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Pritzker, Lightfoot announce clean energy deal

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* WTTW

Electricity set to be generated by a downstate solar farm will power more than 425 large city-owned buildings and facilities in Chicago by 2025 under a deal worth $422.2 million announced Monday by Mayor Lori Lightfoot and Gov. J.B. Pritzker.

Lightfoot and Pritzker, who are both running for re-election, put aside their tense relationship and joined forces to announce the deal with Constellation and Swift Current Energy that they said would start to reverse climate change, which scientists say has already begun to cause disasters such as floods and strong storms.

Pritzker called the deal an “enormously positive development” that proves a 2021 bill that he signed into law that sets a goal of 2045 for Illinois to have all its energy from renewable sources will be effective — while setting aside 10% of jobs for workers from areas of Chicago and Illinois that suffer from disinvestment.

Starting in 2025, the city will use 300 megawatts it plans to purchase from Constellation to power O’Hare and Midway airports, the Harold Washington Library Center and the Jardine Water Purification Plant near Navy Pier with solar power set to be generated by Swift Current Energy in Sangamon and Morgan counties, officials said.

* City of Chicago

Key terms of the contract include:

* Chicago Tribune

The announcement comes nearly a year after Gov. J.B. Pritzker signed legislation that aims to put Illinois on a path to 100% carbon-free energy by 2050, with coal, oil and natural gas power plants scheduled to close over the coming decades. It also seeks to boost the development of wind and solar energy across the state, put more electric vehicles on the road and make it easier for Black and Latino workers and businesses to enter the renewable energy industry.

By and large, coal plants would have to shut down by 2030, while natural gas plants would have until 2045. When the General Assembly passed the energy bill in September 2021, it also called for a nearly $700 million bailout of three nuclear power plants that at the time were owned by Exelon, the parent company of ComEd, plagued by a jobs-for-bribes scandal that has led to millions of dollars in fines for the electricity giant and a series of criminal indictments, including against former Illinois House Speaker Michael Madigan. In February, Constellation split from Exelon and Constellation retained Illinois the power plants in the deal.

The federal budget package approved by the U.S. Senate Sunday also includes hundreds of billions of dollar in initiatives to address climate change. The legislation must still pass the House of Representatives.

* Chicago Sun Times

Work on the solar farm will start in a few months, creating nearly 1,000 jobs, Pritzker said.

“And by 2025, hundreds of thousands of Chicagoans will get their energy needs met by an entirely renewable energy source. It’s momentous. … Illinois is a leader in the clean energy revolution. In this state, we take seriously the looming threats of the climate crisis.”

The new five-year contract is “a historic moment in our city’s obligation to combat climate change with concrete, tangible steps toward a renewable future,” Lightfoot said.

But, the mayor warned, “It can’t just be about the government. Although we have an important role to play, each of us needs to step up and do our part. We must work as hard as we possibly can to mitigate the disastrous effects of climate change, which we see manifest almost every single day across the country and across our world.”

Without Pritzker’s Climate and Equitable Jobs Act and its “explicit attention toward economic equity and climate justice,” the landmark agreement would not have been possible, the mayor said.

* ABC7

“I am incredibly proud to advance this commitment to transitioning all city operations to 100% renewable energy by 2025,” Lightfoot said. “The signing of this agreement demonstrates that the City of Chicago is leading by example and driving high-impact climate action, building the clean energy workforce of the future and equitably distributing meaningful benefits to foster the local clean energy economy for all.”

“We are providing a clean energy solution that will help the City of Chicago,” said Chief Commercial Officer of Constellation Energy Jim McHugh.

The mayor’s office also said the deal will also provide renewable energy to other major organizations throughout the state.

* Block Club Chicago

“As the owner or operator of over 425 facilities city-wide, including City Hall and one of the world’s busiest airports, it is imperative that we as city leaders take all
measures necessary to decarbonize our assets and to mitigate the disastrous effects of climate change,” said Sandra Blakemore, acting commissioner for the city’s Department of Assets, Information & Services.

Additionally, the city plans to buy renewable energy credits from other sources for its remaining power uses, such as small and medium-sized buildings and streetlights, according to a news release.

Constellation and Swift Current Energy will also fund job training, apprenticeships, education and various other programs in Chicago that will focus on developing and nurturing a sustainability-focused workforce, officials said.

posted by Isabel Miller
Tuesday, Aug 9, 22 @ 2:00 pm

Comments

  1. Can’t wait to see how this changes the weather. So far no one can explain how it will but I still can’t wait.

    Comment by The Abyss Tuesday, Aug 9, 22 @ 2:07 pm

  2. “So far no one can explain”

    Google is free

    Comment by SWIL_Voter Tuesday, Aug 9, 22 @ 2:08 pm

  3. It’s nice to see downstate and Chicago working together

    Comment by Nick Tuesday, Aug 9, 22 @ 2:13 pm

  4. Anyone notice the author’s name on this blog post? :)

    Comment by Rich Miller Tuesday, Aug 9, 22 @ 2:35 pm

  5. ===notice===

    Well, I’ll be.

    Congratulations. Good stuff right there.

    Comment by Oswego Willy Tuesday, Aug 9, 22 @ 2:36 pm

  6. I apologize if my comment is a bit of a pivot, but I read this in the Dewitt Daily News:

    https://dewittdailynews.com/local-news/647045

    From the story:

    “According to Rep. Caulkins, part of the program will focus on the energy policies of other states and how it is impacting Illinois. Other states are essentially creating enough energy for themselves and if there is anything left, they can send it to places like Illinois.”

    I don’t think Illinois needs their juice. Caulkins has stated numerous times how Illinois is buying electricity from out of state. My research shows that Illinois exports huge amounts of electricity out of state. I wish he would take another look.

    Comment by Stix Hix Tuesday, Aug 9, 22 @ 2:44 pm

  7. Solar without overnight storage means at night and in poor weather, those places covered by the deal will be running off power from the nuclear plants. I’m very much for renewables but believe we need to retain nuclear for the baseload, until at least the solar and wind farms can demonstrate a viable battery concept. My reading says that’s coming soon, but not tomorrow.

    Comment by Give us Barabbas Tuesday, Aug 9, 22 @ 2:53 pm

  8. The power produced from the solar farm will be fed back to the MISO electric grid, which stretches from Minnesota to Louisiana.

    Comment by Occam Tuesday, Aug 9, 22 @ 3:00 pm

  9. ===Electricity set to be generated by a downstate solar farm will power more than 425 large city-owned buildings and facilities in Chicago by 2025 under a deal worth $422.2 million announced Monday by Mayor Lori Lightfoot and Gov. J.B. Pritzker.===

    You’d think, even with the downstate angle, this would get bigger play than its even getting now.

    It’s a tangible plan that has real world results to measure and allows a statewide type win where the city and elsewhere see something from this type of program.

    Comment by Oswego Willy Tuesday, Aug 9, 22 @ 3:31 pm

  10. Better than Batavia and Geneva owning part of a coal plant. Just saying.

    Comment by Proud Sucker Tuesday, Aug 9, 22 @ 5:12 pm

  11. According to this source (https://panethos.wordpress.com/2022/05/26/largest-solar-farm-in-each-state-territory-and-province/ ), 4100 acres of mostly ag ground will be taken out of production. That’s 6.5 square miles of connected lands. And, as stated by another commenter, the electricity generated when the sun is shining, only goes generically onto the grid. Mainly one farm dynasty is behind all the Black Diamond solar project- Dowsons. Some of you may be familiar with that family name.

    Comment by Anon221 Wednesday, Aug 10, 22 @ 8:26 am

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