The pending conference report on adopting a new Virginia state budget includes a process to rebate the cost of the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiativeโs carbon tax, but only to smaller customers and only if their utility is charging them for it directly.
Larger energy users, especially the largest industrial, commercial and data customers, will still pay in full.ย The full economic impact of the tax on electricity prices in general will be unchanged, and RGGI raises energy costs across the board in Virginia.ย
The complicated rebate process outlined in one paragraph in the budget section on the Department of Environmental Quality would apply only if the utility paying the RGGI carbon tax to run its hydrocarbon power plants then collects the tax from it customers through a special charge on monthly bills.
This might apply only to customers of Dominion Energy Virginia, which has applied to the State Corporation Commission for a 1.3 cent per kilowatt hour โrate adjustment clauseโ on all its customers.ย Appalachian Power Company, serving parts of Western Virginia, pays very little RGGI tax on just one in-state plant and has not used a RGGI rider to collect the funds from customers. Maybe now it will do so.ย There is no provision for rebates to rural cooperative customers, and again, the RGGI cost has not been segregated on their bills as it is buried in their purchased power costs.
This is another admission by the Democrats so fond of this carbon tax that it ultimately is paid by customers, not the power companies.ย When the tax was $5-6 per ton of carbon emissions, it was harder to see, but now at $35 per ton it is impossible to miss.ย











