KAHULUI, Maui 鈥 Vision met reality on the first day of the , which featured a series of panel discussions on how Hawaii can 鈥 or can’t 鈥 reach its goal of getting 100 percent of its electricity from renewable sources by 2045.

鈥淭he sheer infrastructure and scope that would be required to go to 100 percent on Oahu is really impossible under today鈥檚 technology,鈥 Kauai Island Utility Cooperative CEO David Bissell said Wednesday at the Maui Arts and Cultural Center.

鈥淭here鈥檚 just not enough land there,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 got to come from biofuel or other technology or from other islands.鈥

Kauai Island Utility Cooperative CEO David Bissell shared some of the realities in reaching the state's 100 percent renewable energy goal, Wednesday, at the Maui Energy Conference.
Kauai Island Utility Cooperative CEO David Bissell talked about the challenge of reaching the state’s 100 percent renewable energy goal Wednesday at the Maui Energy Conference. Nathan Eagle/Civil Beat

That鈥檚 Oahu, home to nearly 1 million people and a city full of neon lights. Kauai, a rural island of 65,000 residents, could reach the state鈥檚 goal within the next 30 years and is already 40 percent of the way there, Bissell said.

But closing that gap could come at a significant cost even on Kauai, he said.

Bissell estimated that it would take 5,000 acres and a $1 billion investment, with debt-service payments of up to $70 million, for Kauai to be 100 percent renewable under today鈥檚 technologies. KIUC has roughly 35,000 member customers.

He said a recent modeling exercise was 鈥渁 real eye-opener鈥 to him. To make it pencil out, he assumed more than three times as many rooftop solar systems, battery storage infrastructure and agricultural land for utility-scale photovoltaics and biomass crops.

鈥淲e wouldn鈥檛 be subject to as much volatility, but it really wouldn鈥檛 have a downward pressure on rates,鈥 he said.

Former Colorado Gov. Bill Ritter said the path to 100 percent renewable energy should be viewed from a moral position.
Former Colorado Gov. Bill Ritter said the path to 100 percent renewable energy should be viewed from a moral position. 

Hawaii Gov. David Ige signed the 100 percent renewable energy goal into law last year, and the Legislature is fine-tuning the policy this session. The path forward remains uncertain, but there is agreement that the status quo won鈥檛 cut it.

鈥淣o one is going to get to 100 percent without upending the utility model,鈥 said former Colorado Gov. Bill Ritter, now a director at the at Colorado State University.

He considers Hawaii鈥檚 100 percent renewable energy objective to be realistic.

鈥淚t鈥檚 absolutely doable,鈥 Ritter said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 part of what the future of the world needs to look like.鈥

Utility executives said they support the 100 percent goal and are willing to adapt, but underscored the practical limitations of the current technologies and how the regulatory environment slows the process.

Shelee Kimura, Hawaiian Electric Co. vice president of corporate planning and business development, said the customer is an integral part of a 100 percent renewable energy future.
Shelee Kimura, Hawaiian Electric Co. vice president of corporate planning and business development, said the customer is an integral part of a 100 percent renewable energy future. Nathan Eagle/Civil Beat

Hawaii Gas CEO Alicia Moy and Hawaiian Electric Vice President Shelee Kimura reiterated their support at the conference for using liquefied natural gas as a bridge fuel to get to a 100 percent renewable future.

鈥淛ust because it鈥檚 a fossil fuel doesn鈥檛 mean we shouldn鈥檛 be considering a cleaner version of that to get to our end state,鈥 Moy said.

Ige came out against LNG for electricity in August and has not backed down. He has said聽investments in LNG infrastructure would be better spent on renewable energy projects.

Bissell said the governor鈥檚 stance prompted Kauai 鈥 the only county not powered by investor-owned subsidiaries of Hawaiian Electric Industries 鈥 to look at propane instead.

He explained that as the head of a member-owned cooperative, he鈥檚 directly accountable to an elected board of directors. Given how environmentally conscious Kauai residents are, he said he has to keep them happy if he wants to keep his job.

Kimura said if the state is going renewable because it鈥檚 trying to be environmentally responsible, the disposal of renewable聽energy systems is going to be increasingly important.

Ritter and other out-of-state speakers at the conference, such as Kristen Mayes, senior sustainability scholar at Arizona State University, took the opportunity to remind people that while there are challenges in achieving the state鈥檚 ambitious energy goals and differing perspectives on how to get there, Hawaii is leading the country in many聽ways, like integrating rooftop solar into the grid.

鈥淵ou have so, so much to be proud of,鈥 Mayes said.

The continues Thursday with discussions about how the regulatory and governmental framework helps or hinders energy investments in Hawaii, among other topics. Two of the three members of the state聽聽will be panelists.

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