Vermont: The Little State that Could?

- by Rachel Smolk­er, Biofuelwatch

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I am for­tu­nate to live in the tiny state of Ver­mont, a state that has bold­ly led the way on so many issues it’s hard to list them all. We were the first to pass same-sex mar­riage and to take seri­ous steps to make health care acces­si­ble to all. We out­lawed bill­boards alto­geth­er and passed Act 250, a sophis­ti­cat­ed mech­a­nism for pro­tect­ing the land­scape against wan­ton devel­op­ment. That, in fact, led Ver­mont to be the last state in the nation to be col­o­nized by Wal­mart. We were also the first state to ban frack­ing. We fought Enter­gy and the Nuclear Reg­u­la­to­ry Com­mis­sion long and hard demand­ing they shut down the dan­ger­ous­ly rick­ety Yan­kee Nuclear pow­er plant. Recent­ly, at long last and against all odds, we “won” a semi-vic­to­ry on that front.

Now Ver­mont has tak­en anoth­er bold step: deny­ing per­mis­sion for devel­op­ment of a dirty bio­mass burn­ing facil­i­ty, decep­tive­ly referred to as the North Spring­field Sus­tain­able Ener­gy Project.

That facil­i­ty would have burned 450,000 tons of wood annu­al­ly, har­vest­ed from the “Green Moun­tain” state’s just bare­ly recov­er­ing forests. The state’s Pub­lic Ser­vice Board is required to review big devel­op­ment pro­pos­als and issue (or deny) a “cer­tifi­cate of pub­lic good” (CPG) in order to pro­ceed with the project. In this case, the deci­sion was that the facil­i­ty was not a pub­lic good. Many bio­mass facil­i­ties around the coun­try and the world have not won per­mits, or have been aban­doned en route to devel­op­ment due to eco­nom­ic con­cerns. But Ver­mont may be the first to deny a per­mit on the basis of sound reasoning.

The Spring­field facil­i­ty was denied, in part, on the basis that cut­ting and burn­ing trees could not be assumed to reduce green­house gas emis­sions. The Pub­lic Ser­vice Board com­ment­ed that “the evi­den­tiary record sup­ports a find­ing that the Project would release as much as 448,714 tons of CO2e per year, and that seques­tra­tion of those green­house gas­es would not occur until future years, pos­si­bly not for decades, and would not occur at all in the case of for­est-regen­er­a­tion fail­ures.” They also con­clud­ed that it would be more cost effec­tive to do ener­gy con­ser­va­tion, effi­cien­cy and load-man­age­ment than to burn 450,000 trees a year for a pit­tance of elec­tric­i­ty. 

Ver­mont already has the wood-burn­ing McNeil Gen­er­at­ing Sta­tion (not­ed as the largest pol­luter in Ver­mont), and the Rye­gate bio­mass facil­i­ty. Anoth­er new bio­mass facil­i­ty is pro­posed and pend­ing for the town of Fairhaven. These facil­i­ties, like oth­ers of their ilk, release about 50 per­cent more CO2 per unit of ener­gy gen­er­at­ed than a coal burn­ing facil­i­ty, and far more par­tic­u­lates (increas­ing­ly rec­og­nized as a cause of all man­ner of ill­ness­es and dis­eases). And these facil­i­ties are shock­ing­ly inef­fi­cient, gen­er­al­ly only around 25–35 per­cent effi­cien­cy, which means ener­gy from one out of every 3 or 4 trees is cap­tured while all must be cut and trans­port­ed and all con­tribute to pol­lu­tion and green­house gas­es. Ver­mont, the “green” state already ranks among tops in the nation for asth­ma and suf­fers the con­se­quences of a ver­i­ta­ble army of dirty res­i­den­tial wood heat­ing stoves run­ning at full throt­tle for half the year.

Burn­ing up forests in inef­fi­cient facil­i­ties for a tiny bit of elec­tric­i­ty is hard­ly “green” and cer­tain­ly not clean. Besides, with­out bill­boards, how would we con­ceal the clear cuts and denud­ed land­scapes from view of tourists, who come specif­i­cal­ly to see the trees: a main­stay of the state’s economy?

It is inspir­ing to see com­mon sense dic­tate ener­gy poli­cies for a change. I can’t help think­ing of Ver­mont as “the lit­tle state that could.” Big indus­tries and devel­op­ers roar down the tracks and flash their wares, assur­ing us our con­cerns are triv­ial and our val­ues old-fash­ioned, or that we are too tiny to mat­ter. But cit­i­zens in the state do not so eas­i­ly roll bel­ly up. As Gayle Coger Mora­bito, an activist involved in oppos­ing the Spring­field bio­mass facil­i­ty stat­ed: “We are reas­sured that our voic­es can be heard. It’s hard work, but patience does pay off. We cer­tain­ly have the facts and fig­ures our side.”

How­ev­er, there seems to be a nev­er-end­ing parade of chal­lenges that keep parad­ing down the tracks. Ver­mont Gas (owned by the Cana­di­an Gaz Metro which trans­ports gas from Alber­ta to Que­bec and onwards) wants to extend a pipeline that would trans­port fracked gas across the state, under Lake Cham­plain to even­tu­al­ly sup­ply the Ticon­dero­ga pulp mill in New York State. Unfor­tu­nate­ly, the Pub­lic Ser­vice Board, did recent­ly grant a cer­tifi­cate of pub­lic good for the gas pipeline in spite of an out­pour­ing of pub­lic oppo­si­tion. Appar­ent­ly trans­port­ing fracked gas through the state is a “pub­lic good” even if frack­ing in the state is deemed ille­gal. Resis­tance to that pipeline will like­ly advance to anoth­er level.

Mean­while, Enbridge (part own­er of GazMetro) is push­ing yet anoth­er pipeline to trans­port tar sands oil across the north­ern edge of the state en route to Port­land Maine for export. So far twen­ty-nine towns in the state have already passed res­o­lu­tions oppos­ing that one.

Even oppo­si­tion to large-scale wind devel­op­ments is rag­ing in the state.

Ver­mon­t’s sen­ate just passed a bill that would enhance pub­lic par­tic­i­pa­tion in deci­sion mak­ing about the sit­ing of ener­gy projects. Pub­lic par­tic­i­pa­tion is exact­ly what is needed.

So what will be the future of the lit­tle state that could? Ver­mont could shine a lead­ing light on the path to a live­able future, focus­ing on reduc­ing demand for ener­gy rather than embrac­ing the doc­trine of end­less growth, and look­ing towards small-scale, non-com­bus­tion renew­ables to fill essen­tial needs. The state is already posi­tion­ing itself at the fore­front of the local food move­ment, and has long pri­or­i­tized the pro­tec­tion of its land­scape. Ver­mon­ters should be tak­ing note of a nation­wide and glob­al trend: for bet­ter or worse, farm lands have become a hot com­mod­i­ty for investors seek­ing sol­id, reli­able ways to use their mon­ey. Why? Because in the chaot­ic future we face, where envi­ron­ment and econ­o­my are on a col­li­sion course, food and water will be most assured­ly para­mount. Forests and healthy ecosys­tems will be our best defense against the rav­ages of a warm­ing and pol­lut­ed world.

A glance back through his­to­ry reveals that the col­lapse of great civ­i­liza­tions has been direct­ly linked to over-exploita­tion of nat­ur­al resources. One can only hope that Homo sapi­ens can final­ly learn from that his­to­ry. Ver­mon­t’s deci­sion not to stum­ble any fur­ther down the path towards burn­ing its trees for elec­tric­i­ty is a tiny but sig­nif­i­cant step in the right direc­tion. If we can keep the pipelines and extrac­tion indus­tries out and focus on learn­ing to live togeth­er and in bal­ance, per­haps “the lit­tle state that could” will man­age to deliv­er toys and treats to the chil­dren of the future after all.


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