Chart: The retiring coal power plants Trump could revive

Coal plant retirements have been the engine of U.S. progress in cutting emissions. As natural gas became more abundant and renewables plummeted in cost, more than 140 gigawatts’ worth of coal plants have retired since 2011, when the dirty energy source peaked at nearly 318 GW of generation capacity. Carbon emissions from the power sector have fallen steadily over that same period.

Now, the U.S. gets more power from wind and solar alone than it does from coal, an extremely carbon-intensive form of energy that provided around half of the country’s electricity at the start of the millennium.

But President Donald Trump is trying to put a stop to coal’s demise. On his first day in office, Trump declared a national energy emergency that experts have called baseless and which is now being challenged by 15 states in court. The emergency” is also belied by Trump’s efforts to obstruct clean energy, which for years has accounted for over 90% of new electricity added to the grid.

Trump has since built on that edict by availing himself of emergency powers to force fossil-fuel plants to stay online past their scheduled retirement.

In May, the Trump administration issued 90-day stay-open orders for two facilities set to close days later: the J.H. Campbell coal plant in Michigan and the Eddystone oil- and gas-burning plant in Pennsylvania. Trump just reupped those mandates for another 90 days. Families and businesses will pay the price: The first three months of continuing to operate J.H. Campbell alone could cost consumers as much as $100 million, estimated Michigan’s Public Service Commission chair.

And in July, the Department of Energy released a specious report that overstates the risk of grid blackouts. States are attempting to make the agency fix the report, which they expect will be used to justify additional emergency stay-open orders for other coal plants. Blocking all planned closures of fossil-fuel power plants could result in billions of dollars in additional yearly energy costs for consumers by the end of Trump’s term.

The administration’s desire to revive America’s dirtiest form of power will only exacerbate the nation’s brewing utility bill crisis. The price of electricity has been rising for several years, and despite promises of slashing energy costs, Trump’s pro-coal, anti-renewables agenda is making things even worse. 

Great Job Dan McCarthy & the Team @ Canary Media Source link for sharing this story.

#FROUSA #HillCountryNews #NewBraunfels #ComalCounty #LocalVoices #IndependentMedia

Felicia Owens
Felicia Owenshttps://feliciaray.com
Happy wife of Ret. Army Vet, proud mom, guiding others to balance in life, relationships & purpose.

Latest articles

spot_img

Related articles

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Leave the field below empty!

spot_img
Secret Link