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Global Warming Solutions News
For Immediate Release:
2009-11-24
For More Information:
Courtney Abrams, 202-683-1250 Nathan Willcox, 202-683-1250 Rob Sargent, 617-747-4317 Washington, D.C. New Report: Power Plants Emit Three Times the Pollution of All the Nation’s Cars
Washington,
DC—The nation’s power plants
emitted 2.56 billion tons of global
warming pollution in 2007, which is equivalent to the pollution from nearly 450
million of today’s cars – nearly three times the number of cars registered in
the United States in 2007, according
to a new analysis of government data released today by Environment America. More than 70 percent of this pollution came from plants –
primarily coal plants – built before 1980.
“It's time for the oldest
and dirtiest power plants to clean up their act,” said Environment America
Global Warming Associate Courtney Abrams.
“Coal-fired giants have dominated our electricity for decades and have
been allowed to pollute without license.
In order to stop global warming and reap all the benefits of clean
energy, we must require old coal-fired clunkers to meet modern standards for
global warming pollution.” Coal is the dirtiest of all
fuels, but it supplies more of America's electricity than any other
source. Coal plants currently do not
have to meet any global warming pollution standard, meaning that
they are an unchecked contributor to global warming. In fact, coal plants are the nation’s single
largest source of global warming pollution.
The new report, America's
Biggest Polluters: Carbon Dioxide Emissions from Power Plants in 2007, was
released nationally and in 22 states
today. The report looks at carbon
dioxide emissions from power plants across the country using 2007 data from the
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency; 2007 is the most recent year for which
final data is available. The report
examines both age of and pollution from power plants to document the fact that
we are reliant on an energy infrastructure that is both old and polluting. The key findings include the following for
2007:
“America's
power is both decades-old and dangerously polluting. We’re reliant on technology that’s as old as
the very first commercially available televisions. Televisions have gone from black-and-white
clunkers to super high-definition flat screens, but they’re still powered by
the same dirty electricity,” Abrams said. “Clean energy holds the
future of America—to make our nation energy independent, create millions of new
jobs, and stop the worst effects of global warming. In order to realize this clean energy future,
coal
plants must stop polluting with
impunity,” continued Abrams. The U.S. Senate is slated to consider legislation in
the next few months to establish the first-ever federal limits on global
warming pollution as well as standards and incentives for clean energy. In addition, EPA has proposed a rule to
require coal
plants and other large smokestack industries to use available technology to cut
their global warming pollution when new facilities are constructed or existing
facilities are significantly modified. However, the coal industry is fighting the transition
to clean energy. The American Coalition for Clean Coal Electricity, a coal industry
lobby group, spent nearly $40 million dollars in 2008 alone – more than
$100,000 a day – on lobbyists and advertising, according to reports to the
Internal Revenue Service this month.
Earlier this year, they hired lobbyists who forged phony constituent
letters to Congress opposing action on clean energy. “We urge the U.S. Senate to
pass an energy bill that requires old, clunker coal plants to meet modern
standards for global warming pollution so we can finally move to clean energy,
like wind and solar power. We also urge
EPA to finalize its proposed rule to cut global warming pollution from dirty
coal plants,” concluded Abrams. ### Environment
America is a federation of state-based, citizen-funded, environmental advocacy
organizations working for clean air, clean water, and open space.
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