Food clashes with energy in Puerto Rico

From: POLITICO's Power Switch - Friday Feb 09,2024 10:24 pm
Presented by American Chemistry Council – Chemistry Creates America Competes: Your guide to the political forces shaping the energy transformation
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By Gloria Gonzalez and Rebekah Alvey

Presented by

American Chemistry Council – Chemistry Creates America Competes

Solar panels set up by Tesla Industries are seen at a hospital in Vieques, Puerto Rico.

A new Energy Department report says Puerto Rico can reach a 100 percent renewable energy target, but costs to fix its ailing power grid will weigh on residents. | Ricardo Arduengo/AFP via Getty Images

Puerto Rico’s efforts to get all its power from renewable energy got a boost this week from a Biden administration report showing the goal is achievable.

But battles are raging over plans to develop massive solar and wind projects on prime agricultural land — on an island where destructive hurricanes have heightened the uncertainty about its energy and food supplies.

The debate has at times pitted efforts to achieve two major goals in Puerto Rico against each other: the urgent need to shift away from the territory’s fossil-fuel-dominated but notoriously unreliable energy grid, and the desire to ramp up farming in a territory that imports more than 85 percent of its food. This is an expensive reality in Puerto Rico, where a substantial number of residents live below the poverty line.

“At the end of the day, food security and energy security are interlocked,” said Ismael Arciniegas Rueda, a senior economist at RAND who studies energy issues in Puerto Rico.

Hurricane Maria, which killed nearly 3,000 Puerto Ricans in 2017 and triggered blackouts lasting in parts of the territory for nearly a year, highlighted not just the trauma that an unstable energy grid can inflict on a population, but the food and water shortages that emerge in times of disasters in a territory so dependent on imports.

Puerto Rico took steps to try to tackle the energy challenges after Maria, passing a law in 2019 that mandates that the territory get 100 percent of its electricity from renewable resources by 2050. Puerto Rico is fully capable of achieving that target, according to a study released this week led by the Department of Energy’s National Renewable Energy Laboratory.

But Puerto Rico’s agriculture sector is declining, with both the number of farms and the amount of land in farms experiencing large decreases, according to U.S. Department of Agriculture data. And this was before Maria destroyed more than 80 percent of Puerto Rico’s crop value and caused $1.8 billion in infrastructure damage to the territory’s agricultural sector.

Fears are rising that more of the agricultural land that could be used to farm locally will be diverted to site large wind and solar projects that are tied to the territory’s unstable grid. Earthjustice is suing the Puerto Rican government on behalf of a coalition of community, environmental and other groups to prevent the siting of large renewable energy projects on agricultural and ecologically sensitive lands.   

DOE’s PR100 study examined the use of agricultural land for large projects and the exclusion of these lands, finding that 14 gigawatts could be available for energy development on non-agricultural lands.

“We have no need to impact agricultural land,” Maritere Padilla-Rodriguez, senior director for policy and advocacy for the Hispanic Federation, said during a panel discussion moderated by Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm in San Juan on Wednesday. “No need to sacrifice Puerto Rico’s goal for food security to achieve a 100 percent renewable energy transition.”

In a follow-up interview with POLITICO, Padilla-Rodriguez reflected on the fear that reigned after Maria as food supplies ran low. It’s one of the main reasons she insists that rooftop solar should get priority ahead of utility-scale renewable energy projects that are less resilient and could impact agricultural land.

“This isn’t just about transitioning to clean renewables,” she said. “This is about resiliency, energy justice and saving lives.”

 

It's Friday  thank you for tuning in to POLITICO's Power Switch. I'm your host, Gloria Gonzalez, with help from Rebekah Alvey. Power Switch is brought to you by the journalists behind E&E News and POLITICO Energy. Send your tips, comments, questions to ggonzalez@politico.com.

 

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A message from American Chemistry Council – Chemistry Creates America Competes:

President Biden: American chemistry is the backbone of innovation. It's time to address the regulatory overload stifling American chemistry. Chemistry powers our semiconductors, medical devices, and clean energy initiatives. But your administration’s avalanche of regulations is hampering America’s progress and competitiveness. American chemistry is more than an industry; it's our future. The Biden Administration must commit to smarter, growth-oriented regulations before it’s too late - because when chemistry is enabled to create, America competes.

 
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President Joe Biden with Reps. Hakeem Jeffries (D-N.Y.) and Pete Aguilar (D-Calif.).

President Joe Biden steps on stage Thursday to speak to the House Democratic Caucus Issues Conference at the Lansdowne Resort in Leesburg, Virginia, and is greeted by House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-N.Y.) and Caucus Chair Pete Aguilar (D-Calif.). | Andrew Harnik/AP

Democrats plot messaging strategy
House Democrats are grappling with the best strategy for selling the benefits of the Inflation Reduction Act to the American public at the start of a 2024 campaign sure to focus on President Joe Biden's signature climate law, writes Emma Dumain.

Some Democrats are urging the party to focus on the tangible economic impacts of the IRA over the climate gains. Others want to ensure Republicans don’t get the credit for the manufacturing wins contained in the IRA or any of the other Democrat-backed infrastructure bills. Top officials in the Biden administration met with House Democrats at a retreat in Virginia to focus on messaging.

History repeating
The Biden administration’s pause on liquefied natural gas export permitting scored political points with climate activists. Now eyes are on Biden to keep those voters happy. It’s a similar position former New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo found himself in a decade ago, writes Scott Waldman.

In 2014, Cuomo implemented a historic ban on fracking in New York after inheriting a pause. Pressure from climate activists, and greater political challenges from the left and right, ultimately pushed the former governor to take action on fracking.

Cuomo could serve as a cautionary tale for Biden if he wins re-election, as some warn a return to LNG permitting could lead to young voters losing faith in the Democratic Party.

The California factor
There’s broad consensus that the West needs a unified electricity distribution market to better coordinate during extreme weather events. But concerns are flaring over California's powerful role after federal regulators approved the state's proposal to improve how the West shares renewable energy, writes Jason Plautz.

Several Western utilities want a framework for an independent body to govern the market. Some advocates believe it’s important to develop a market that includes California. But major questions still need to be resolved, like governance structure and different climate commitments by Western states.

 

A message from American Chemistry Council – Chemistry Creates America Competes:

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La Niña watch: The National Weather Service has issued a La Niña watch that may develop by August. This pattern is the opposite of El Niño, and is tied to significant shifts in weather like lower global temperatures, dry conditions in the Southwest and destructive Atlantic hurricane seasons.

 

A message from American Chemistry Council – Chemistry Creates America Competes:

President Biden, America’s priorities depend on chemistry

America’s chemical industry is the foundation of semiconductors, medical devices, infrastructure, defense, clean energy and more. But there's a looming threat – ballooning regulatory overload.

Over the past two decades, regulations on chemical manufacturing have doubled. This isn't just numbers, it's a reality that hampers policies like the Inflation Reduction Act, the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act, and the Chips and Science Act.

The Biden Administration’s current approach is a direct hit to America's innovation and global standing. We need to wake up to the reality that over-regulation stifles growth and production. It's time for the Biden Administration to adopt smarter, growth-oriented regulations.

Join us in urging the Biden Administration to stop undercutting national priorities and American competitiveness. American chemistry isn't just an industry -- it's our future. When Chemistry Creates, America Competes.

 
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That's it for today, folks. Thanks for reading, and have a great weekend!

 

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