By Howard Fischer | YourValley
PHOENIX — Calling it a potential barrier to renewable energy, Gov. Katie Hobbs vetoed legislation Monday that would have imposed new requirements on solar and wind generating plants.
House Bill 2618 contained a list of what cities, towns and counties could adopt in zoning standards, site-specific conditions and permitting requirements on such facilities.
Potentially more significant, it would have required owners to not only have a decommissioning plan in place but also to post a bond — essentially insurance — to cover the costs if the company goes bankrupt or otherwise tries to walk away. And it even would mandate restoring and re-establishing soils and vegetation using native seed mixes.
It also included requirements for liability insurance to protect the community from any financial obligations due to injuries or other damages caused by the plant.
Rep. Gail Griffin, R-Hereford, said counties already have some oversight of such projects. What this would do, she said, is provide some basic standards.
The governor, however, said all that is too much.
“HB 2618 encourages an inconsistent statewide patchwork of regulations for renewable energy project and would have a deep chilling effect on renewable energy development in Arizona,” Hobbs wrote in her veto message. “It creates additional regulatory confusion for businesses, negatively impacting Arizona’s ability to attract, retain, and grow a renewable energy ecosystem in our state create good-paying jobs for everyday Arizonans.”
“Billions of dollars are set to be invested in new renewable energy projects in Arizona over the next decade and HB2618 would have made it more difficult and unpredictable to get those projects built. The Governor was right to veto the bill that did nothing to solve problems facing clean energy development and instead created additional red tape and costs.” – Rose Law Group Co-founder and Director of Regulatory Law, Court Rich