The biggest hurdle was convincing Rocky Mountain Power, their existing fossil-fuel-dependent utility monopoly, to develop and provide the communities with sufficient clean, renewable electricity resources - not renewable energy credits or supplies from existing sources - and to retire fossil-fuel assets. How did a politically conservative, coal-dependent state such as Utah achieve a 100% renewable energy commitment? Through interviews with the key players involved and secondary sources, our research uncovered the initial key obstacles facing the cities’ renewable electricity goals and the strategies they have initiated to resolve them. How did a politically conservative, coal-dependent state such as Utah achieve such a commitment? We recently published a study in the journal Sustainability (access is free) exploring how it began with Salt Lake City, Park City and Moab, the first Utah cities to enact 100 percent net-renewable electricity resolutions in 20. In Utah, 23 cities and counties have resolved to adopt 100 percent net-renewable electricity by 2030, representing about 37 percent of Utah’s electricity load. ![]() ![]() Six cities already have achieved this goal: Kodiak Island, Alaska Aspen, Colorado Georgetown, Texas Greensburg, Kansas Rock Port, Missouri and Burlington, Vermont. ![]() To date, more than 150 cities, counties and states across America have passed resolutions to commit to 100 percent net-renewable electricity in the coming years, defined as meeting the city’s total electricity demand with the gross amount of electricity generated and purchased from renewable sources, such as solar, wind and geothermal as well as energy efficiency, demand management and energy storage. In the absence of federal action on climate change in the United States, local communities have taken on the responsibility of reducing their greenhouse emissions.
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