Resistance from the Edison Electric Institute (EEI), which
represents investor-owned utilities that serve 250 million
people, to the proposal could pose a problem for U.S. President
Joe Biden's plan to decarbonize the country's power sector by
2035 - a critical pillar of his climate change agenda.
The power industry accounts for a quarter of the nation's
greenhouse gas emissions, second only to transportation,
according to Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) data.
The EPA's plan would require large existing natural gas-fired
plants that run at least 50% of the time to install carbon
capture by 2035 or co-fire with 30% hydrogen by 2032.
The rules would also regulate coal and new natural gas plants
separately.
EEI said it was still finalizing its comments on the proposed
rule and would not provide specifics.
"There are elements of the proposal that are favorable, and we
are making recommendations to strengthen them; elements that are
fixable with additional flexibilities; and elements that miss
the mark," EEI spokesperson Brian Reil said in a statement.
Areas of concern include regulations that would mandate a
timeline for deploying carbon capture and storage (CCS) systems
to suck up carbon emissions, according to a source briefed on
EEI's draft comments.
The group stated in a white paper in April, before EPA's
proposal was released, that "there are significantly fewer
levers for technical and technological improvement for
natural-gas based units when compared to coal-based units."
It also said retrofitting those plants for CCS would be
"difficult" due to space constraints and other limitations.
The second source familiar with the industry's draft comments
questioned why utilities are pushing back against the rules when
they are already deploying technologies including CCS and
hydrogen.
EEI and others have until Aug. 8 to submit comments on the
proposed rules. The final rule will likely take about a year to
be finalized.
EPA said it "looks forward to reviewing comments and
constructively engaging with stakeholders as we work to finalize
the proposed standards."
(Reporting by Nichola Groom and Valerie Volcovici; Editing by
Sonali Paul)
[© 2023 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2022 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|
|