Calhoun Times

Plant Bowen tops state list for carbon emissions

♦ Three Georgia power plants land on list of nation’s dirtiest

- By Dave Williams

Georgia is home to three of the nation’s 100 dirtiest power plants, the Atlanta-based Environmen­t Georgia Research & Policy Center reported Monday.

Georgia Power’s Plant Bowen near Cartersvil­le topped the Georgia list for carbon emissions and is ranked 23rd in the country.

Two of Plant Bowen’s four coal-burning units were due to be retired by 2028 under a proposal the Atlanta-based utility filed with the Georgia Public Service Commission last January.

But a 14-page agreement Georgia Power and the PSC’s Public Interest Advocacy Staff reached last week would leave that decision up to the commission, contingent upon the “completion of necessary transmissi­on system improvemen­ts.”

Environmen­t Georgia’s new report ranks power plants across the U.S. by their contributi­on to climate change based on the U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency’s (EPA) latest eGRID data.

The dirtiest power plants have an outsized impact: In 2020, the 10 most climate-polluting plants in Georgia were responsibl­e

for 91.5% of global warming emissions from the power sector despite only generating 56.5% of total electricit­y, according to the report.

“Our changing climate affects every aspect of our lives, from the air we breathe in our neighborho­ods to the food we grow in Georgia,”

said Jennette Gayer, Environmen­t Georgia’s state director.

“Dirty power plants threaten our health and the climate,

yet these super-polluters have filled the skies with pollution for decades without consequenc­e. We need to hold the worst power plants accountabl­e for damaging our climate.”

While Plant Bowen burns coal, eight of Georgia’s 10 dirtiest power plants are fired by methane gas. New research on methane leaks finds that the emissions associated with extracting and transporti­ng methane are a serious climate problem.

Although burning methane gas releases less carbon dioxide than burning coal, the report ranked Plant McDonough, a gasfired plant near Smryna, as the state’s second dirtiest.

Coal-burning Plant Scherer, near Macon, was third on Georgia’s dirtiest-plants list.

To get power plant pollution under control, the report recommends limiting emissions from power plants and accelerati­ng Georgia’s transition from fossil fuels to renewable energy sources. Georgia Power is proposing to expand its renewable energy portfolio by 2,300 megawatts by 2029.

Environmen­tal advocates are worried a U.S. Supreme Court ruling expected this month in a West Virginia case could hamstring the EPA’s ability to set limits on carbon emissions from power plants.

“We can repower our state more cleanly and safely with renewable energy,” Gayer said. “We hope the Public Service Commission will take steps to shut down Plant Bowen, our state’s dirtiest power plant.”

 ?? File ?? Georgia Power’s Plant Bowen near Euharlee is one of the largest coal-fired power plants in the Southeast.
File Georgia Power’s Plant Bowen near Euharlee is one of the largest coal-fired power plants in the Southeast.

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