Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin speaks to reporters outside the Capitol near the end of the 2024 General Assembly session. Photo by Graham Moomaw/Virginia Mercury.
A Virginia circuit court judge ruled Wednesday Gov. Glenn Youngkin (R) acted unlawfully by withdrawing the commonwealth from the multistate Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative, a program aimed at reducing climate-changing emissions that has funneled hundreds of millions to the state to deal with the impacts of extreme weather events.
Eleven states, from Maryland north to Maine, are currently part of RGGI, which requires electricity producers to buy allowances for the emissions they produce. Virginia joined the program in 2021, but Youngkin pulled the commonwealth out in 2023.
In his five-page opinion, Floyd County Circuit Judge C. Randall Lowe wrote that “the only body with the authority to repeal the RGGI regulation would be the General Assembly. This is because a statute, the RGGI Act, requires the RGGI regulation to exist.”
“For the reasons set out in this opinion, the court finds that the attempted repeal of the RGGI Regulation is unlawful, and thereby null and void,” Lowe wrote.
RGGI background and how we got here
Virginia began participating in RGGI in 2021 after Democrats, with control of state government the year prior, passed the Clean Energy and Community Flood Preparedness Act — what Lowe, in his opinion, called the RGGI Act.
Proceeds from emission allowances that electricity producers in the RGGI states are required to purchase are returned to the states. In Virginia, about $830 million had been generated for programs to increase flood resiliency and for energy-efficiency efforts prior to the state’s withdrawal at the end of last year. The 2020 law dedicated 50% of the funds to energy-efficiency programs that reduce electricity needs; 45% go to the Community Flood Preparedness Fund, or the flood fund for community-scale flood protection projects; and 5% to administrative functions.
Climate commission tables debate on revenue-generating measures
In Virginia, utilities produce their own electricity and are allowed to recover the costs of the allowances from ratepayers. For a typical Dominion customer, the recovery amounted to a $2.39 monthly fee, before it was paused amid uncertainty around Virginia’s participation in RGGI. The fee was then added back in the amount of $4.34 for a typical residential customer, to make up for when cost recovery wasn’t levied and participation in RGGI continued.
The fee is no longer tacked on to utility bills.
Youngkin called the fee a “hidden tax” when he proposed a regulation in fall 2022 to repeal the existing regulation requiring Virginia’s participation in RGGI. The State Air Pollution Control Board approved the repeal regulation in August 2023.
Four groups immediately challenged the Youngkin administration in Fairfax County Circuit Court. The judge found only one group, the Association of Energy Conservation Professionals, had standing to sue, and transferred the matter to Floyd County Circuit Court, where AECP is headquartered.
What the ruling means
Lowe based his decision that Youngkin overreached on precedents set by two cases, Supervisors of Botetourt County v. Cahoon from 1917, and Bean vs. Simmons from 1852.
In the Cahoon case, the court ruled that where there is a “duty coupled with the power … usually the power must be exercised,” Lowe noted, adding that “what they are empowered to do … the law requires shall be done.”
The Bean case, Lowe explained, demonstrated that where “public interest and right are concerned,” the public has a right to agency powers being used.
The RGGI Act, Lowe wrote, includes in the first substantive provision that participation in RGGI “shall be incorporated” by the Virginia Department of Environmental Quality without further action by the air board. The act also “hereby authorized” the DEQ director to participate in RGGI, Lowe pointed out, thereby coupling the duty to participate in RGGI and the power to do so.
“There can be no doubt that the RGGI Act is designed for the purposes discussed in Cahoon,” Lowe wrote. “Because respondents lacked the statutory authority to repeal the RGGI Regulation, it is unnecessary to address whether the decision to do so was supported by substantial evidence.”
YOU MAKE OUR WORK POSSIBLE.
Had the Youngkin administration “amended,” the RGGI regulation in ways that were still consistent with the law, Lowe added, “it is doubtful that their authority to do so could be challenged. That is not what happened here.”
Environmental advocates, lawmakers react
Environmental groups and Democratic lawmakers had said repeatedly that the RGGI withdrawal was unlawful and hurt Virginians.
Billy Weitzenfeld, former executive director of the Association of Energy Conservation Professionals, said in a statement, “All along we knew that the actions taken by the Air Board and DEQ were wrong.”
His group was granted standing in the case by Lowe because the repeal of the regulation meant the association was injured by losing a source of revenue to carry out their energy efficiency work.
“This is a win for communities across Virginia who have benefited from the state’s participation in RGGI in the past and those that now will have a chance to continue to see those benefits,” Weitzenfeld said.
Chelsea Harnish, executive director of the Virginia Energy Efficiency Council, noted that the revenue from RGGI “cannot be replaced or matched,” since the allowance revenues “exceeded every other source of energy efficiency funding in Virginia combined.”
Members of other environmental groups hailed the judge’s decision as a victory.
Mike Town, executive director of the Virginia League of Conservation Voters, said the result of Youngkin’s move was, “dirtier air, more communities left exposed to floodwaters, and fewer tools to help Virginians cut energy costs.” Walton Shepherd, Virginia director and senior attorney with the group, added that “as we witness the grim toll of the increasingly dangerous weather in a warming world, today’s decision is good news for all Virginians.”
House Majority Leader Charniele Herring, D-Alexandria, who carried the 2020 law through its passage and pushed for a budget amendment this past session to reinstate Virginia in RGGI, said the decision was a “resounding victory for Virginia’s families.”
“We are proud to stand with every Virginian who benefits from this initiative and will continue fighting to ensure these protections remain intact,” said Herring.
But Youngkin spokesperson Christian Martinez said, “We respectfully disagree with the judge’s decision and will pursue an appeal.”
Some good climate news, for once: Md. leads in carbon emissions reductions
“Governor Youngkin remains committed to lowering the cost of living for Virginians by continuing to oppose the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative, which fails to effectively incentivize emission reductions in the Commonwealth,” Martinez said. “Instead, it functions as a regressive tax, hidden in utility, bills passed on to all Virginians.”
Attorney General Jason Miyares, in response to a question about the judge’s decision, told Richmond television station WTVR on Wednesday that, “I think you can see from the beginning this is in the governor’s powers and how the law was actually written to the Virginia code. … We obviously have a disagreement in the interpretation of the law and the code.”
Next steps
Lowes’ opinion explaining his decision will need to be followed up by an order to officially repeal the regulation that withdrew Virginia from RGGI, and reinstate the previous regulation requiring participation, said Nate Benforado, senior attorney with the Southern Environmental Law Center, which represented the AECP. The timing of that order is yet to be determined.
Once the old regulation is back in effect, DEQ will then need to take steps to resume participation in RGGI, Benforado said. While the Youngkin administration has said it will appeal the decision, it will also need to also ask for a stay, or a pause, if it wants to delay rejoining RGGI while Lowe’s decision is appealed.
Calling the ruling “validating,” Benforado said, “It is up to the administration on what they want to do next.”
He said the RGGI program was “critical” to reducing one-third of emission from independent power producers, since the state’s other landmark law reducing emission from power companies, the Virginia Clean Economy Act, applies only to Dominion Energy and Appalachian Power Co.
“RGGI is really the key, if not the only tool, Virginia has,” Benforado said.
The state’s third major emissions-reducing regulation, which tethered Virginia’s vehicle tailpipe emissions to California’s Advanced Clean Car II standards that ban the sale of new gas-powered vehicles starting in 2035, has also been repealed during Youngkin’s tenure. Environmental groups have signaled they’ll challenge that administrative move, also.
A spokesperson for Miyares’ office declined to elaborate on questions from the Virginia Mercury concerning what happens next with the state’s RGGI participation.
“We look forward to defending the commonsense repeal of this counterproductive program on appeal,” the spokesperson said.
– Virginia Mercury is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Virginia Mercury maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Samantha Willis for questions: info@virginiamercury.com. Follow Virginia Mercury on Facebook and X.