July 23, 2008
Utilities push back big against Prop. 7
A November ballot measure to expand renewable energy produced in California faces a long, expensive fight, as two of the state's biggest utility companies have poured $22.5 million this week into beating the initiative.
"This is a declaration of war," said Jim Gonzalez, a former San Francisco supervisor and sponsor of the measure.
The recent donations -- $12.25 million from PG&E and $10.25 million from Southern California Edison -- come on top of the $1.2 million energy-providers have already contributed.
Gonzalez said he fully expects this is only the beginning of the utilities' donations: "This is the opening gambit."
The target of the funds is Proposition 7, which would require all California utilities to generate at least half of their power from alternative sources, such a solar or wind, by 2025. Utilities are currently required to provide 20 percent of energy from renewable by 2010.
In a statement, Southern California Edison said the measure "would upend the existing regulatory process, disrupt existing renewables development, significantly raise rates and threaten reliability."
Proposition 7 was placed on the ballot largely on the strength of donations from Peter Sperling, the son of John Sperling, an Arizona billionaire and founder of the University of Phoenix.
Sperling donated $3 million to gather signatures to qualify for the ballot. Gonzalez's firm has contributed another $100,000.
The fall ballot fight -- with deep-pocketed utilities on one side and a billionaire on the other -- could wind up as the most expensive of the season.
Gonzales would not reveal if Sperling had committed to future donations, saying the campaign intended to rely on an online network of contributors, though he added, "We will spend whatever it takes to win."
The measure has united a broad and curious coalition in opposition: Democrats with Republicans (both state parties), environmentalists (the Natural Resources Defense Council) with utility companies, big labor (American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees) with big business (California Chamber of Commerce), and so on.
"It's kind of like I'm uniting every warring group in the state," Gonzalez told the San Francisco Chronicle earlier this month.
So far, all the money has come from the utility companies, whose largesse, Gonzales suggested, played a role in securing the endorsements of the state parties.
"The utility companies can run but they can't hide," he said. "They can't hide behind environmental groups and they can't hide behind political parties whose conventions they sponsor."
John White, an environmental lobbyist who directs the Center for Energy Efficiency and Renewable Technologies, said environmental groups and renewable energy advocates oppose the measure because it was poorly drafted.
Environmentalists, White said, are "afraid that the measure, while well intentioned, is so poorly drafted that it could undermine the goals."
Even with such a broad coalition, the opponents of Proposition 7 face an uphill fight against public opinion. The Field Poll reported this week that, when read a brief description, 63 percent of the voters surveyed said they would support Proposition 7.
"We don't feel we have to spend the tens of millions they have to do to stick with the status quo," said Gonzalez.
Posted by Shane Goldmacher on July 23, 2008 10:02 AM
Tags: alternative, breaking, companies, energy, news, power
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