Pubdate: Thu, 24 Dec 2015 Source: Albuquerque Journal (NM) Copyright: 2015 Albuquerque Journal Contact: http://www.abqjournal.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/10 Author: Jennifer Oldham, Bloomberg News U.S. POT INDUSTRY A POWER-SUCKING HOG Indoor Growing Sites Tax Electric Grids, Unravel Conservation Efforts DENVER - The $3.5 billion U.S. marijuana market is emerging as one of the nation's most power-hungry industries, with the 24-hour demands of thousands of indoor growing sites taxing electricity grids and unraveling hard-earned gains in energy conservation. Without design standards or efficient equipment, the growing facilities in the 23 states where marijuana is legal are responsible for greenhouse-gas emissions almost equal to those of every car, home and business in New Hampshire. Some operations have blown out transformers, resulting in fires. Others rely on pollution-belching diesel generators to avoid hooking into the grid. And demand could intensify in 2017 if advocates succeed in legalizing the drug for recreational use in several states, including California and Nevada. State regulators are grappling with how to address the growth, said Pennsylvania Public Utility Commissioner Pam Witmer. "We are at the edge of this," Witmer said. "We are looking all across the country for examples and best practices." The corporatization of what was once off-the-grid agriculture is taxing electrical systems as the nation prepares to comply with the Paris climate agreement and the Environmental Protection Agency tries to reduce greenhouse gases from coal-fired power plants, which are considered the single largest domestic source of emissions that contribute to global warming. "Consumers seeking a green lifestyle are likely unaware that their cannabis use could cancel out their otherwise lowcarbon footprint," Evan Mills, an energy analyst for California's Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, wrote in an email. Indoor growing in 2012 racked up at least $6 billion a year in energy costs, compared with $1 billion for pharmaceutical companies, Mills found in a study he did independent of the research institution. Some larger facilities use as much as $1 million worth of power a month. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom