Energy & Enviro bills posted in Trenton

Here’s the lineup of energy and environmental bills posted for tomorrow (2/20–one bill) and Monday (2/24) in the New Jersey Assembly


Bill:   A741 Sponsors:    Johnson (D37); Conaway (D7); Zwicker (D16) Summary:   Establishes NJ Fuel Cell Task Force to increase use of fuel cells in State. History: 02/03/2020—Reported out of committee, 2nd reading in Assembly. Scheduled:  02/24/2020—Assembly, 11:00a Caucus; 1:00p Voting Session.

Bill:  A1459 Aca (1R) Sponsors:    Moriarty (D4); Johnson (D37); Benson (D14) +3 Summary:   Prohibits the sale of certain children’s products containing lead, mercury, or cadmium. History:  01/27/2020—Reported out of committee with committee amendments, 2nd reading in Assembly. Scheduled:  02/24/2020—Assembly, 11:00a Caucus; 1:00p Voting Session.

Bill:   A2371 Aca (1R) Sponsors: Kennedy (D22); Pinkin (D18) Summary:   Requires large food waste generators to separate and recycle food waste and amends definition of “Class I renewable energy.” History:  02/03/2020—Reported out of committee with committee amendments, 2nd reading in Assembly. Scheduled:  02/20/2020—Assembly Telecommunications and Utilities Committee, 10:00a, 3rd Floor, Committee Room 9, Annex. (Revised 02/14/2020)

Bill:  A2775 Aca (1R) Sponsors:    Houghtaling (D11) Summary:   Makes pilot program for special occasion events at wineries on preserved farmland permanent program. History: 02/13/2020—Reported out of committee with committee amendments, 2nd reading in Assembly. Scheduled:  02/24/2020—Assembly, 11:00a Caucus; 1:00p Voting Session.

Bill:  S232 Sponsors: Singleton (D7); Weinberg (D37) Summary:   Concerns environmental permits in burdened communities. History:  01/14/2020—Introduced and referred to Senate Environment and Energy Committee. Scheduled:  02/24/2020—Senate Environment and Energy Committee, 10:00a, 1st Floor, Committee Room 6, Annex.

Bill:  S331 Sponsors: Smith (D17); Codey (D27) +2 Summary:   Requires environmental sustainability plan for State House Complex. History:  01/14/2020—Introduced and referred to Senate Environment and Energy Committee. Scheduled:  02/24/2020—Senate Environment and Energy Committee, 10:00a, 1st Floor, Committee Room 6, Annex.

Bill: S337 Sponsors: Smith (D17); Greenstein (D14) Summary:   Authorizes NJ Infrastructure Bank to issue up to $20 million in bonds to finance cost‑effective energy efficiency improvements in State, local, and school district buildings. History:   01/14/2020—Introduced and referred to Senate Environment and Energy Committee. Scheduled:  02/24/2020—Senate Environment and Energy Committee, 10:00a, 1st Floor, Committee Room 6, Annex.

Bill:   S349 Sponsors: Smith (D17) Summary:   Requires developers to offer electric vehicle charging stations as an option in certain new home construction. History:  01/14/2020—Introduced and referred to Senate Environment and Energy Committee. Scheduled:  02/24/2020—Senate Environment and Energy Committee, 10:00a, 1st Floor, Committee Room 6, Annex.

Bill:   S1016 Sponsors: Smith (D17) Summary: Directs DEP to classify neonicotinoid pesticides designed for outdoor use as restricted use pesticides. History: 01/30/2020—Introduced and referred to Senate Environment and Energy Committee. Scheduled:  02/24/2020—Senate Environment and Energy Committee, 10:00a, 1st Floor, Committee Room 6, Annex.

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Google spinout Dandelion Energy targets areas of New York state for geothermal heat pumps

With fresh investment, a new CEO and a supportive state policy environment, Dandelion is ready to expand in New York.

JULIAN SPECTOR reports for gtm

Dandelion is investing in R&D to minimize disruption from drilling geothermal wells at homes.
Dandelion is investing in R&D to minimize disruption from drilling geothermal wells at homes.

Google spinout Dandelion Energy wants to push home geothermal heating to new heights in 2020.

The company, which emerged from the X “Moonshot Factory” in 2017, has grown to around 100 employees and installed hundreds of sites in New York state. It continues to refine its drilling technology to make residential drilling and heat pump installation easier and more competitive with incumbent fossil fuels. Last month, it pulled in another $12 million, bringing total investment to $35 million, and hired a new CEO to handle the growth stage while co-founder Kathy Hannun takes the president role to focus on technology development.

Installations grew nearly fivefold year-over-year in 2019, Hannun said in a recent interview, as the company dialed in on its core markets of Albany, the Hudson Valley and Westchester. Previous investors Comcast Ventures, GV, NEA and Lennar saw that progress and wanted to expand on last year’s Series A.

Dandelion is seizing on statewide trends as well. It partnered with utility Con Edison to install geothermal heat pumps in Westchester, where demand for natural gas has outstripped supply, leading to a moratorium on new hookups. The utility offers rebates of up to $5,000 for customers who switch to Dandelion’s geothermal heat pumps. And the state Public Service Commission, which regulates utilities, raised heat pump deployment targets and allocated billions in funding for it in a January 16 order.

“We’ve demonstrated that there’s a lot of demand, and we’ve demonstrated that we can install geothermal systems that customers are really happy with,” said newly appointed CEO Michael Sachse. “This year will largely be about getting all our systems in place and processes, so we can take as much complexity out of this as possible.”

The new funding provides “plenty of runway” for the foreseeable future, Sachse added.

Sachse’s appointment as CEO follows his experience at energy efficiency company Opower. He joined when Opower had about 30 employees, then served as chief marketing officer as the company went public in 2014 and was acquired by Oracle in 2016. That journey had its ups and downs — its stock price lost more than half its initial value by the time of acquisition — but the $532 million deal remains one of the biggest sales achieved by a U.S. cleantech startup.

If Dandelion makes good on its appeal to the millions of New England homes burning fuel oil to stay warm, it’ll need a leadership team that can handle big valuations.

Drill smarter, not harder

Dandelion’s technology drills a ground loop 300 to 500 feet below a house and connects it to an electric heat pump. In the winter, installations pump heat from deep underground to warm the house, cutting the need for heating fuel. In the summer, they pump heat from the house into the ground, reducing air conditioning load. Both actions help utilities stressed by peak seasonal heating and cooling needs.

Compared to the myriad companies selling home solar power, Dandelion is notable for the lack of competitors in its lane. In the fight for customers, it must outcompete the status quo — keeping the fuel-based heating system — or a number of local installers. The space hasn’t attracted much attention from venture capitalists or technology entrepreneurs.

“This is an industry that’s been served by people with no ability to invest in R&D,” Sachse said. “Our core thesis is that by investing in technology, we’ll make this product cheaper and therefore be able to bring a unique offering to the market.”

That R&D effort includes honing a next-generation heat pump and logging data on soil strata in the regions where the company drills frequently, which allows teams to prepare the best equipment for the geology they’re planning to drill in.

The company already saves customers money compared to fuel oil, Sachse said, and that advantage will only increase as innovation drives down the cost of installation. 

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After last-minute negotiations, judge picks a winner in Philadelphia refinery auction

A U.S. Bankruptcy Court judge on Wednesday tentatively approved the sale of the shuttered Philadelphia Energy Solutions refinery to a Chicago firm, closing the door on more than a century of oil refining in South Philadelphia and potentially radically altering the city’s landscape. JESSICA GRIFFIN / STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

Andrew Maykuth reports for the Philadelphia Inquirer

A U.S. Bankruptcy Court judge on Wednesday tentatively approved the sale of the shuttered Philadelphia Energy Solutions refinery to a Chicago firm, closing the door on more than a century of oil refining in South Philadelphia and potentially radically altering the city’s landscape.

» UPDATE – Chicago’s Hilco is the new owner of Philadelphia refinery and 1,300 acres

RELATED STORIES

Judge Kevin Gross said he was satisfied that Hilco Redevelopment Partners’ $252 million bid — boosted by $12 million in a flurry of eleventh-hour negotiations on Wednesday — was the highest and best offer for the 1,300-acre site, occupied by the East Coast’s largest oil refinery until it abruptly closed June 21 after a devastating fire.

Gross also said the decision to sell to Hilco, which has told city officials it plans to demolish the refinery and replace it with a mixed-use industrial park, was “clearly in the best interests of the community,” citing the refinery’s “numerous and repeated problems.”

Having addressed most of the objections Wednesday, the judge said he would be prepared to sign an order Thursday affirming the refinery’s bankruptcy reorganization after lawyers representing various parties had a chance to review the document overnight.

There was some urgency to complete the deal by Thursday, a deadline set by the expiration of Hilco’s offer.

“After tomorrow, Hilco disappears, the plan disappears,” Gross told the packed courtroom in Wilmington. “What’s a judge supposed to do?” Gross scheduled a hearing for 1 p.m. Thursday, in case any parties raised new objections that he had not already ruled on.

With an expected final approval Thursday, Hilco would be in charge of developing Philadelphia’s largest available commercial real estate parcel. Environmental activists have long criticized the refinery as the city’s largest stationary source of air pollution. And, community activists want the site to be used for anything but a refinery after the catastrophic explosion in June served as a dramatic reminder of the risks posed by the fuel-refining complex.

» READ MORE: What to know about the Chicago firm remaking the South Philly refinery site

First, however, the site will need extensive environmental remediation after more than a century of oil refining there. But it’s not immediately clear when that will happen, and who will pay the bill.

On Wednesday, the Clean Air Council, a frequent legal adversary of the refinery, lauded its permanent closure.

“Hilco must work with all stakeholders to leverage this opportunity to transform the site so it protects our air, water, health, and safety while spurring economic development and high-paying union jobs,” Joseph Otis Minott, the council’s executive director, said in a statement.

Hilco’s experience in redeveloping industrial properties includes acquiring old power plant sites in Boston and New Jersey, and building warehouses on a former steel mill site in Baltimore.

Last-minute negotiations

The start of Wednesday’s hearing was delayed nearly six hours while a frantic round of closed-door negotiations took place, resulting in settlements on most of the objections raised in the last week by unsecured creditors, the United Steelworkers union, and other parties.

A rival development firm, Industrial Realty Group, made a late effort to boost its offer and to wrest the refinery away from Hilco, which was selected after a Jan. 17 auction. That apparently accounted for Hilco’s offer to boost its payment to $252 million, from $240 million agreed to earlier.

IRG had teamed up with former PES chief executive Philip Rinaldi, who wanted to restart the refinery. Rinaldi’s effort was supported by trade unions, including the United Steelworkers, which represented more than 600 of the refinery’s 1,100 workers.

Rinaldi said he was “very disappointed” with Wednesday’s outcome.

Ryan O’Callaghan, the president of Steelworkers Local 10-1 before he lost his job during mass layoffs that followed the refinery’s closure, sat glumly during Wednesday’s hearing. “It’s not good,” he said.

The Steelworkers international signed on to a revised agreement, however, after $5 million in severance was added as a payment to workers who lost their jobs. The new plan also includes guarantees from PES and Hilco that union workers would remain employed to maintain the refinery and to continue to remove remaining fuels, a process that is expected to take at least a year. Hilco also agreed to work with unions on future employment at the site.

PES and its secured lenders also agreed to set aside $20 million for unsecured trade creditors, who can opt in and immediately receive a small portion of their claims — about 10 to 12 cents on the dollar — in exchange for dropping future legal claims.

“This is far from a perfect outcome,” said Robert J. Stark, a lawyer representing the committee of unsecured creditors, which agreed to withdraw its objections to the plan. He said the result made the best of a “horrible” situation. “We did the best we could with what we had.”

Assuming that Gross approves the plan on Thursday, it could still face legal challenges, especially from ICBC Standard Bank PLC, which lent the refinery millions of dollars only days before the explosion to finance its purchases of petroleum. The bank is engaged in a bitter battle with other lenders over who has priority in $1.25 billion in insurance claims the refinery has filed, but which have not been paid. That separate litigation is expected to take a long time to settle.

The refinery complex shut down after the June fire and a series of explosions destroyed a key unit on the Girard Point side. Girard Point is the larger of two refineries on the site.

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Controversy over turbine blades in landfill overblown?

Kayla Timmo reports for the Casper Star Tribune

Eight hundred seventy-four wind turbine blades have been entombed in Casper Wyoming’s regional landfill. The blades once powered Wyoming’s burgeoning fleet of wind turbines but have succumbed to a utility company’s effort to upgrade several wind farms across the state.

Eight hundred seventy-four wind turbine blades have been entombed in the city of Casper’s regional landfill.

As utility companies look to replace aging wind turbines, the machines’ blades are being buried in stacks at a handful of landfills around the country, including in the Casper Regional Landfill.

Rapid technological advancements in renewable energy have led many utilities to ramp up wind energy installation to supply ratepayers with cheap electricity. Yet the growing number of wind farms sprouting up across Wyoming’s blustery plains have caused many lawmakers and residents loyal to the state’s robust fossil fuel industry to bristle.

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When Casper’s landfill began accepting the blades, criticism of the wind industry here ballooned. The blades have swept Casper into a national discussion around renewable energy, waste and environmental responsibility.

Each turbine blade is 120 feet long and cut into 40-foot pieces before being buried. Compare that to a typical single-story house, which stands between 12 and 14 feet tall. The thinner two pieces are stored inside the wider third to minimize needed space, but each turbine blade and the motor housing unit still take up about 30 cubic yards combined. The landfill has accepted 289 motor housing units.

The sheer size of the equipment and the potential environmental ramifications of disposing something that can’t decompose have raised concerns among wind energy critics.

But Casper Solid Waste Manager Cynthia Langston hopes to dispel some of those concerns. Despite the size of the blades, Langston said the landfill has plenty of space for them. She said the landfill won’t need to open another cell, or separate space, for the blades until 2034, at the current rate.

“I wish people were so interested in all the garbage,” she said, not just the wind turbines.

 Looking ahead: 2020 could be a big year for wind in Wyoming

Accepting the blades at Casper Regional Solid Waste Facility also provides an economic benefit for the city, Langston noted. The deal has already earned Casper nearly $450,000, and when more come this spring, the total earnings for the city could reach $600,000.

Turbine blades are not the only form of “special waste” the city takes in for revenue. The city estimates it gains roughly $800,000 annually from accepting special waste from various entities, including the oil and gas industry.

Waste from oil and gas operations puts more pressure on the landfill than anything, she said, with tires and dewatering liners among the bigger drivers of waste encountered by Langston’s team at the landfill.

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‘Just gloom and doom’: SC hemp farmers’ encounter low returns on big investments

Zoe Nicholson reports for The Greenville News

Tom Garrison looks at ground up hemp plants during harvest at the Danny Ford farm in Central on September 21.
Tom Garrison looks at ground-up hemp plants during harvest at the Danny Ford farm in Central, South Carolina on September 21.  (Photo: Ken Ruinard )

Tom Garrison wants you to know he’s a realist, not a pessimist. 

But from where he stands – on the 1,000-acre farm his family has worked for 150 years – things are looking bleak. 

“I’ve never seen anything like this in my life, with the hemp crop …  and I’ve never seen a more depressed ag (agriculture) economy than I’m seeing right now. It’s just gloom and doom, man.”

In 2018, Garrison, who owns Denver Downs farm in Anderson, was one of the first SC farmers to be issued a hemp license.

“I just was trying to be an entrepreneur just like my dad was,” Garrison said.

Twenty SC farmers, three from the Upstate, were awarded the first round of permits by the SC Department of Agriculture to grow no more than 20 acres.

This year, that number doubled to 40 permits. 

Lee Ford cuts down hemp plants during last September’s harvest

Immediately, farmers like Garrison faced steep learning curves due to a lack of knowledge about the plant, high up-front costs, and a fledgling processing industry needed to get the crops onto retail shelves. 

Hemp: high maintenance and high costs

Hemp is a derivative of cannabis sativa, the plant that produces marijuana. Hemp is low in THC, a chemical that gives marijuana many of its psychoactive effects, but high in CBD, a chemical believed to have many medicinal purposes. 

Industrial hemp can also be processed for manufactured items, like fabric and car door paneling. 

The plant was heralded as South Carolina’s next cash crop when the state legalized hemp farming in 2018; the emerging $1.8 billion CBD industry offered promises of long-term success for family farmers. 

But growing it is expensive: DeWitt says a single acre can take between $8,000 and $20,000 to grow.

Jordan Ford, left, Danny Ford, and his son Lee Ford look for any plant problems between cutting weeds between rows of hemp at the farm in Central in July.  The Ford farm in Pickens County is one the South Carolina Department of Agriculture (SCDA) selected with 19 others to participate in the 2018 SC Industrial Hemp Pilot Program. "The famers represent 15 South Carolina counties. 'The Industrial Hemp Pilot Program creates a new opportunity for South Carolina farmers to increase crop diversity,' said Hugh Weathers, South Carolina Commissioner of Agriculture. Interest in the program was strong, and the Department of Agriculture worked diligently to select a broad representation of growers.  Governor Henry McMaster signed H.3559 into law in May, making it legal for 20 South Carolina farmers to grow up to 20 acres of industrial hemp in 2018 for research purposes, in accordance with the 2014 Farm Bill."
Jordan Ford, left, Danny Ford, and his son Lee Ford look for any plant problems between cutting weeds between rows of hemp at the farm in Central in July. The Ford farm in Pickens County is one the South Carolina Department of Agriculture (SCDA) selected with 19 others to participate in the 2018 SC Industrial Hemp Pilot Program.

Agriculture. Interest in the program was strong, and the Department of Agriculture worked diligently to select a broad representation of growers. Governor Henry McMaster signed H.3559 into law in May, making it legal for 20 South Carolina farmers to grow up to 20 acres of industrial hemp in 2018 for research purposes, in accordance with the 2014 Farm Bill.” 

David DeWitt, who heads the hemp educational program at the Clemson Extension Program in Lee County, said he has heard the harvested crop selling to processors for anywhere from $15 to $60 a pound.  

Garrison said the average yield is about 750 pounds of hemp per acre, but that number can vary widely depending on how much of a crop makes it to maturity.

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“The farmers represent 15 South Carolina counties. ‘The Industrial Hemp Pilot Program creates a new opportunity for South Carolina farmers to increase crop diversity,’ said Hugh Weathers, South Carolina Commissioner of

Hemp seeds must be planted in pesticide- and chemical-free soil and crops must be weeded by hand. Extra security measures are typically required, as well, according to the SCDA website.

Since hemp was outlawed in the state for decades, farmers have to buy seeds from out-of-state sellers. Garrison bought seeds for this year’s crop from an Oregon retailer. The packet had a certificate of authenticity from the State of Oregon stamped on it.

The seeds did not take. So, Garrison said eight of this year’s 20-acre hemp crop will wind up in the bush hog, ground into hay, because of it.  

“It was bogus,” he said. 

Lots of ‘growing pains’ for emerging hemp industry

State regulations and backed-up processors keep farmers’ profits down, Garrison said 

State law mandates a 15-day harvest window for hemp. The shorter window leaves less time for CBD levels to rise, lowering the raw plant’s worth, DeWitt explained. 

Processors extract the CBD from raw hemp through a refinement process, which can be lengthy and expensive, DeWitt said. 

Tom Garrison, left, of Denver Downs Farm in Anderson, good friends with farmer Danny Ford, middle, shakes hands with Hugh Weathers, right, State Commissioner of Agriculture, during hemp harvest at the Ford farm in Central on September 21. Weathers has been visiting the first 20 hemp farms around the state to see how each is processing their plants.
Tom Garrison, left, of Denver Downs Farm in Anderson, good friends with farmer Danny Ford, middle, shakes hands with Hugh Weathers, right, State Commissioner of Agriculture, during hemp harvest at the Ford farm in Central . Weathers has been visiting the first 20 hemp farms around the state to see how each is processing their plants.  (Photo: Ken Ruinard )

The influx of SC hemp growers has overwhelmed many local processors, causing a backup of product, according to Garrison, who said he is still waiting for payment after his processor did not refine his crop last year. 

“But there’s not any of my crop leaving my farm this year unless I got money in my hand,” he said. 

Garrison added that the processing industry in SC is still in startup mode. He said many of the new businesses popping up across the state have to get infrastructure and machinery in place before any work can begin. 

The SCDA is finalizing new hemp guidelines for 2020, to be added in the Farm Bill. Garrison, who heads an advisory board on hemp farming for the SC Farm Bureau, is hopeful the changes to the bill will put checks and balances into place to protect farmers.

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‘Historic, unprecedented’ flooding swamps southern USA; Mississippi and Tennessee hardest hit

Doyle Rice, Luke Ramseth, and Wilton Jackson
report for USA TODAY

JACKSON, Miss. – Weeks of heavy rain have inundated a large portion of the southern U.S., bringing near-record flooding to Mississippi and Tennessee. 

In Jackson, Mississippi, hundreds of residents either watched their homes flood over the weekend or worried their residence would soon be drenched as the Pearl River crested Monday at 36.8 feet, its third-highest level ever recorded.

Kathy Covington, center, watches the powerful floodwaters of the Pearl River rush through her Florence, Miss., yard on Feb. 16, 2020.

Calling the Jackson floods “historic” and “unprecedented,” Mississippi Gov. Tate Reeves said in a Sunday press conference that “we do not anticipate this situation to end anytime soon. It will be days before we are out of the woods and the waters recede.”

Reeves said at a news conference Monday that there were no reports of flood-related injuries, and thanked the people of Mississippi for heeding evacuation orders. Only 16 search and rescue missions were necessary, he said, even though as many as 1,000 homes were flooded. 

See earlier flooding story posted today

Reeves had declared a state of emergency Saturday because of the floods.

February has seen “a constant stream of wet storms rolling across the Deep South,” said AccuWeather meteorologist Paul Walker, who called it a “crazy month” for the amount of rain that’s fallen across the region.

More wet weather is on the way: Rain showers will develop Monday night over the Mississippi River Valley, further saturating an already soggy South, the Weather Channel said.

The National Weather Service said that this entire area is quite soaked and any additional rainfall may lead to more runoff issues and additional flooding.

Residents began filling sandbags and preparing their homes, businesses and churches for the flooding earlier last week after multiple days of heavy rain, AccuWeather said.

Jackson resident Mark Wakefield knows what it takes to rebuild after flooding: His in-laws’ home in Jackson has flooded four times before. The worst was 1979 when the house was 8 feet underwater. The home has flooded again, he said, and this time they might not come back.

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