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This letter to the editor was submitted by Eric Hauverson, Mayor of Longview.
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Longview has always been a town that makes things.
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From our timber beginnings to our modern port, we are an industrial city built on honest work.
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And right now, politicians in Olympia are making it harder to grow that future.
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The culprit is Washington's Clean Energy Transformation Act.
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While it doesn't get the headlines, it is quietly reshaping what kind of economy this region is allowed to build.
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The law restricts our utilities from accessing affordable energy on the open market and locks in a hard timeline that investors cannot ignore.
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Washington already forced coal out of utility portfolios at the end of last year.
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By 2030, utilities must be greenhouse gas neutral.
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By 2045, every kilowatt sold in this state must come from a renewable or zero carbon source.
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Those deadlines may sound reasonable in Olympia.
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They look very different to a company deciding where to build.
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When a site selector is evaluating locations for a large manufacturing facility,
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energy ranks near the top of every checklist.
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Can we get reliable, affordable power for the life of this investment?
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In Washington, the honest answer right now is uncertain.
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The 2045 deadline creates a hard ceiling that makes long-term energy planning difficult and expensive.
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Other states, without those restrictions, are making the pitch to those same companies and they are winning business that could have come to Longview.
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At least one major industrial project that seriously evaluated Longview ultimately chose a Gulf of America site instead.
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Predictable energy was a deciding factor.
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That's one facility, hundreds of jobs, and years of tax revenue that went somewhere else.
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At the same time, the grid cannot currently support a major surge in industrial demand.
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We are being told to electrify everything while the electricity is not there to back it up.
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That is not a plan. That is a promise with no delivery date.
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The good news is that real help is coming.
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Small modular reactors are next-generation nuclear plants that are safe and capable of producing massive amounts of carbon-free power.
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Federal regulators just issued the first construction permit for an advanced reactor in the West.
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That is the kind of energy future that actually works for a region like ours.
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But those reactors will not be online until the 2030s.
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That leaves us stranded in a gap Olympia created.
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We are being pushed away from the energy we have before the replacement is ready.
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It is like being told to jump from an airplane while the parachute is still being sown.
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The port of Longview is one of our greatest assets.
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Our export economy moves real volume, keeps union workers employed, and connects this region to global markets.
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But when a manufacturing facility sets down roots here, it multiplies that benefit.
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It creates a tax base, builds careers, and sends more goods through that same port.
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We have the land, the river access, and the workforce to compete for that kind of investment.
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That future doesn't wait.
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Every year, energy uncertainty lingers, another company chooses somewhere else.
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We need state leaders to keep natural gas viable as a bridge until the new energy era actually arrives.
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If we do not fix this timeline, we are not just cutting emissions, we are cutting off our own future.
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Let's build a bridge we can actually afford to cross.
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Eric Halverson is the mayor of Longview, Washington, where he has been a vocal advocate for economic development
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and the region's industrial future.