April 3, 2016
Hawaii

Hawaiian Electric sets renewable energy plan

By Big Island Now Staff | Posted April 2, 2016 | bigislandnow.com

Hawaiian Electric Companies has submitted its Power Supply Improvement Plan Update to the Hawai’i Public Utilities Commission, laying out its direction in getting the state to 100 percent renewable energy over the next 30 years.

In the detailed plan, Hawaiian Electric hopes to have the Big Island reaching 100 percent renewable energy by the year 2040, ten years behind Moloka’i and Lāna’i and five years ahead of the statewide goal of 2045.

To achieve 100 percent renewable energy levels, Hawaiian Electric hopes to utilize a mix of private rooftop solar energy, feed-in-tariff solar energy, utility-scale solar energy, onshore wind energy, offshore wind energy, hydropower, and geothermal energy.

Hawaiian Electric also aims to increase rooftop solar levels by 250 percent from current levels and 370 percent from levels recorded in 2014, which was the last time the utility company submitted a Power Supply Improvement Plan.

Proposed plans by Hawaiian Electric to achieve its 100 percent renewable energy goal include:

Additionally, Hawaiian Electric plans to ask the PUC for permission to move ahead with a contract that would import liquefied natural gas, also known as LNG, as early as 2021. The goal is to phase it out by 2040.

LNG is used for electricity generation and is supposed to be a cleaner, less volitile, and cost efficient option. On the Big Island, it is proposed for the Keahole and Hamakua Energy Partners plants.

A major part of the plan hinges on the pending merger with NextEra Energy, based on its financial support and expertise. Hawaiian Electric plans to go through with plans to reach 100 percent renewable energy, but admits that a different contract with lower, delayed savings would be likely on its own.


URL to article:  https://www.wind-watch.org/news/2016/04/03/hawaiian-electric-sets-renewable-energy-plan/