Why a Renewable Portfolio Standard for the Railbelt?
The most pressing energy challenge we face today in Alaska’s Railbelt region, from Fairbanks down to Homer, is the Cook Inlet Gas Crisis. Currently, the Railbelt region generates 80 percent of its electricity and most of its heat by burning natural gas that is produced from the Cook Inlet. In 2022, Hilcorp, the private company responsible for producing most of that gas, notified Railbelt utilities and consumers that they cannot guarantee their ability to meet the utilities’ ongoing gas needs after current supply contracts expire. This is because the Inlet’s relatively inexpensive and accessible gas is nearly depleted. Unfortunately, Hilcorp’s announcement aligns with the Alaska Department of Natural Resources’s projections that annual supplies of economically recoverable Cook Inlet gas are likely to fall short of the region’s annual demand as soon as 2027.
This realization has forced Southcentral Alaska’s electric and heating utilities to consider alternative sources of energy, and it has led decision makers to propose several competing visions for meeting future energy needs in the Railbelt. Each comes with its own implications for the affordability of heating, electricity, and other goods and services in communities throughout the state.
The urgency to act is high. In this environment, our elected leaders must champion energy policy solutions that foster alignment around a shared vision for our state’s energy future and promote action towards securing reliable, low-cost and stably-priced energy for ratepayers at the speed necessary to fill impending supply gaps. For years, REAP has advocated for the establishment of a Renewable Portfolio Standard (RPS) in the Railbelt that will require the region’s electric utilities to generate an increasing percentage of their electricity from renewables. Setting such a Standard would promote the rapid development of the region’s local renewable energy resources in a way that keeps local energy costs low and stable, stimulates in-state economic development and job creation, and promotes Alaska’s energy security by minimizing our dependence on increasingly expensive and volatile priced finite fossil fuels. In this pivotal moment for energy in the Railbelt, REAP’s primary goal for this Legislative session is getting RPS legislation re-introduced and passed before Railbelt utilities sign contracts for alternative energy supplies that could preclude us from realizing the myriad benefits an RPS could bring to the region and the state as a whole.