SPRINGFIELD CLIMATE JUSTICE COALITION COMMENDS CLIMATE LEGISLATION; TAKES AIM AT GOVERNOR BAKER’S IMMEDIATE PLANS TO PROMOTE PALMER BIOMASS PLANT

For Immediate Release: January 5, 2021

Contact: Verne McArthur - vernemca@gmail.com; 413.439.3324

Jacqueline Velez - jackie@massjwj.net; 646.683.1883

SPRINGFIELD CLIMATE JUSTICE COALITION COMMENDS CLIMATE LEGISLATION; TAKES AIM AT GOVERNOR BAKER’S IMMEDIATE PLANS TO PROMOTE PALMER BIOMASS PLANT

The Springfield Climate Justice Coalition (SCJC) commends the Massachusetts Legislature for taking into consideration the justified concerns of Springfield residents about a large biomass power plant proposed in this community. 

After hearing from SCJC, its member groups, allies, and thousands of Massachusetts residents, the Legislature removed biomass from the list of qualified energy sources for a new Greenhouse Gas Emission Standard established for municipal lighting plants and called on the Baker Administration to conduct a study on the health and climate impacts of burning biomass for energy. 

However the new climate bill will not protect Springfield residents and people living in the surrounding cities and towns from the threat of a proposed biomass plant in that community. Currently, inefficient biomass power plants don’t qualify for renewable energy credits in Massachusetts. But new rules submitted by the Baker Administration’s Department of Energy Resources (DOER) in December would roll back these standards and allow a long-contested  plant, proposed by Palmer Renewable Energy, to qualify for $13-$15 million a year in clean energy subsidies paid for by Massachusetts ratepayers..

The Palmer biomass plant will disproportionately impact low-income communities of color that already have some of the worst air quality in the entire country. The City of Springfield has been classified as the “Asthma  Capital” of the U.S. by the Asthma and Allergy Foundation of America. One in five children in Springfield have asthma and one in four in Holyoke. The negative impacts of pollution from the Palmer biomass power plant will be felt well beyond the city limits of Springfield. Furthermore the rule change will open the door for other polluting biomass plants in the Northeast.

In addition to passing the Climate Roadmap bill, the SCJC is  urging the Legislature to hold a hearing on the Baker Administration’s proposal to extend renewable energy subsidies to biomass electricity plants. We join with the Attorney General’s office and dozens of environmental organizations in calling on the Joint Committee on Telecommunications, Utilities and Energy (TUE) to hold a public hearing on these regulations and seek more input from the communities disproportionately affected that will have to deal with the damaging results of the pollution that a biomass plant to be built in Springfield will have on them. We also request the TUE Committee examine the scientific basis for introducing the new regulations into the effort to fight climate change.

We  support passage of the climate bill and call upon the Legislature to join us in urging Governor Baker to protect the health of our children, vulnerable populations, and the climate by withdrawal of the proposed biomass rule changes. 

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Link to Press Release: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1u2AU9GAS3rrd9HYSniVhRxRsonfsoAIFo1qnco14XC8/edit?usp=shari

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