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Global Warming Solutions Reports
Executive Summary
The United States relies heavily on outdated technology and limited resources for most of its electricity needs. While the production of clean, renewable energy such as wind and solar power is growing, the vast majority of American electricity comes from burning fossil fuels—coal, oil, and natural gas—and from nuclear power. Our long-time dependence on fossil fuels is a threat to our future. It wreaks havoc on our environment by polluting our air, land, and water; and it puts our entire economy at risk due to our reliance on imports from unfriendly parts of the world. Most importantly, it fuels global warming—the most profound environmental problem of our time, with ever growing impacts that will impose threats to our safety and immense financial cost on our society. Power plants are the single largest source of U.S. carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions, the main pollutant that fuels global warming. Coal is the biggest culprit. Coal supplies just under half of America’s electricity – more than any other source – and is the dirtiest of all fuels. Coal has the highest carbon content of any fossil fuel per unit of energy, meaning that burning coal for electricity produces more carbon per kilowatt-hour generated than does burning oil or natural gas. America’s fleet of coal-fired power plants emitted more than 80 percent of CO2 pollution from U.S. power plants in 2007 and 36 percent of the total U.S. CO2 pollution, as well as disproportionate amounts of smog- and soot-forming pollutants, toxic mercury, and other toxic air pollutants.[1] This report examines CO2 emissions of America's power plants. We analyze 2007 plant-by-plant data from the Environmental Protection Agency’s Acid Rain Program; 2007 is the most recent year for which final data is available. The report finds that America's power is dirty – and also very old – and that these two qualities tend to go hand-in-hand. Key findings include the following for 2007: America's
Power is Old
America's
Power is Dirty
The
Oldest and Dirtiest Often Go Hand-in-hand
Power
Plants Must Be Required to Clean Up Cleaning up America's fleet of aging, inefficient power plants is critical to stopping global warming. We cannot achieve the real and sustained reductions in global warming pollution that science shows are urgently needed to stop the worst effects of global warming unless we begin now to reduce carbon pollution from the utility sector. Moving to clean energy means leaving old,
inefficient, and dirty technology behind. The U.S. Department of Energy
projects that electricity demand will remain relatively flat over the next two
decades, growing at an annual average rate of less than 1 percent – and that’s
without factoring in the enormous efficiency gains that we can and should make. These projections make it clear that allowing
polluting fossil fuels to maintain the monopoly over America's electricity will
result in a much smaller market for renewables.
Making the move to clean, renewable energy will cut pollution as well as
jump-start our economy and create millions of clean energy jobs. In order to build a clean
energy economy and stop global warming, lawmakers should adopt the following
recommendations: 1) The Environmental Protection Agency should finalize its proposal to require coal plants and other big smokestack industries to meet modern standards for global warming pollution when new plants are built or existing plants are upgraded. 2)
Congress should pass strong clean energy and
global warming legislation that caps global warming pollution at science-based
levels, establishes strong mandates for clean energy production, and does not repeal the sections of the Clean Air Act
that require coal-fired power plants to meet modern standards for global
warming pollution. 3) Congress should eliminate subsidies that help keep our nation dependent on fossil fuels for its electricity. [1] U.S. Dept. of
Energy, Energy Information Administration, Emissions
of Greenhouse Gas Report, 3 December 2008. [2] Environmental
Protection Agency, Inventory of US Greenhouse Gas Emissions and Sinks: 1990-2007, April 2009 shows that total CO2
emissions in 2007 were 6.103 billion tons. |