By Steve Haner

The states that belong to RGGI? Or the states that voted for Kamala Harris? Works both ways.

Grapevines sequester carbon dioxide, so Virginia’s climate alarmism activists are pulling corks without guilt today, after learning that a Virginia circuit court judge will order Virginia to rejoin the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (RGGI).

During the three years Virginia was part of the multi-state cap and tax compact, Virginia collected $827 million from electric power producers seeking permits to emit CO2. The largest of the payers in the state, Dominion Energy Virginia, simply passed its cost along to consumers dollar for dollar right on monthly bills. 

The final order from the judge has not been produced, so the details of any relief he will order are not settled. But on Monday Floyd County Judge C. Randall Lowe circulated a letter stating he agreed with RGGI’s boosters that only the Virginia General Assembly could pull the state out of the compact, based on his reading of 2020 legislation.

It was the position of Republican Governor Glenn Youngkin and Republican Attorney General Jason Miyares that the statute was permissive but not mandatory. Both issued brief statements today disagreeing with the judge’s order and promising to pursue an appeal to the Supreme Court of Virginia. Presumably they will also ask the upper court to stay the order, but that motion could be denied.

It was always likely that whoever prevailed at the circuit court level would face an appeal. And it is still true that the real decision on RGGI’s future in Virginia will hinge on the 2025 election, the next governor, and future General Assembly. If this ruling stands and Virginia is in RGGI when the new governor arrives, only a Republican trifecta would overturn it again.

Getting out of RGGI was a promise the Governor made at the beginning of his term in 2021, but it took two years to accomplish. At the Governor’s urging, the Air Pollution Control Board voted in the summer of 2023 to exit RGGI at the end of the current contract period in December 2023.

The judge has stated that the vote to repeal was void, illegal, without effect. That means it was illegal for the state not to force its electricity generators to buy and expend RGGI credits for this year. He asked lawyers for the plaintiffs in the case to draft the final order that outlines what happens next. In theory, that could include imposition and collection of those lost 2024 tax revenues, probably about $400-500 million.

Why not? The case was brought by a group of energy conservation contractors who were being paid to renovate homes for energy efficiency. They argued (correctly) that the decision to exit RGGI ended their meal ticket and would reduce their activity and revenue. Loss of money is the damage they suffered, and money is a logical part of any relief. That RGGI was hardly the only source of revenue for their programs didn’t seem to matter.

The judge just ruled they were illegally deprived of that money. On the other side of the RGGI ledger, localities and contractors doing work to prevent or mitigate flooding also lost work and money. They got the other half of the RGGI tax dollars collected between 2021 and 2023. While they did not join the case, if financial reparations are ordered, they will get in line.

RGGI’s agreement between the states runs on a three-year cycle, and Virginia missed the start of the 2024-2026 contract period. The other RGGI states will have a say in whether, when and under what conditions Virginia rejoins the confederation. Virginia getting back in will also have an impact on the price of allowances, the carbon tax.

As reported by Bacon’s Rebellion before, in the months since Virginia exited the compact, the price for each ton of carbon emissions has risen dramatically. A new record could be set at the final 2024 auction in early December.  

In 2023 Dominion was charging each of its customers, residential and business, the same $4.43 per 1,000 kilowatt hours. A good guess would be that had the tax stayed on bills for 2024, it would have risen to at least $5 or more per 1,000 kwh for this year. Dominion puts that 1000 kwh amount forward as a “typical” bill but many, many of its residential customers use far more than that per month, and thus would see far more than a $5-6 increase in their power bills. Often those large bills accrue to fairly small, but poorly insulated, dwellings with lousy heating systems. 

As to what the tax would be for 2025, given the rising carbon price in the auctions, perhaps Dominion has an estimate if it wants to share that. Could it hit $7-8 per 1,000 kwh? In Virginia’s first auction in 2021 the carbon tax was $7.60 per ton and in the most recent auction – less than four years later – it had risen 240% to $25.75 per ton. 

None of the price projections in Dominion’s most recent integrated resource plan assumed the imposition of RGGI carbon tax on its hydrocarbon generation fleet in the next 15 years. And in the case of that IRP, it would be its growing hydrocarbon generation fleet, given that the plan adds 6 gigawatts of natural gas generation. 

The old saying around Richmond is that a statute means what a judge says it means. The first of what could be several judges has spoken.

 


ADVERTISEMENT

(comments below)




Comments


Comments

5 responses to “RGGI is Back. Prepare to Pay.”

  1. DJRippert Avatar

    Sorry to be daft but … if the RGGI had stayed in place all along, the state would have charged Dominion and the othe power producers who, in turn, would have passed the costs onto consumers.

    What was the state supposed to do with that windfall?

    Was the money earmarked for certain things or just dumped into the General Fund?

  2. Dick Hall-Sizemore Avatar
    Dick Hall-Sizemore

    From the point of view of statutory interpretation, this is a fascinating case. The judge based his decision on a 1917 case in which the Virginia Supreme Court said that the language in a statute does not necessarily mean what it seems to mean.

    If a statute โ€œauthorizedโ€ a public official to take a certain action, most people, including me, would interpret that as allowing the public official to act, but not requiring him or her to do so. In the 1917 case of Supervisors of Botetourt County v Cahoon, 121 Va. 768 , the Virginia Supreme Court said otherwise. The court said that where there is a โ€œduty coupled with the powerโ€ฆusually the power must be exercised, though conferred in merely permissive language.โ€ Furthermore, โ€œwhenever the public interest or individual rights call for [the exercise of governmental power] the language used, though permissive in form, is in fact preemptory. What they are empowered to doโ€ฆthe law requires shall be done.โ€

    Based on this precedent, the judge ruled that the statutory language that โ€œauthorizedโ€ the director of the Dept. of Environmental Quality to establish โ€œan auction program to sell allowances into a market-based trading program consistent with the RGGI program and this articleโ€ requires the director to do so (Sec. 10.1-1330). Therefore, because the statute requires that its provisions be included in the regulations of the Air Pollution Board, the only way that those regulations and the stateโ€™s participation in RGGI can be repealed is by repeal of the statute by the General Assembly.

    How the Virginia Supreme Court handles this case will be most interesting.

  3. energyNOW_Fan Avatar
    energyNOW_Fan

    I also noticed the RGGI states are the vote-for-Harris states, and also they are mostly the CARB states that are matching California auto restrictions. NH is not currently CARB but they were. Virginia thought about it. Mostly true out West also whereas CA, WA, OR are CARB, NM was CARB at one point I think.

  4. Nancy Naive Avatar
    Nancy Naive

    Japan finds massive rare metals deposit worth $26,290,800,000

    A survey by the University of Tokyo and The Nippon Foundation from April 24 to June 9 has uncovered a vast deposit of rare earth metals worth an estimated $26.3 billion near Minami-Torishima Island. Located 3.5 miles (5,700 meters) below sea level, the deposit contains approximately 230 million tons of manganese nodules rich in cobalt and nickel, crucial components for electric vehicle batteries and other technologies.

    Fun fact, in the middle of the nodules are sharkโ€™s teeth.

Leave a Reply


ADVERTISEMENT