President Trump can't stop U.S. coal
plants from retiring
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[January 14, 2019]
By Scott DiSavino
(Reuters) - More U.S. coal-fired power
plants were shut in President Donald Trump's first two years than were
retired in the whole of Barack Obama's first term, despite the
Republican's efforts to prop up the industry to keep a campaign promise
to coal-mining states.
In total, more than 23,400 megawatts (MW) of coal-fired generation were
shut in 2017-2018 versus 14,900 MW in 2009-2012, according to data from
Reuters and the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA).
Trump has tried to roll back rules on climate change and the environment
adopted during the Obama administration to fulfill pledges to voters in
states like West Virginia and Wyoming.
But the second highest year for coal shutdowns was in Trump's second
year, 2018, at around 14,500 megawatts, following a peak at about 17,700
megawatts in 2015 under Obama.
One megawatt can power about 1,000 U.S. homes.
The number of U.S. coal plants has continued to decline every year since
coal capacity peaked at just over 317,400 MW in 2011, and is expected to
keep falling as consumers demand power from cleaner and less expensive
sources of energy.
Cheap natural gas and the rising use of renewable power like solar and
wind have kept electric prices relatively low for years, making it
uneconomic for generators to keep investing in older coal and nuclear
plants.
Generators said they plan to shut around 8,422 MW of coal-fired power
and 1,500 MW of nuclear in 2019, while adding 10,900 MW of wind, 8,200
MW of solar and 7,500 MW of gas, according to Reuters and EIA data.
The predictions come from estimates compiled by Thomson Reuters and U.S.
Energy Information Administration data.
For a graphic on U.S. coal shutdowns, see: https://tmsnrt.rs/2H1GQIO.
Since taking office in January 2017, the Trump administration has
announced its intention to leave the 2015 Paris Agreement on climate
change and is relaxing Obama-era rules on emissions from power plants as
it seeks to boost domestic production of oil, gas and coal.
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President Donald Trump speaks during a "roundtable discussion on
border security and safe communities" with state, local, and
community leaders in the Cabinet Room of the White House in
Washington, U.S., January 11, 2019. REUTERS/Leah Millis
U.S. emissions of carbon dioxide, the main greenhouse gas, spiked in
2018 after falling for the previous three years as cold weather
spurred gas demand for heating and the booming economy pushed planes
and trucks to guzzle fuel, according to a study by Rhodium Group, an
independent research group.
After falling to 5,144 million tonnes in 2017, the lowest since
1992, the EIA projected U.S. energy-related carbon emissions will
rise to 5,299 million tonnes in 2018.
"There will be a limit to what increasingly cheap renewable power
and continuously cheap natural gas can deliver with respect to
emissions reductions," said John Larsen, a director at Rhodium Group
who leads the firm's power sector research, noting the rising use of
gas to produce power as coal plants shut. Natural gas emits about
half the carbon as coal.
The Trump administration has also tried to slow the retirement of
coal and nuclear plants through a directive in 2017 from Energy
Secretary Rick Perry to subsidize the aging units because they make
the electric grid more resilient.
That plan was bashed by advocates for gas, renewable power and
consumers and unanimously rejected by the U.S. Federal Energy
Regulatory Commission (FERC), led by former Chairman Kevin McIntyre.
The plan could resurface now that Trump has a chance to replace
McIntyre, who died on Jan. 2.
(Reporting by Scott DiSavino and Stephanie Kelly in New York;
Editing by Sonya Hepinstall)
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