San Antonio Express-News (Sunday)

COAL PLANT

- Diego.mendoza-moyers@ express-news.net elena.bruess@express-news.net

executive in charge of power generation, has said CPS is also looking at blending hydrogen with natural gas at its plants to make them lower-emitting. Hydrogen can be produced using excess electricit­y, and it generates power when it’s burned in a turbine but creates no emissions.

“New turbines have the potential to be upgraded so they can blend hydrogen all the way to a pretty big blend, and that’s a natural way to supplement natural gas,” Almaraz said. “If we get to the point where we’re producing a lot of green hydrogen — shoot, blend it in and reduce” emissions.

The U.S. Department of Energy estimates natural gas can be blended with as much as 30 percent hydrogen.

Coal’s impacts

Coal-fired power plants emit numerous chemicals — mercury, sulfur dioxide, nitrogen oxide and particulat­e matter — that are harmful both for global climate and the long-term health of surroundin­g communitie­s.

They’re especially harmful for children, the elderly and those with underlying health conditions, said Adelita Cantu, vice chair of the Climate Equity Advisory Committee for San Antonio’s climate action plan.

Burning coal is responsibl­e for 42 percent of mercury emissions in the U.S., according to the Environmen­tal Protection Agency.

The heavy metal, which is toxic to humans, can damage nervous and immune systems, and stunt childhood developmen­t.

“The longer you are exposed to these chemicals, whether you work at the facility or live nearby, the more likely you are to experience health issues,” Cantu said.

“It will impact your breathing, such as with bronchitis or chronic pulmonary disease, and either cause the developmen­t of asthma or exacerbate the symptoms if you already have it.”

In Bexar County, asthma hospitaliz­ation

rates are higher than in Texas overall, according to a 2021 report by the Metropolit­an Health District. Between 2018 and 2019, asthma rates in the county surpassed the state as well.

Other emissions, like sulfur dioxide, nitrogen oxide and particulat­e matter, are small enough to penetrate human lungs and cause chronic respirator­y diseases, which can lead to pneumonia and influenza or impact the cardiovasc­ular system. Spruce produced more than 2,000 tons of nitrogen oxide and 821 tons of sulfur dioxide in 2020.

Other pollutants include heavy toxic metals such as lead and cadmium, volatile organic compounds, which add to the ozone pollution, and carbon monoxide — a chemical that can aggravate heart disease.

But even moving to a natural gas-powered plant is hazardous for the community because it produces similar chemicals as coal, such as sulfur dioxide and

nitrogen oxide, Cantu said.

DeeDee Belmares, who serves on the CPS rate advisory committee, echoed that.

“If we truly want to address the climate crisis, if CPS energy really wants to reach its targets, its commitment­s to (San Antonio’s climate action plan), we can’t just convert Spruce to natural gas,” she said. “That’s not the solution.”

The Spruce plant is the sixthhighe­st emitter of carbon dioxide among more than 300 power plants in Texas. Last year, it spewed nearly 6 million tons of CO2 into the atmosphere, according to the U.S. Energy Informatio­n Administra­tion.

On average, Texas power plants generate 1.4 megawatt hours of power for every ton of CO2 they emit — roughly the amount of electricit­y a household in San Antonio consumes in a month. But the Spruce power plant generates only 0.91 megawatt hours per ton of CO2 emitted,

meaning the plant produces roughly 50 percent more emissions per unit of power generated than the average Texas power plant.

Of the nearly 400 coal plants operating in the U.S., 28 percent have committed to closing by 2035, with the number of scheduled retirement­s “likely to increase” in the coming years, according to the Energy Informatio­n Administra­tion.

Energy storage

As CPS increasing­ly relies on renewable energy such as wind and solar, the utility could look to store that energy for when it’s needed most, like in the early evenings, and rely less on fossil fuel-based generation.

“Energy storage is kind of like the battery on your smartphone or in an electric car, but in a much bigger package,” said Rhodes, the UT researcher. “It can act like a buffer for how inconsiste­nt wind and solar might be. We can’t turn renewables off and on, but we can turn batteries off and on. So if we put that renewable energy into batteries, we have the ability to switch it off and on.”

And the energy transition doesn’t have to spell the end of the coal industry, said Wen Song, a professor of engineerin­g at UT-Austin. There are plenty of ways to use coal elsewhere.

Song has been working in her lab on the fly ash that comes from coal combustion. Across the United States, standing mountains of fly ash are an environmen­tal hazard for the air and waterways, she said. But fly ash also carries rare earth elements, minerals used for products such as computer chips, hybrid cars or the magnets in wind turbines.

“There’s a huge demand for these elements,” Song said. “And it turns out coal and coal-related materials might be an opportunit­y to secure that supply chain.”

A completely carbon-free economy must to be fueled by economics, she said, not just people wanting to do good.

CPS officials also warn that closing Spruce too quickly could affect the utility’s bond rating. Rating agencies gauge the utility’s financial health to signal to investors the safety or risk of buying the bonds it issues. A lower bond rating would mean CPS could have to spend millions more in extra interest expenses to investors each year.

At the end of 2018, CPS closed the J.T. Deely coal-fired power plant and wrote down $150 million of depreciati­on on the plant. Garza said the utility’s financial metrics “took a hit” as a result.

Williams “downplayed the significan­ce of writing off a $1 billion asset, but that’s a real impact,” Garza said.

“We’ve got to be thoughtful about what the impact is on our customers,” he said. “We’re going to need firm capacity to back up renewables. There’s no way around that reality.”

 ?? Staff file photo ?? This year, the two-unit facility produced about 23 percent of the city’s power. But it also spews CO2 into the atmosphere, nearly 6 million tons of it last year, according to a federal agency.
Staff file photo This year, the two-unit facility produced about 23 percent of the city’s power. But it also spews CO2 into the atmosphere, nearly 6 million tons of it last year, according to a federal agency.

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