The Columbus Dispatch

Fla. utility sets 2045 goal on emissions

- Terry Spencer

FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. – Florida’s largest electricit­y provider has announced plans to eliminate its carbon emissions by 2045 by halting its fossil fuel usage and greatly increasing its reliance on solar energy, including using it to turn water into hydrogen to power its generating plants.

Florida Power & Light, which serves 5.7 million homes and businesses or about half the state, said the multibilli­on-dollar plan will not result in any price increases beyond what would be anticipate­d normally.

FPL’S parent company, Nextera Energy, said in its announceme­nt this week that when its “Real Zero” plan is fully implemente­d 23 years from now, 83% of the utility’s electricit­y will be generated by solar, including “green hydrogen,” or come from battery storage from periods when excess power is produced.

Green hydrogen is a process where solar power is used to break apart water molecules into hydrogen and oxygen. That hydrogen is then used as a fuel source, eliminatin­g the company’s use of natural gas. Most of the solar facilities will be built on converted, unused farmland in the central part of the state.

The company says another 16% of FPL’S power will be generated by its two current nuclear plants and 1% from renewable natural gas, which is created from biomass such as plant waste. It has set five-year goals starting in 2025 that it says will allow environmen­tal groups and others to audit its progress. The plan still must be approved by the state utility commission.

FPL spokesman Chris Mcgrath said Wednesday that the plan is a continuati­on of the company’s move since 2001 to reduce its carbon emissions. At that time, about a quarter of its electricit­y was generated by burning oil and coal, but that has been eliminated in Florida. A Georgia coal plant in which FPL owns a 25% stake will close by 2028.

Today, about two-thirds of FPL’S power comes from natural gas, which generates carbon emissions but less than oil and coal. Another 20% comes from nuclear, 4% from solar, while the rest comes from the Georgia plant and other sellers.

“This is a goal that we are setting because we think the technology exists and it can be done in a cost-effective way for our customers,” Mcgrath said. Wind power will not be used in Florida because that would require purchasing expensive coastal property to erect turbines, a move that would also be opposed by the tourism industry.

Rising levels of greenhouse gases are increasing global temperatur­es and fueling extreme weather.

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