The Community Connection

New power plan takes sensible approach on climate

- By Terry Jarrett Guest columnist

Washington is about to see another controvers­ial chapter in the Trump era.

Any day now, the Environmen­tal Protection Agency will issue its final “Affordable Clean Energy” rule. Intended as a replacemen­t for President Obama’s 2015 Clean Power Plan, the new rule will likely spur debate in Washington. But the ACE offers a realistic plan to address climate concerns while still ensuring the future reliabilit­y of America’s power grid.

The implementa­tion of the original CPP was halted by the Supreme Court in 2016. Twenty-eight states had brought suit against it, arguing that the EPA overreache­d by mandating the reconstruc­tion of entire state power grids.

Along with regulatory issues, states were concerned that the CPP would also drive up electricit­y prices. Energy Ventures Analysis has estimated that wholesale electricit­y costs under the plan would increase $214 billion in the next decade, with new power sector infrastruc­ture costing an additional $64 billion.

At least 30 states would have seen their monthly electric bills climb by more than 20 percent.

These exorbitant costs — and the regulatory overreach that defined the plan — are now gone. Instead, the ACE will allow individual states to determine the emissions reductions approach that works best for them.

And rather than force states to close essential coal power plants, the new rule allows them to upgrade existing plants for increased efficiency.

Notably, the ACE still instructs states to reduce carbon dioxide emissions.

But it offers a list of candidate technologi­es that can be used to improve existing facilities, including advanced systems already in use.

For example, Japan, Western Europe, and China are already using high-efficiency, low-emissions (HELE) plants to burn coal hotter and more efficientl­y.

These HELE systems could be game-changing in the U.S., since they raise coal-burning efficienci­es from the typical 33 percent to a more optimum 40 percent.

Overall, HELE technologi­es could reduce coal-plant carbon dioxide emissions by up to 21 percent.

U.S. coal plants have already invested more than $127 billion in scrubbing systems to reduce exhaust emissions 92 percent per kilowatt-hour. The ACE rule will now open the door wide to further improvemen­ts.

Much of this comes down to cost, though. Coal remains cheap and plentiful in the United States, but natural gas, wind turbines, and solar panels are gaining market share.

However, the price volatility of natural gas, and the limits of pipeline capacity, could impede future expansion. And wind turbines and solar arrays face their own weather challenges.

There will undoubtedl­y be criticism of the ACE rule. But it provides a path forward to achieve reasonable and affordable emissions reductions for the baseload power plants on which many states rely. Since coal will remain a part of America’s electricit­y portfolio for years to come, it makes sense to embrace new technologi­es for a balanced, future energy mix.

Terry M. Jarrett is an energy attorney and consultant who has served on both the National Associatio­n of Regulatory Utility Commission­ers and the Missouri Public Service Commission.

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