Public Power Energy Lead Erin Dayl and coalition members Jay Levine (Renewable Taos) and Jonathon (YUCCA) will join Les Rubin of Picuris Pueblo to present the benefits and urgency of ending the monopoly power granted to Investor Owned Utilities and passing Local Choice Energy aggregation legislation in 2023. Hope you will show up to support and give public comment, or tune in to the webcast at the link on the committee web page !
SB83, the Local Choice Energy Act was introduced in 2019 and 2021. The bill made it through Senate Conservation and lost by one vote in Senate Tax, Business and Transportation. Local Choice Energy will be filed again in 2023.
Local Choice Energy changes the law to allow municipalities the option to choose their electricity generation sources and expands energy options for tribal nations while lowering costs for customers. Right now there are three Investor Owned Utilities (IOU) in New Mexico that serve 73% of New Mexico households - PNM, SPS and EPE. They were granted monopoly rights to 1) generate energy 2) transmit that energy, and then 3) distribute it locally to homes in their service area. Local Choice Energy (LCE) gives local governments the option to compete in the generation sector - to build and/or purchase electricity while still utilizing transmission and distribution service from their existing utility provider.
Why do we need competition in energy generation? IOU’s continue to slow-walk the energy transition, extract wealth from communities and charge a premium to customers. Private investor owned utilities have monopoly control over their service areas and a fiduciary duty to put shareholder profit above all other concerns. They decide how and where our energy will be generated, they decide if they will invest in new technologies or upgrade infrastructure, and they transfer the profit from their energy sales to shareholders on Wall St. Where has this led us? The three IOU’s that serve more than 73% of New Mexico households continue to obstruct the transition to 100% renewables, which are cheaper, more efficient and resilient, and necessary to address the climate challenge. (In 2021 PNM had 30% solar/wind, SPS had 36% and EPE just 5% in 2020) They charge 7% more than public utilities, and extracted more than $280M from the state in 2021.
We hope you will lend your support to get legislative momentum so that Local Choice Energy can make it over the finish line in the 2023 legislative session. Please call or write to the committee members listed below and tell them why Local Choice Energy is important for New Mexico and for you personally.
Local Choice Energy gives New Mexicans the option to control the kind of energy we want, to decide whether to build locally, and to decide what to do with the profits from energy sales. Its benefits include:
Please write to the Committee Members below to express your support, either before or after the presentation, and share why Local Choice Energy is important to you:
In addition to public power, presentations on PFAS, the Ute Pipeline, transmission planning, geothermal, green hydrogen, carbon capture and sequestration, home electrification, EV charging, methane regulations, abandoned well cleanup and oil and gas act modernization will make for an interesting next two days!