Current Oregon law requires that all public building
construction and reconstruction projects include solar
energy technologies when their total contract price
exceeds one million dollars. The law requires that one
and one half percent of the entire construction cost for
new building must include solar electric, solar thermal
or passive solar technologies. It also applies to
building renovations that exceed one million dollars and
fifty percent of the total building value. The solar
requirement can be transferred and added to another
building in the event that the contractor determines
that solar technologies are not feasible for a specific
building.
I voted against the enactment of the law in 2007 for two
reasons. First, I believe that construction contract
decisions should be based on free market cost-to-benefit
analysis rather than political mandates. Second, the
most cost effective form of renewable energy should be
used if our state government is going to force the
inclusion of renewable energy technology.
A salient example of the second point is the application
of the solar technology requirement to a reconstruction
project for the hospital in Lakeview. Geothermal energy
was piped into the building from an existing resource to
supply virtually all the HVAC system. Yet Oregon law
absurdly required the contractors to spend more than a
quarter of a million dollars on solar technologies for
the building. This is not an isolated occurrence in our
area. Five of the seven known major geothermal resource
areas in Oregon are located in Klamath, Lake and
southern Deschutes counties.
I introduced a bill in the 2011 Legislative Assembly
that would have allowed virtually any feasible source of
renewable energy to be substituted for the solar
requirement. This would have allowed the building
contractors to at least use the most cost efficient form
of renewable energy for the specific building. That bill
passed the Senate 28 to 1 but later died in a House
committee when time ran out on that session.
This year I introduced SB 1533 in the same form as the
bill that passed the Senate in 2011. The relevant
Democrat House committee chairman asked that we amend
the bill to include only solar and geothermal
technologies to better address the concerns of Oregon’s
solar industries. Our bipartisan amendment was
successful. The bill as amended passed through the
Senate 30-0. The bill passed out of the House committee
unanimously after a last minute flurry of activity that
could have sidelined its passage once again. SB 1533 was
subsequently passed in the House 58-2. It has been sent
to Governor Kitzhaber for his signature.
With the Governor’s signature, SB 1533 will allow our
area to utilize its geothermal resources to satisfy the
existing renewable energy requirement for public
building construction and renovation.
Please remember, if we do not stand up for rural Oregon
no one will.
Best,
Doug |