At the governor鈥檚 request, Hawaii lawmakers took special action Thursday to reconsider a bill that would change the formula the state uses to determine how much electricity comes from renewable sources.
鈥淭he current method is flawed and results in the misrepresentation of the state鈥檚 renewable energy progress,鈥 Gov. David Ige said in a statement.
Hawaii set a goal last year of achieving 100 percent renewable energy for electricity generation by 2045. But the formula the law uses, which is based on electricity sales rather than generation, would let the state meet that goal while still relying significantly on fossil fuels.

鈥淭o succeed in meeting this goal, there must be an accurate method of calculating the percentage of renewable energy penetration,鈥 Ige said.
Hawaii was getting聽roughly 21 percent of its electricity from renewable sources at the end of 2014.
The governor asked lawmakers to reconsider , which had died in the Consumer Protection Committee after being amended in the Energy and Environmental Protection Committee. The Senate version had also stalled.
Rep. Angus McKelvey, who chairs the Consumer Protection Committee, said it鈥檚 protocol to reconsider bills when a governor or former governor asks. He moved on the House floor to waive the 48-hour notice normally given, and called for a decision-making meeting to be held on the bill roughly four hours later, at 5 p.m.
He did the same for a bill that former Gov. Neil Abercrombie asked the House to reconsider, , which authorizes public agencies to initiate projects through which a public utility will purchase fuel or electricity. Abercrombie was warmly welcomed at the hearing.
House Bill 2991 initially set out to simply change the definition of “renewable portfolio standard” by substituting a single word. It would mean the percentage of electrical energy “generation” 鈥 instead of “sales” 鈥 that is represented by renewable electrical energy.
Then things got complicated.
The House Energy Committee, chaired by Rep. Chris Lee, amended the bill last month after hearing concerns from Hawaiian Electric Co. and The Alliance for Solar Choice, an advocacy group for the solar industry, among others.
HECO, Hawaiian Electric Industries’ Oahu subsidiary, was worried that the change failed to take into account electricity generated by fossil fuels coming from customers with their own power systems who connect to the grid. In theory, the utility could burn less oil and coal at its power plants but this could be offset by customers who connect to the grid with their own fossil-fuel burning systems.
TASC said rooftop solar systems shouldn鈥檛 count toward helping the utility meet the renewable energy goals because the customers pay for those systems.
The committee amended the bill by changing the definition of “renewable portfolio standard” to mean the 鈥渢otal renewable electrical energy generated from grid-connected renewable energy systems to the total electrical energy generated from grid-connected energy systems.鈥
Lee wrote in his committee report that “grid-connected” was defined to more accurately reflect the sum total of renewable energy penetration in the state.
鈥淪pecifically, the amended definition of renewable portfolio standard, when analyzed in the context of grid-connection, bases the calculation of renewable portfolio standards on the ratio of total renewable electrical energy generated from grid-connected renewable energy systems to the total electrical energy generated from grid-connected energy systems.鈥
If that sounds a bit confusing, you鈥檙e not alone. The Consumer Protection Committee indefinitely deferred the bill after receiving it from the Energy Committee.
That is, until Ige asked McKelvey to reconsider it Thursday. He did, and the committee passed an amended version of the bill that restores it to its original version.
鈥淲e鈥檙e going to pitch a clean slate back over to the Senate,鈥 McKelvey said.
The full House is expected to vote on the bill next week, and its approval would send it to the Senate for its consideration.
Hawaiian Electric Industries’ subsidiaries power Oahu, Big Island and Maui County. Kauai has a member-owned electric cooperative.
HECO reported Thursday that the聽consolidated renewable portfolio standard聽for聽Hawaiian Electric, Maui Electric and Hawaii Electric Light combined was 23.2 percent, an聽increase from 21.3 percent for 2014.
GET IN-DEPTH
REPORTING ON HAWAII鈥橲 BIGGEST ISSUES
We need your help.
Unfortunately, being named a聽finalist for a聽Pulitzer prize聽doesn’t make us immune to financial pressures. The fact is,聽our revenue hasn鈥檛 kept pace with our need to grow,听.
Civil Beat is a nonprofit, reader-supported newsroom based in 贬补飞补颈驶颈. We鈥檙e looking to build a more resilient, diverse and deeply impactful media landscape, and聽we hope you鈥檒l help by .
About the Author
-
Nathan Eagle is a deputy editor for Civil Beat. You can reach him by email at neagle@civilbeat.org or follow him on Twitter at , Facebook and Instagram .