Abstract U.S. policymakers are pursuing visionary policies for clean energy, including a proposed federal Green New Deal and state and city pledges for 100% renewable energy. Bold policy goals are… Click to show full abstract
Abstract U.S. policymakers are pursuing visionary policies for clean energy, including a proposed federal Green New Deal and state and city pledges for 100% renewable energy. Bold policy goals are unlikely to be achieved, however, if policy instruments are poorly designed, as occurred in past experiences of ambitious but unsuccessful energy policy. To understand how ambitious energy transition goals affect the political dynamics of policy design and implementation, this paper conducts a longitudinal case study of the 2007 Renewable Fuel Standard using policy feedback theory. It finds that unrealistically high goals for cellulosic biofuels triggered weak policy design, undermining the policy’s effectiveness. This was a negative policy feedback wherein anticipated costs led policymakers to weaken the mandate with waivers, exemptions, and alternative compliance options. Yet while too much flexibility on fuel volumes led to insufficient incentives for cellulosic ethanol, the policy’s flexibility on fuel pathways allowed for new developments in cellulosic renewable natural gas. Thus, the case offers both a cautionary tale about the political risks of overambitious goals, as well as constructive lessons about policies that build new constituencies for clean energy.
               
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