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Making Sense of the “Coal Rushâ€: The Consequences of Expanding America’s Dependence on Coal
2006-07-20
Coal_Rush.pdf
News Release
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Executive Summary
As the new home of Arizona PIRG's environmental work, Environment Arizona can be contacted with any questions regarding this report. Energy companies have proposed building
a fleet of new coal-fired power
plants across America. As of June
2006, power producers have approximately
150 new coal-fired plants on the drawing
board, representing a $137 billion investment
and the capacity to supply power to
96 million homes.
If energy companies succeed in building
even a fraction of these new power
plants, it would have major impacts on
America’s environment and economy. Further,
this “coal rush” would consume investment
dollars that could otherwise
promote more sustainable energy sources.
Fortunately, alternatives exist that would
reduce or eliminate the need for new coal-fired
power plants. By funneling investment
instead into improvements in energy efficiency
and expansion of renewable energy,
the U.S. can avoid the potential impacts of
the “coal rush” and improve the economy,
the environment and public health.
The “coal rush” would increase U.S.
global warming pollution at a time when
aggressive action is needed to reduce
emissions.
• To avoid the worst consequences of
global warming, scientists believe that
the U.S. needs to stabilize emissions
within a decade, begin reducing them
soon thereafter, and cut global warming
pollution by as much as 80 percent
by the middle of this century. New
coal-fired power plants will take us in
the wrong direction.
• If all of the proposed plants are built,
they would increase U.S. carbon
dioxide pollution from electricity
generation by more than 25 percent
above 2004 levels. This would be
equivalent to a 10 percent increase in
total U.S. emissions and a 2.4 percent
increase in world emissions.
• The vast majority of proposed plants
use traditional coal-burning technology,
which emits massive amounts of
carbon dioxide. Only 16 percent of the
proposed plants would use coal gasification
technology and could someday
be equipped to capture and store
carbon dioxide. Even these plants
would require costly future upgrades
to avoid large releases of global
warming pollutants.
Increasing America’s dependence on
coal carries significant economic risks
for power generating companies, their
shareholders, utility ratepayers, and the
economy as a whole.
• The growing urgency of addressing
global warming makes limits on
carbon dioxide pollution a virtual
certainty for the future. As these limits
are set, coal-fired power plants will
decline in value compared to lesspolluting
resources. Additionally,
companies or ratepayers may be forced
to pay the significant cost of retrofitting
the new plants to capture and
store carbon dioxide.
• Companies that build coal-fired power
plants today knowingly and significantly
contribute to the public health,
environmental and property damage
that will result from global warming.
Such companies face potential legal
risks, similar to the lawsuits filed
against the tobacco industry in the last
decade.
• The new coal-fired power plants, if
built, will strain the U.S.’s ability to
extract and deliver enough coal to keep
them running. U.S. coal demand
would increase by over 30 percent if all
the plants are built, requiring additional
mines and expanded railroad
infrastructure to move the coal around
the country. Mining additional coal would damage
America’s land and water.
• According to the U.S. Department of
Energy, currently operational coal
mines have enough recoverable coal to
supply the power industry for only 18
years at current levels of demand (and
fewer years if demand increases).
• While the U.S. has enough coal
supplies to sustain current levels of
consumption for nearly 200 years,
extraction of that coal is likely to
damage wide areas of land now used
for agriculture, housing and recreation,
while fouling water supplies and
harming wildlife.
• Between 1985 and 2001, “mountaintop
removal” coal mining in Appalachia
cut down more than 7 percent of the
region’s forests and buried more than
1,200 miles of streams.
• In 2004, coal mines across the U.S.
reported the release of more than 13
million pounds of toxic chemicals,
including over 300,000 pounds
dumped directly into streams and
rivers.
The “coal rush” would increase
health-threatening air pollution.
If all of the planned coal-fired power plants are built, they would increase
total pollution from power plants and
other industrial facilities on the order
of 1 to 3 percent, including:
• 120,000 tons per year of sulfur
dioxide, a major ingredient in fine
particle pollution, linked to premature
death and respiratory and
cardiovascular disease;
• 240,000 tons per year of nitrogen
dioxide, a major ingredient in the
photochemical smog that plagues
many cities across the U.S. on
summer days; and
• 3 tons per year of mercury, a
neurological toxicant that contaminates
fish in rivers, lakes and the
oceans.
The “coal rush” would consume investment
dollars that could be used to
promote safe and sustainable energy
sources, including energy efficiency and
renewable energy.
• Building all of the coal-fired power
plants on the drawing board
would require capital investment of
6 Making Sense of the “Coal Rush” $137 billion. On top of that, energy
companies would have to spend more
than $100 billion to operate, maintain
and fuel the plants and build transmission
lines.
• If that $137 billion in capital were
instead directed toward energy efficiency,
it could reduce electricity
demand in 2025 by about 19 percent
compared to a business-as-usual
forecast (1 million GWh/year),
without additional investment for
transmission and distribution. In other
words, energy efficiency could completely
alleviate the need to build any
new coal-fired power plants—and do
so for less cost and with zero global
warming pollution.
• Directed instead toward renewable
energy, that $137 billion could develop
110 GW of the best wind resources in
the western U.S. with a cost of electricity
comparable to conventional
coal. Alternatively, the money could
build over 50 GW of promising zeroemission
solar technologies like
concentrating solar thermal power
plants—predicted to provide electricity
at prices competitive with coal within
the next 10 years, with the potential to
supply energy day or night using
thermal storage.
• Wind, solar, tidal, geothermal and
biomass resources—coupled with
energy-saving renewable technologies
such as passive solar heating and
lighting, solar hot water heating and
geothermal heat pumps—could
provide a large and growing share of
America’s energy. A consistent emphasis
on renewables in public policy and
in research and development funding
could bring many of these technologies
into the mainstream—but not if
America’s investment dollars are staked
on coal.
Citizens and government should act
to stop the “coal rush” and instead pursue
a cleaner, more sustainable path to
satisfying America’s energy needs.
• States and the U.S. as a whole should
impose strong caps on global warming
pollution from power plants at levels
that are sufficient to minimize human
interference with the global climate— on the order of 80 percent below 1990
levels by mid-century.
States and the federal government
should not allow any new coal facility
to be built, unless:
• All the costs of coal-fired power
plants—including the societal cost
of global warming and the probable
cost of additional pollution control
requirements—are fully considered
when utility investment decisions
are made;
• Gasified coal with carbon storage is
demonstrated to be the least-cost
way to reduce global warming
pollution consistent with climate
stabilization goals, compared to
other clean resources that could
satisfy or reduce energy demand,
such as renewable energy and
energy efficiency; and
• Any new gasified coal plants with
carbon storage are used to replace
old, inefficient coal-fired power
plants, not augment them.
• Public funds should not be used to
support the construction of any coalfired
power plants.
• Leaders at all levels of government
should take aggressive action to encourage
the development of cleaner
alternatives to coal-fired power plants,
particularly measures to improve energy
efficiency and encourage the development
of clean renewable resources.
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