New Yorkās longest serving commissioner of the Department of Environmental Conservation is stepping down.
What You Need To Know
- Basil Seggos has served for eight and a half years
- The state law requires several benchmarks: 2030: 70% electricity come from renewables, 2040: 100% carbon-free electricity, 2050: Carbon-free economy
- Seggos pushed back the Jan. 1 deadline for the carbon emissions policy, called cap and invest, to sometime this summer
Basil Seggos has served for eight and a half years. He was appointed to the job in 2015 and officially confirmed in 2016.
Seggos has now served under two governors and is poised to leave at a pivotal time in New Yorkās history.
āWe have a job to do and when it comes to climate change, but like any of the threats facing the state, we have to be honest, but also aggressive about fixing these problems,ā Seggos told NY1 in a sit-down interview Monday.
Heās the top official leading and implementing New Yorkās 2019 climate law, which mandates the stateās economy be entirely carbon free in less than three decades ā if it all goes to plan.
āWe have to hit the law, not just because the law says we should, but that in fact, weāre dealing with a crisis,ā Seggos said.
The state law requires several benchmarks:
- 2030: 70% electricity come from renewables
- 2040: 100% carbon-free electricity
- 2050: Carbon-free economy
But the law also lends flexibility, allowing the DEC and New York state Energy Research and Development Authority broad leeway as to how theyāll meet those goals.
āWe have flexibility and that the law itself requires us to merely hit the targets. It doesnāt really tell us how to do it. And thatās what weāve been doing,ā Seggos said.
But critics charge that the goals wonāt be met.
The electrical grid is expanding too slowly, so is moving away from fossil fuels.
Wind energyās cost may have been underestimated ā Gov. Kathy Hochul recently announced two major projects are about to be renegotiated after the projectsā CEOs complained they need more investment from the state.
ā2030 is not that far away, especially when what we are predominantly looking at is a massive build out of our grid,ā Doreen Harris, CEO and president of NYSERDA, told NY1 in a sit-down interview Monday.
Harris testified at a recent budget hearing that New York is currently at 25% renewable energy, which includes reliance on wind, solar and hydroelectric power.
āWhat weāll continue to do is make rational decisions based on changing circumstances because it is the fact that it is not a straight line to 2030 for sure, and Iām sure 2040 and 2050 will present their challenges as well,ā she said.
And already, Seggos pushed back the Jan. 1 deadline for the carbon emissions policy, called cap and invest, to sometime this summer.
āI told the public last year that we were not going to hit our first deadline of draft regulations by the end of the calendar year,ā he said. āWhat the law requires us to do is come up with an economy-wide policy. Thatās really tough to do.ā
Heās focused on making the changes affordable for families and businesses, which are estimated to end up in the multi-billion range once in full force.
Admitting heās concerned ā and so is the governor.
Hochulās budget director Blake Washington recently said that she is āuneasyā about the financial burden that will inevitably be felt by taxpayers.
Hochul is also exploring incorporating nuclear power as part of the transition to renewable energy.
āWeāre all paying extraordinary cost right now for climate change. I mean, thereās no doubt about it,ā Seggos said, adding that the cost of inaction will be even worse.
Hurricane Sandy cost taxpayers $36 billion. Pollution is sending more people to the hospital and sea levels are rising.
The next DEC commissioner will need to marry the goals of affordability and smart policy.
Seggos said heāll exit in April once the state budget is finalized.
āI donāt want to leave before ensuring that this agency is as well-resourced for next year,ā he said.
Heās grown the agency to nearly 3,000 employees since taking the helm, boasting a multi-billion dollar budget.
Seggos navigated the politics of the job, which at one point led him to calling out the former governor. Heās traveled to Ukraine on several humanitarian trips.
āI went because I knew that in my mind, that it was a very significant struggle for our future as a country and the future of the Western world, if you will. Governor was nothing but supportive. It wasnāt even a difficult conversation,ā he said. āIāve got some work to do. And then whatās next after that? Iām not taking a knee from the environmental fight.ā