Log in



Lost your password?
EnerKnol
  • Home
  • About
  • EK Research
  • News
  • Platform
  • Coverage
  • Case Studies
  • EnerKnol Calendar
  • Press
Log on To EnerKnol Platform Book Demo
  • Home
  • About
  • EK Research
  • News
  • Platform
  • Coverage
  • Case Studies
  • EnerKnol Calendar
  • Press
Login Book Demo
Advanced Energy Projects

The Joint Committee on Carbon Reduction unveiled legislation on Feb. 4 that would establish the Oregon Climate Action Program to place a cap on greenhouse gas emissions for entities whose annual emissions exceed 25,000 metric tons of carbon dioxide equivalent. The bill would set an annually declining emissions budget, starting in 2021 to put the state on a path to achieving a reduction of 45 percent by 2035 and 80 percent by 2050, relative to 1990 levels. If the legislation is approved, Oregon will become the second jurisdiction, after California, to implement an economy-wide carbon cap-and-trade system. Democratic Governor Kate Brown commended the measure expressing support for a comprehensive market-based program to reduce emissions and transition to a clean energy economy. (HB 2020)

The legislation would create a Carbon Policy Office to adopt the program by rule. Electric companies would be entitled to direct distribution of allowances at no cost for an amount equal to 100 percent of their forecast emissions to serve retail customers until 2030, after which, the amount would decline proportionate to the allowances available in the annual budgets. Manufacturing entities engaged in “emissions-intensive, trade-exposed processes,” would receive allowances at no cost during the calendar year 2021.

The bill would provide exemption for certain sources including emissions from fuel used for aviation, watercraft and railroad locomotives, from combustion of municipal solid waste to generate renewable energy, and emissions attributable to certain consumer-owned utilities. Fluorinated greenhouse gases generated during the manufacture of semiconductors and related devices would be exempted through 2025.

Under the bill, covered entities would be allowed to meet up to 8 percent of their compliance obligation using offset credits and up to 4 percent using credits sourced from offset projects that do not provide direct environmental benefits in the state.

February 5, 2019
Share
TweetShare on Twitter Share on FacebookShare on Facebook Share on LinkedInShare on LinkedIn

Post navigation

PreviousPrevious post:EnerKnol Week Ahead: ISO New England’s Capacity Auction, FERC’s Energy Storage Push, California’s Wildfire Mitigation PlansNextNext post:Michigan Electric Choice Program Shows 8 Megawatt Higher Consumption Amid Drop in Enrollees

Related Research

EnerKnol Research PU Visual Primer Coal 2026 04 28 Blog preview
Policy Actions Delay Planned U.S. Coal Plant Retirements Over Reliability Concerns
April 27, 2026
EnerKnol Research PU Visual Primer Coal 2026 04 28 Blog preview
Visual Primer: Policy Actions Delay Planned U.S. Coal Plant Retirements Over Reliability Concerns
April 27, 2026
6 1
New York Grid Operator Warns of Record-Low Summer Reliability Margin
April 27, 2026
Week Ahead: WA Examines Data Center Impacts, DOE Advances Genesis Mission, Cross-Border Pipeline Expansion
April 24, 2026
Image3
New York Approves 343 Megawatts of Wind and Solar to Boost Clean Energy and Local Investment
April 23, 2026
Image14
Trump Invokes Defense Production Act to Expand Energy Production, Infrastructure, Supply Chains
April 21, 2026
EnerKnol Research PU Visual Primer Oil and Gas Permitting 2026 04 21 Blog preview
Federal Actions Signal Reforms to Streamline Oil and Gas Permitting
April 20, 2026
EnerKnol Research PU Visual Primer Oil and Gas Permitting 2026 04 21 Blog preview
Visual Primer: Federal Actions Signal Reforms to Streamline Oil and Gas Permitting
April 20, 2026
  • Renewables
    • Biofuels
    • Electric Vehicles
    • Hydropower
    • Nuclear Power
    • Solar Power
    • Wind Power
  • Environmental Markets
    • Carbon Markets
    • Emissions
  • Fossil Fuels
    • Coal Power
    • Natural Gas
    • Oil
  • Power & Utilities
    • Energy Efficiency
    • Energy Storage
    • Retail Power & Gas
    • Smart Grid
    • Wholesale Markets

Subscribe To Our Research Newsletter!


First Name *
Last Name *
Email Address *
Phone *
Company *
Job Title *
Select any sectors you're interested in

Submit Form
https://enerknol.com/?p=26957
EnerKnol

The most comprehensive platform for energy and environmental regulatory intelligence, powered by cutting-edge AI and machine learning technology.

sales@enerknol.com
212-537-4797
175 Greenwich St, FL-38, New York, NY 10007

Product

  • Platform Overview
  • EKAI Assistant
  • Coverage Areas

Resources

  • Case Studies
  • API Documentation

Company

  • About Us
  • Careers
  • New York Energy Week

Legal

  • Terms of Service
© 2026 EnerKnol. All rights reserved.
Book a Demo