Test Drive Our New Site! We have some improvements in the works that we're excited for you to experience. Click here to try our new, faster, mobile friendly beta site. We will be maintaining our current version of the site thru the end of 2024, so you can switch back as our improvements continue.
Legislation Quick Search
10/03/2024 09:50 AM
Pennsylvania House of Representatives
https://www.legis.state.pa.us/cfdocs/Legis/CSM/showMemoPublic.cfm?chamber=H&SPick=20210&cosponId=35030
Share:
Home / House Co-Sponsorship Memoranda

House Co-Sponsorship Memoranda

Subscribe to PaLegis Notifications
NEW!

Subscribe to receive notifications of new Co-Sponsorship Memos circulated

By Member | By Date | Keyword Search


House of Representatives
Session of 2021 - 2022 Regular Session

MEMORANDUM

Posted: March 11, 2021 10:09 AM
From: Representative Keith Gillespie
To: All House members
Subject: Waste-To-Energy Facility Surplus Electricity Sales (former 695)
 
I plan to introduce legislation that would amend the Municipal Authority Section of Title 53 (Municipalities Generally) of the Pennsylvania Consolidated Statutes to enable waste-to-energy facilities in public/private partnerships with local communities and authorities to sell the surplus electricity they generate to their local electric utility at the default service commodity rate (price to compare).

Requiring the purchase of electricity from these facilities by local utilities at this rate would not increase costs to electricity customers; it is the same price the distribution companies are paying other generators in their regions.

This change would provide much needed financial support to these public/private partnerships that were significantly affected by changes in public policy since they were originally built.

In Pennsylvania, there are six waste-to-energy facilities, serving 2.9 million Pennsylvanians, which safely dispose of about 36 percent of the municipal waste in the state. They are located in the following counties across the Commonwealth, Bucks, Dauphin, Lancaster, Montgomery, York, and Delaware.

These facilities are all public/private partnerships serving municipal authorities and local communities to provide a vital service to the public. To be economically viable, they depend primarily on revenue from waste tipping fees, the sale of electricity and to a lesser extent from the sale of recyclable metals to be economically viable.

The original development of these facilities was stimulated by a federal policy requiring local utilities to enter into long term power purchase agreements for the electricity they generated at these small power plants. Unfortunately, this policy no longer requires these agreements and leaves these facilities struggling financially. And, the electricity they generate is only a tiny portion of the electricity generated in Pennsylvania.

Please join me in co-sponsoring this legislation, which I believe will prove to be beneficial to waste-to-energy facilities, as well as numerous public/private partnerships serving municipal authorities and local communities, and ultimately, residents of the Commonwealth.
 




Introduced as HB1189