Minnesota lawmakers are once again jockeying to craft new clean-energy legislation. And while they seem to be trying harder to reach an agreement this year, it's not clear whether they will move beyond last year's deadlock.
The efforts to contain the novel coronavirus — and deal with its consequences — could end up scuttling the whole effort as well.
Energy committees in both branches of the Legislature have passed bills aimed at furthering carbon-free power goals, with critical differences in the visions of the DFL-controlled House and the Republican-controlled Senate.
Still, "the fact that both bills have moved early in the session through committee is a positive," said Justin Fay, government affairs director for Fresh Energy, a St. Paul-based clean-energy research and advocacy group.
But Fay and another legislative observer said recently that the coronavirus threat has led to a "wait-and-see" attitude for pending legislation.
"[Lawmakers] are reprioritizing, and I am not sure if they will get to energy," said Annie Levenson-Falk, executive director of the rate payer watchdog group Citizens Utility Board of Minnesota.
Both bills seek to move the state's electric utilities — which have already made progress toward clean-energy targets — further down the carbon-free path. But one key difference between the Senate and House approaches is what counts as carbon-free power.
For instance, the Senate bill includes carbon capture, a technology that enables fossil-fuel power plants to capture and store carbon dioxide created from electricity generation. The technology is still in its infancy, but Minnkota Power is studying a $1.3 billion facility next to a large coal plant in North Dakota.