In the heart of coal country, U.S. climate bill could push up green
shoots
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[August 12, 2022]
By Andy Sullivan and Rose Horowitch
(Reuters) - In West Virginia, a solar field
could soon rise atop an abandoned coal mine, and factories will soon be
churning out batteries and electric school buses. The ambitious U.S.
climate bill could push up more of these green shoots, but analysts say
King Coal will retain outsized clout in the state.
Advocates say the $430 billion package, expected to clear Congress on
Friday, could bring a tide of investment to one of the nation's poorest
states.
"We've been growing exponentially for the last couple of years and with
this bill coming through it's going to get even crazier," said Dan
Conant, chief executive of Solar Holler, a solar-system installer in the
state.
This week, the Senate passed the bill, shaped in large part by West
Virginia Senator Joe Manchin, and the Democratic-controlled House of
Representatives is expected to approve it on Friday. President Joe Biden
has promised to sign it into law.
Its $369 billion in climate incentives include sweeteners championed by
Manchin that aim to steer green investments to West Virginia and other
regions that have depended on fossil-fuel jobs and revenue.
The state's other senator, Republican Shelly Moore Capito, voted against
the bill, saying it would hurt the coal industry. At least one of the
three West Virginia House members, all Republicans, will vote against
it. Representative Alex Mooney is running video ads saying he won't let
Manchin "devastate West Virginia."
Their concern is warranted. West Virginia's coal industry is already in
retreat, as electric utilities have shifted to natural gas and other
cheaper and less carbon-intensive fuels. Analysts said the bill will
encourage utilities to build more renewable facilities and shut down
coal plants.
"While this shift is not necessarily new ... the legislation serves to
further accelerate it," Moody's wrote in a research note.
Coal accounted for 19% of U.S. energy generation last year, down from
45% in 2010, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA).
In West Virginia, the industry is no longer a jobs powerhouse, employing
only 11,000 workers in 2021, down from 146,000 in 1948, according to
state figures.
But coal still generates 91% of the electricity in West Virginia, one of
the highest percentages in the country. The state's governor, Republican
Jim Justice, owns several coal companies and many other officials,
including Manchin, have ties to the industry. West Virginia also led a
successful legal challenge that undercut the federal government's
authority to regulate greenhouse gases.
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Homes sit in front of an idled coal mine
in Keystone, West Virginia, U.S., May 19, 2018. Picture taken May
19, 2018. REUTERS/Brian Snyder/File Photo
As utilities have shuttered coal-fired power plants elsewhere, West
Virginia regulators last year signed off on expensive upgrades to
allow three big coal plants to keep operating until at least 2040.
State residents will shoulder the cost through higher electricity
bills.
Decisions like that could hinder the climate bill's effectiveness
and undercut the Biden administration's goals of cutting U.S.
climate emissions in half from 2005 levels by 2030, said James Van
Nostrand, head of the Center for Energy and Sustainable Development
at West Virginia University.
"You have to have policies at the state level that ... take
advantage of that, and it's just not there," he said.
Still, the Republican-controlled state legislature has passed
several incentives for solar power in recent years, spurred in part
by large employers that have demanded access to clean energy.
While the state only had 10 megawatts of solar capacity in place in
2020, enough to power roughly 1,300 homes, there are now more than
4,000 megawatts of solar projects waiting for approval, according to
Evan Hansen, a Democratic member of the state House of Delegates.
"Some good things are happening, but it's happening at a slower pace
than most states," he said.
The state government has also offered incentives to lure companies
like electric-school bus manufacturer GreenPower, which plans to
employ 200 people in South Charleston.
GreenPower Motor Co Inc President Brendan Riley said his company
does not pose a threat to coal interests because all types of fuel
will be needed to power battery charging stations for his vehicles.
"We're not anti-coal or anti-fossil fuel electricity," he said.
Advocates said they expect support for clean energy and green-tech
companies to grow as they employ more people in the state.
"I'm really excited for what this is going to do for the small towns
and hollers across the state," said Solar Holler CEO Conant.
(Reporting by Andy Sullivan in Cape Elizabeth, Maine and Rose
Horowitch in Washington; editing by Scott Malone and David Gregorio)
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