Why We Must Fight Gas-fired Power Plants

- by Mike Ewall, Ener­gy Jus­tice Network

The Ban Ki Moon U.N. Cli­mate Sum­mit is short­ly com­ing to New York City. As we march and teach work­shops at cli­mate con­ver­gences, the media is like­ly to focus on the sto­ry of the Oba­ma administration’s “Clean Pow­er Plan” mov­ing us away from coal in order to mit­i­gate cli­mate change. The sto­ry won’t be told that this plan will do more harm than good, main­ly by ignor­ing methane and enabling a huge move from coal to gas-fired pow­er plants.

The plan also does more harm than good by not reg­u­lat­ing CO2 from trash incin­er­a­tion (2.5 times as bad as coal for the cli­mate) and bio­mass incin­er­a­tion (50% worse), thus encour­ag­ing a large-scale con­ver­sion to burn­ing every­thing from trash to trees. Oth­er EPA dereg­u­la­tion efforts allow­ing waste burn­ing to escape reg­u­la­tion by call­ing waste a “fuel” are also clear­ing the way for this tox­ic, cli­mate-cook­ing disaster.

A lead­ing researcher for a major frack­ing cor­po­ra­tion recent­ly con­fid­ed in me that this move from coal to gas will spell dis­as­ter for cli­mate change, con­firm­ing that if only about 3% of the gas escapes, it’s as bad as burn­ing coal. Actu­al leak­age rates are far high­er (4–9% just at the frack­ing fields and more in pipelines and dis­tri­b­u­tion sys­tems), but it was most inter­est­ing to hear this per­son admit that the indus­try will nev­er get below that lev­el of leak­age to become less harm­ful than coal.

We now know that methane is 86 to 105 times as potent as CO2 over a 20-year time-frame — we’re in real trou­ble if we keep using the out­dat­ed “20 times over 100 years” fig­ure EPA main­tains, and per­mit this new gen­er­a­tion of gas-burn­ing to be built.

Why is it strate­gic to focus on the pow­er plants?  Read on…

1) Gas burned for elec­tric­i­ty is the largest source of gas demand since 2007. From 1997 to 2013, it more than dou­bled and is poised to keep growing.

2) Stop­ping pow­er plants is more winnable than fight­ing frack­ing, liq­ue­fied nat­ur­al gas (LNG) exports, pipelines or com­pres­sor sta­tions. Stop­ping frack­ing one com­mu­ni­ty at a time isn’t a win­ning strat­e­gy when the indus­try has thou­sands of com­mu­ni­ties tar­get­ed, and rur­al neigh­bors pit against neigh­bor­ing landown­ers des­per­ate for lease mon­ey. State and region­al bans and mora­to­ria have been effec­tive so far, but LNG ter­mi­nals, pipelines and com­pres­sor sta­tions have fed­er­al pre­emp­tion aspects that make them hard to fight through local or state government.

Fight­ing pro­posed LNG export ter­mi­nals also has the “weak link” prob­lem.  Ten years ago, when we were fight­ing LNG import ter­mi­nals, there were 40 pro­pos­als through­out the U.S., but the indus­try and gov­ern­ment offi­cials admit­ted they only need­ed six – two each on the east, west and gulf coasts. Now that they’re plan­ning export ter­mi­nals, there are near­ly 30 pro­pos­als, and the same dynam­ic is at play, where the indus­try has stat­ed in their con­fer­ences that they only need two on each coast, after which they’ll toss out the rest of their pro­pos­als and “let envi­ron­men­tal­ists take the cred­it.” Cyn­i­cal as that is, it’s not a strat­e­gy we can defeat if we’re try­ing to attack gas demand, since it’s unlike­ly we can beat enough to pre­vent the planned export vol­umes — espe­cial­ly due to fed­er­al pre­emp­tion and the clus­ter­ing of most pro­pos­als on the oil- and gas-dom­i­nat­ed Gulf Coast, where it’s far hard­er to stop them.

Each gas-fired pow­er plant blocked is a cer­tain amount of gas burn­ing and frack­ing pre­vent­ed, while we can stop over 20 LNG ter­mi­nals with­out putting a dent in planned export vol­umes. While work against the LNG export ter­mi­nals is com­mend­able, it should not be pri­or­i­tized over stop­ping the rush to build hun­dreds of gas-burn­ing pow­er plants.

3) Attack­ing pro­pos­als can only be done in a cer­tain time win­dow, or we’re doomed to rough­ly 30 years of pow­er plant oper­a­tion and gas demand. Although coal pow­er plants are dirt­i­er to live near, all of the fund­ing and resources being put into clos­ing coal plants while ignor­ing (or endors­ing) new gas pow­er plants, is mis­guid­ed. Exist­ing pow­er plants can be tack­led at any time, but pro­pos­als have to be fought when they’re pro­posed, or it’s too late. Also, coal pro­duc­tion has peaked in the U.S., prices are going up, and gas is under­cut­ting coal. It’s effec­tive­ly ille­gal to build new coal pow­er plants and the indus­try is already mov­ing quick­ly to shut and replace coal. The ques­tion is:  will we allow a switch from coal to gas, or force a change to con­ser­va­tion, effi­cien­cy, wind and solar?

So, if there are plans for gas-burn­ing pow­er plants in your area, whether it’s a new plant, an expan­sion or con­ver­sion of an exist­ing plant, or reopen­ing of a closed plant, please be in touch so we can plug you in with oth­ers who are fight­ing these. There is strength in numbers!


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