The federal government’s disaster response agency is being sued over its plans to rebuild Puerto Rico’s power grid in a way that limits a transition to renewable energy and extends the lifespan of current fossil-fuel dependent plants, according to conservation and community groups.
The Center for Biological Diversity, a national conservation nonprofit in Washington, and eight Puerto Rican environmental groups filed the lawsuit Tuesday in federal court in Washington.
The groups allege that the Federal Emergency Management Agency has failed to consider rooftop solar energy systems as well as other forms of distributed renewable energy for projects intended to provide electricity to vulnerable communities.
FEMA and other federal agencies are expected to invest more than $12 billion to permanently rebuild the grid that was destroyed by Hurricane Maria in 2017. For the past five years, the patched-up grid has been acting up, causing blackouts and brownouts.
Against this background, power customers in Puerto Rico have been subjected to seven electric rate increases over the last year, even though they already pay about twice as much as mainland U.S. customers.
Unreliable and expensive electricity has prompted a still small but growing number of Puerto Ricans to transition to renewable energy.
The thousands of Puerto Rican homeowners who have installed solar panels on their roofs support preliminary findings of a community-driven study known as PR100 from the U.S. Department of Energy, and funded by FEMA, that concluded that Puerto Rico should prioritize rooftop solar systems and microgrids to reach its renewable energy goals.
According to the study, microgrids and smaller distributed systems improve the overall resiliency of the island’s power system, mainly because it recovers more quickly after disasters.
But with permanent reconstruction of the devastated power grid on the horizon, the community groups in Puerto Rico that are suing FEMA worry that the agency…
Read the full article here