Wednesday, April 02, 2008

Earth Policy News - The Beginning of the End for Coal: A Long Year in the Life of the U.S. Coal Industry

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> Earth Policy Institute
> News Release
> April 2, 2008
>
> THE BEGINNING OF THE END FOR COAL
> A Long Year in the Life of the U.S. Coal Industry
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> http://www.earthpolicy.org/Updates/2008/Update70_timeline.htm
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> Lester R. Brown and Jonathan G. Dorn
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> With concerns about climate change mounting, the era of coal-fired electricity generation in the United States may be coming to a close. In early 2007, a U.S. Department of Energy report listed 151 coal-fired power plants in the planning stages in the United States. But during 2007, 59 proposed plants were either refused licenses by state governments or quietly abandoned. In addition, close to 50 coal plants are being contested in the courts, and the remaining plants will likely be challenged when they reach the permitting stage.
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> What began as a few local ripples of resistance to coal-fired power plants is quickly evolving into a national tidal wave of opposition from environmental, health, farm, and community organizations as well as leading climate scientists and state governments. Growing concern over pending legislation to regulate carbon emissions is creating uncertainty in financial markets. Leading financial groups are now downgrading coal stocks and requiring utilities seeking funding for coal plants to include a cost for carbon emissions when proving economic viability.
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> On March 11, 2008, Representative Henry Waxman of California introduced a bill to ban new coal-fired power plants without carbon emissions controls nationwide until federal regulations are put in place to address greenhouse gas emissions. If Congress passes this bill, it will deal a death blow to the future of U.S. coal-fired power generation. Yet even without a legislative mandate for a moratorium, the contraction in financial support for new coal-fired power plants is escalating toward a de facto moratorium. The timeline that follows is witness to what may well be the beginning of the end of coal-fired power in the United States.
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> A Long Year in the Life of the U.S. Coal Industry -- Timeline
> On-line at www.earthpolicy.org/Updates/2008/Update70_timeline.htm.
>
> 26 February 2007 - James Hansen, director of NASA's Goddard Institute for Space Studies and a leading climate scientist, calls for a moratorium on the construction of coal-fired power plants that do not sequester carbon, saying that it makes no sense to build these plants when we will have to "bulldoze" them in a few years.
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> 26 February 2007 - Under mounting pressure from environmental groups, TXU Corporation, a Dallas-based energy company, abandons plans for 8 of 11 proposed coal-fired power plants, catalyzing the shift from coal-based to renewable energy development in Texas.
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> 2 April 2007 - The U.S. Supreme Court rules that the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has the authority to regulate carbon dioxide and that EPA's current rationale for not regulating this gas is inadequate.
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> 3 May 2007 - Washington Governor Christine Gregoire signs a bill that prevents new power plants from exceeding 1,100 pounds of carbon dioxide emissions per megawatt hour of electricity generated, creating a de facto moratorium on building new coal-fired power plants in the state.
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> 30 May 2007 - Progress Energy, an energy company serving approximately 3.1 million customers in the Southeast, announces a two-year moratorium on the construction of new coal-fired power plants.
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> 2 July 2007 - The Florida Public Service Commission denies Florida Power & Light the permits needed to move forward with the massive 1,960-megawatt coal-fired Glades Power Park, citing uncertainty surrounding future carbon costs.
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> 13 July 2007 - Florida Governor Charlie Crist signs an Executive Order establishing "maximum allowable emission levels of greenhouse gases for electric utilities." Under the emissions cap, building new coal-fired power plants in the state seems unlikely.
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> 18 July 2007 - Citigroup downgrades the stocks of Peabody Energy Corp., Arch Coal Inc., and Foundation Coal Holdings Inc., prominent U.S. coal companies. The decision reflects the growing uncertainty surrounding coal's future in the United States.
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> 18 August 2007 - After opposing new coal-fired power in Nevada, U.S. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid says that he is opposed to building coal-fired power plants anywhere.
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> 18 October 2007 - The Kansas Department of Health and Environment denies Sunflower Electric Power Corporation air quality permits for two proposed 700-megawatt coal-fired generators on the basis that carbon dioxide is an air pollutant and should be regulated.
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> 3 January 2008 - Merrill Lynch downgrades the investment ratings of Consol Energy Inc. and Peabody Energy Corp., two leading U.S. coal companies.
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> 22 January 2008 - The Attorneys General of California, six eastern states, and the District of Columbia submit a letter to the South Carolina Department of Health and Environmental Control opposing the proposed 1,320-megawatt Pee Dee coal-fired power plant. They note that emissions from this plant would "seriously undermin[e] the concerted efforts being undertaken by multiple states to address global warming."
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> 30 January 2008 - Citing escalating costs, the Bush administration pulls the plug on federal funding for FutureGen, a joint project with 13 utilities and coal companies to build a demonstration coal-fired power plant that captures and sequesters carbon.
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> 4 February 2008 - Investment banks Morgan Stanley, Citi, and J.P. Morgan Chase announce that any future lending for coal-fired power plants will be contingent on the utilities demonstrating economic viability under future carbon costs. Demonstrating economic viability would require speculation of future costs, imposing a risk on the investment.
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> 8 February 2008 - The U.S. Court of Appeals overturns two EPA mercury rules covering coal-fired power plants, thus requiring new coal-fired plants to implement the most stringent mercury controls available. Compliance is expected to raise the considerable costs of 32 proposed coal plants, some already under construction.
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> 12 February 2008 - Bank of America announces that it will start factoring in a cost of $20–40 per ton of carbon emissions in its risk analysis when evaluating loan applications from utilities.
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> 19 February 2008 - The federal government suspends a low-interest loan program for rural utilities seeking assistance for new coal-fired power plants.
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> 11 March 2008 - Representatives Henry Waxman (D-CA) and Edward Markey (D-MA) introduce a bill that would block the EPA and states from issuing permits to new coal-fired power plants that lack state-of-the-art carbon capture and storage technology. Since this technology is at least a decade away from commercial viability, if this bill passes it would essentially place a near-term moratorium on new coal-fired power plants.
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> ---------------------------------------------------------------
> Source: Earth Policy Institute, www.earthpolicy.org, April 2008.
> Additional details and references at www.earthpolicy.org/Updates/2008/Update70_timeline2.htm.


>
> # # #
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> For a strategy on how to phase out coal-fired power generation worldwide by 2020, see Chapters 11 and 12 in Plan B 3.0: Mobilizing to Save Civilization, available for free downloading at www.earthpolicy.org.
>
> Additional resources at www.earthpolicy.org
>
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>
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>
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> E-mail: jlarsen (at) earthpolicy.org
>
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> Web: www.earthpolicy.org
> ---
>

2 comments:

  1. Anonymous12:38 PM

    Hey envirowacko what are we going to power our schools, churches, homes, hospitals, not to mention our places of business?

    Use bicycle power, or perhaps gather farts from unicorns?

    Carbon based power is here to stay for the next 50 to 100 years you'll figure that out when your power bill is $1000 a month and you're laid off due to rolling blackouts and/or having your job shipped to India or China where they aren't worried about CO2 emissions.

    Don't think environmental regulation costs jobs? Ask a Pittsburgh steelworker or a logger from Washington or Oregon.

    ReplyDelete
  2. In many cases, wind power is now as cheap as coal. It also creates new, good-paying jobs. Sustainable, long-term jobs. So does solar energy. So do bio-fuels if done correctly. You can lessen carbon-intense energy production while creating new jobs. Regulation, instead of just banning older energy sources, needs to replace them with sustainable ones. We need better ways of regulating as much as we need better ways to clean up the environment. Instead of just giving up and keeping everything the same until the world dies, why not add your energy and intelligence to moving things in a sustainable direction and keeping or creating jobs to replace those phased out?

    Did you know that the wind power from just three states, TX, MT, and ND could replace the total electricity usage of the entire US if fully developed? That leaves the other 47 for growth and export, not counting off-shore wind plants along our extensive coast lines. All of that capacity needs to be built and maintained. I'd love to see laid-off steel workers or loggers given first shot at those wind-energy jobs, or jobs as solar panel installers, just for starters.

    Regards,

    Dan

    ReplyDelete