By Steve Haner,
Virginiaโs return to the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (RGGI) will produce such an explosion of new tax revenue and will cause such major increases in consumer electricity costs, a political feeding frenzy is beginning to erupt over the money.ย
A legislative study panel heavily controlled by Democrats who voted forย Virginiaโs return toย RGGI decided earlier this week to consider finding a way toย rebateย the money back to energy consumers.ย ย ย This came after Dominion Energy Virginia, the company most vulnerable to RGGI, asked toย raise electricity pricesย by more than 7 percentย to recover RGGI expenses.ย ย ย
The same Democrats and their leader Governor Abigail Spanberger assured voters thatย returning toย RGGI would not increase electricity costs and would instead lower them.ย ย The only way toย meet that false promiseย now is to give all the money back.ย ย
To really make a dent in the rising electricity costs, the legislatureย mustย rebateย toย homeownersย moreย moneyย than the RGGI taxesย willย add to residential bills.ย ย Peopleย will onlyย come outย even orย ahead if the state also takes the RGGI revenuesย from commercial and industrial usersย andย transfers those dollars to residential users, too.ย ย ย
That is because the money the utilities pay for carbon allowances, the carbon tax, is only one way that being in RGGI raises Virginia electric bills.ย ย Being in RGGI also drives down the operating tempo of Virginia generation usingย coal orย natural gas, causing the state to import more power from other states in the PJM Interconnection market which are not in RGGI.ย Ratepayers are covering the capital costs of plants which are idle more often than without RGGI.ย














