Cuomo sets Goal for Carbon Neutral Electric System by 2040
By MARIE J. FRENCH
12/17/2018 | 04:44 PM EST
ALBANY — Gov. Andrew Cuomo on Monday set a new goal to reduce
emissions from the state's electricity generation and promised to
support a Green New Deal to get to a completely carbon-free economy.
Details were sparse on what Cuomo's conception of a Green New Deal
would entail or when he'd mandate that the state eliminate carbon
emissions across the economy. His current goal for the electric sector
is 50 percent renewables by 2030, and for emissions in most sectors of
the economy to be cut 80 percent from 1990 levels by 2050.
“New York will launch the Green New Deal to make New York’s
electricity 100 percent carbon neutral by 2040, and ultimately eliminate
the state’s entire carbon footprint," Cuomo said during a speech in New York City, where laid out his agenda for 2019.
Environmental advocates expressed optimism at Cuomo's new goals.
“The new goal is incredibly exciting and motivating,” said Kit
Kennedy of the Natural Resources Defense Council. "What happens now is
going to be crucial. In other words, is this a goal … and that’s it, or
can we get done what we need to get done in New York state on the ground
in terms of policy deployment, acceleration of energy efficiency,
electric vehicles, Article 10 [the state siting law for large-scale
generators] reforms, offshore wind, storage, the whole gamut of
zero-carbon technologies."
For advocates who have consistently pushed for more aggressive
action, the lack of details or a goal to get to zero percent emissions
in the short-run were disappointing.
“A vague pledge of carbon neutrality by the year 2040 is not
the bold action necessary to move New York off fossil fuels," said Food
and Water Watch's Alex Beauchamp. "Cuomo must go much bigger: A true
Green New Deal for New York must include a moratorium on all new fossil
fuel infrastructure and a commitment to transition New York to 100
percent renewable energy by 2030."
The Cuomo administration did not respond to questions about what a
Green New Deal would include, whether legislative action would be
required or whether electric generators would be able to purchase carbon
offsets to comply with the 2040 goal.
The Democratic governor has already directed the New York State
Energy Research and Development Authority to study how the state could
get to 100 percent renewables, not just in the electric sector but
across the economy. He's said he supports that goal. The study was
expected to be completed by the end of this year.