas Man Questions Electric Efficiency”(December 1996).
Tom Tanton, Director with Energy and Environmental Legal Institute, has worked 40 years in energy and environmental policy, focused on enabling technology choice and economic development. Mr. Tanton has testified to numerous state Legislatures and Congress as an expert on energy policy. He formerly served as Principal Policy Advisor at the California Energy Commission.
The post Federal Energy Efficiency Mandates: DOE’s End Run vs. the Public Interest (Part I) appeared first on Master Resource.