logologo_light
  • News
  • Blog
  • States
  • Resources
  • Videos
  • About Us
  • Take Action
  • News
  • Blog
  • States
  • Resources
  • Videos
  • About Us
  • Take Action

EIA: Clean Power Plan Will Increase Prices, Reduce Reliability

Via The Muscatine Journal:

The EPA’s so-called “Clean Power Plan” to reduce carbon emissions from coal-fired power plants has come under fire from utilities, regional grid operators, the North American Electric Reliability Corporation (NERC), and the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) — basically, any entity that has some responsibility for seeing that consumers are provided with reliable and affordable electricity. Now, even the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA), an arm of the U.S. Department of Energy, confirms what the energy experts have been saying all along — the Clean Power Plan will raise electricity prices and result in a much greater loss of coal generation than the EPA projected, risking the reliability of the grid.

In a report issued on May 22, the EIA forecasts a 90 GW loss of coal generation because of the Clean Power Plan, which is the equivalent of providing power for about 63 million homes. Even more troubling, the EIA projects that most of these coal plant closings will occur by 2020 to meet the Clean Power Plan’s interim goals. The EIA says that this would require “significant investment” in alternative forms of electricity generation to fill the void. Not only would this raise electricity prices by 5.9 percent by 2020, the additional infrastructure necessary to build replacement generation simply cannot be planned, designed, constructed, tested, and placed into operation in the less than five years to 2020. That is why so many entities responsible for the reliability of the electric grid have been critical of the EPA’s plan — that much capacity cannot be replaced in such a short period of time.

The EIA report states that the Clean Power Plan “increases natural gas use significantly.” The analysis shows the rule would move generation away from baseload coal, nuclear and hydropower, which are located on-site, and toward natural gas, which requires real-time fuel delivery, and renewables, which are intermittent. And, as we learned during the Polar Vortex during the winter of 2013-2014, surging demand for electricity to keep the lights on — as well as to heat homes and businesses — was met by coal. In fact, American Electric Power, one of Ohio’s biggest utilities, later reported that 90 percent of their coal plants slated for retirement were running full speed just to meet that peak demand. Natural gas couldn’t shoulder that burden, due in part to a shortage of infrastructure to deliver gas where it was needed — this despite record-setting production in the Marcellus Shale. But more importantly, whereas coal’s sole purpose is to generate electricity, natural gas is also used for home heating. And when push comes to shove, heating gets priority over generation. The EPA’s assumption that natural gas and renewables can replace coal, especially during times of peak demand, is misplaced, and grid reliability will suffer as a result. The EPA simply doesn’t acknowledge the obvious — its plan will reduce reliability of the grid.

The EPA cannot continue to ignore the serious concerns of so many energy experts and entities — including the U.S. Department of Energy — that are responsible for reliable and affordable electricity. The Clean Power Plan propels our energy policy in the wrong direction, and it should be scrapped.

Terry M. Jarrett was appointed to the Missouri Public Service Commission in 2007. During his six years as a state utilities regulator, Jarrett became a nationally recognized leader in energy, utility and regulatory issues. 

See the article here.

  • On June 10, 2015
Recent Coal in the News Posts
  • The EPA’s plan to break the electricity grid
  • No Energy Transition Without a Reliable Electric Power Grid
  • America faces chronic electricity shortages in push for renewable energy
  • The latest Biden energy crisis
  • Capito, Miller Introduce Bill to Block Implementation of EPA’s Power Plant Proposals
  • Opinion: Looming power shortages highlight flawed policy
  • Experts Warn of Grid Crisis as PA Senators Demand Green Energy
Popular Posts
  • Be part of the revolutionApril 14, 2015
  • Missouri Should Oppose Obama’s “Clean Power Plan”August 14, 2015
  • NMA Calls EPA’s Power Plant Rule a Reckless Gamble with the EconomyJanuary 7, 2014
Recent Comments
  • Clean Power Plan Facing Opposition in Missouri | Count on Coal on Missouri Should Oppose Obama’s “Clean Power Plan”
  • Death of a Shalesman: U.S. Energy Independence Is a Fairy Tale | SuddenlySlimmer on Voices
Tags
affordability baseload power Bloomberg California carbon capture utilization and storage China coal Department of Energy (DOE) electricity grid electricity prices Electricity Reliability Council of Texas (ERCOT) emissions energy addition energy transition Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Europe Fatih Birol Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) fuel diversity Germany grid reliability infrastructure International Energy Agency (IEA) James Danly Jim Robb Joe Biden Mark Christie Michael Regan Midcontinent Independent System Operator (MISO) National Mining Association (NMA) natural gas New England North American Electric Reliability Corporation (NERC) PJM Interconnection polling renewable energy Rich Nolan Southwest Power Pool (SPP) technology Texas transmission lines U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) United Kingdom Wall Street Journal wind power

Sierra Club Pressed EPA to Create Impossible Coal Standards

Scroll
Count on Coal
Recent Posts
  • Strengthening Energy Security: DPA Action Reinforces America’s Coal Advantage
  • PJM’s Power Crunch: Why Coal Is Critical to Closing a 60-Gigawatt Gap
  • China’s Coal Playbook Is Winning
  • Today’s Gas Glut, Tomorrow’s Price Shock
  • The Global Pivot to Coal Is About More Than Electricity
RECENT TWEETS
Tweets by @countoncoal
Privacy Policy | © Copyright Count on Coal 2024