Rocky Year for Coal Industry: 26 Power Plant Plans Shelved in 2009

Rocky Year for Coal Industry: 26 Power Plant Plans Shelved in 2009
'There Is a Shift Going on Across America'
by Matthew Berger - Dec 22nd, 2009 in No More Dirty Coal Big Business Clean Tech Sector Coal Environmentalists Governors Investors Sierra Club
Despite a lack of substantive action on climate change in Copenhagen or, yet, in Washington, environmental groups are celebrating a year of victories over one of climate change’s biggest culprits.

Coal releases more carbon dioxide emissions per unit of energy produced than any other fossil fuel, but it also provides more than half the United States’ electricity supply. It is possible, however, that 2009 marked a turning point away from that reliance on coal.

Seminole Electric dropped plans to build a new coal-fired power plant in Florida late last week, in part because of the likelihood of future regulation of greenhouse gases. That canceled plant was one of more than two dozen this year. The Sierra Club announced Monday that 26 coal-fired plants in all were “defeated or abandoned” in 2009 — the largest number since 2001, it says, when the number of proposed coal plants spiked at 150.

Plans for a coal plant in South Carolina were suspended in August. A plan to ship coal from Wyoming’s Powder River Basin to South Dakota and Minnesota was put on hold later that month — after a decade-long fight, the Sierra Club points out. And plans for a coal-fired power plant on the Ohio River were scrapped in favor of a smaller, gas-fired plant. Just days into office, the Obama administration revoked the air permits for the Big Stone II plant that would have shipped its power to Minnesota but would have avoided the state’s tougher regulations by being located just across the border in South Dakota. In November, the project was shelved.

It remains to be seen whether this year’s trends will stick or simply represent a dip for coal, but what is clear is that 2009 has been a rocky year for the industry.

The Energy Information Agency projects in its monthly report that coal consumption by the electric power sector will have fallen nearly 10 percent by the end of the year. It says electric sector coal consumption should rise a bit next year, but will remain below 2008 levels. The amount of coal for coke production and for “retail and industry sectors” also declined by significant amounts.

The EIA also estimated carbon dioxide emissions from fossil fuels fell 6.1 percent, a drop that was led by a reduction in emissions from coal, which fell more than 10 percent.


Buck

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I read an article awhile ago that the architectural framework for electric power is in overhaul, or at least in discussions for redesign.

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