Now it backs McKee’s plan to gut them.
By Nancy Lavin, Rhode Island Current
“No more silent costs,” Gov. Dan McKee proclaimed Monday at an event in Warwick before signing an executive order to roll back state renewable and energy efficiency programs to save ratepayers money on their monthly bills.Behind him stood leaders of the state’s top manufacturing companies. Each stepped up to the podium to bemoan rising energy costs during the 20-minute press conference. Except one.
John Ranieri, senior director for corporate engineering for Toray Plastics (America), stood silently in the background, smiling as McKee put pen to paper in a recording posted online by independent journalist Steve Ahlquist.
Ranieri stood in at the last minute for the North Kingstown manufacturer’s CEO, Christopher Roy, who was originally scheduled to attend and deliver remarks alongside executives from igus Inc., Bullard Abrasives, and VIBCO, Laura Hart, a spokesperson for McKee’s office, confirmed in an email Tuesday.
But environmental advocates in the audience, holding signs and wearing green T-shirts, noticed the Toray executive’s silence. They were not invited to speak during the press conference but had plenty to say after about the millions of dollars in state incentives Toray has received through the very programs McKee now wants to weaken.
“It’s disappointing to hear from business leaders about high energy costs without acknowledgement of the ways that those businesses have taken advantage of renewable energy and energy efficiency programs,” Emily Koo, Rhode Island program director for Acadia Center, said in a phone interview Monday afternoon.
Emily Howe, state director for Clean Water Action Rhode Island, called the silence from Toray executives “hypocritical.”
Toray applied for and received a $15.9 million energy efficiency rebate from National Grid in 2013, along with a $1.8 million advanced gas technology incentive to upgrade its 70-acre campus in Quonset Business Park.