We've done many shows on reinventing the grids to better serve our current and future power needs, and we agree that we can migrate to a smart, clean powered delivery system without gaps in filling our energy demands. Do you agree?
Experts Agree: We Can Preserve Electric Reliability and Protect Public Health Under Clean Power Plan
Michael Panfil
Last June, the Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA) proposed the first ever national carbon pollution
standards for existing power plants. Fossil fuel-fired power plants account for
almost 40% of U.S. carbon dioxide emissions, making them the largest source of
greenhouse gas emissions in the nation and one of the single largest categories
of greenhouse gas sources in the world.
Under the Clean Power Plan, these
emissions will decline to 30% below 2005 levels by 2030 – accompanied by a
significant decline in other harmful pollutants from the power sector, such as
sulfur dioxide and oxides of nitrogen. The power sector is already halfway to
this target, already 15% below 2005 levels.
The EPA has carefully designed the
Clean Power Plan to provide extensive flexibility so that states and power
companies can continue to deliver a steady flow of electricity while deploying
cost-effective measures to reduce carbon pollution over the next fifteen years.
The Clean Power Plan:
- Allows states and power companies to determine the
optimal timing of emission reductions over a ten year-long averaging
period starting in 2020;
- Allows states to decide how to most cost-effectively reduce carbon pollution, including through market-based programs and clean energy policies that have been successfully used around the country; and
- Allows states to cooperate with one another in complying with the long-term reduction goals.
In addition, the Clean Power Plan
preserves the ability of grid operators to deploy long-standing tools and
processes that have been successfully used in the past to keep the electric
grid functioning reliability during periods of significant change. EDF
has released a white paper identifying these well-established tools
and practices, and describing how they will continue to ensure a reliable grid
under the Clean Power Plan.
Grid operators are well-equipped to
ensure reliability as we transition to a cleaner and more efficient power
sector, just as they have under all previous Clean Air Act regulations. EPA’s
proposed Clean Power Plan is eminently achievable, reliable, and cost-effective
– and integral to our climate security, human health and prosperity.
Ample Tools and Practices
Grid operators have long-standing
tools and practices available to ensure that our nation’s grid continues to
provide power reliably. These include well-established planning principles that
have motivated large amounts of new generation year in, year out. Since 2000,
roughly 30 gigawatts of new generation have been added per year,
largely consisting of low or zero-emitting resources such as wind turbines and
natural gas combined cycle power plants. Over the next two years, the solar
industry alone expects to add another 20 gigawatts of power. In addition,
reliability is ensured through tools and practices including:
- Transmission Upgrades: Because upgraded transmission infrastructure can help move generation more easily, transmission upgrades can enhance reliability without needing to add new generation.
- Long-term forecasting: Grid planners and reliability regulators forecast the needs of the electric grid years in advance. By determining how much transmission and generation will be needed, any long-term reliability issue can be identified and resolved quickly and effectively.
- Reliability Must-Run (“RMR”) Contracts: Short term contracts that, in the case of sudden
and unexpected retirements or plant losses, require a unit to be kept
operational until reliability can be ensured through the use of longer
term tools.
- Operating Procedures: Manuals and standard practices exist to ensure that, in the case of particular reliability scenarios, grid operators know the best way to respond.
These tools are already in use
throughout the country, and have proven extremely effective in maintaining
reliability over the last few decades – even as the power sector has begun a
rapid transition towards cleaner sources of electricity, and has implemented
important public health protections under the Clean Air Act. In the
Mid-Atlantic region, for example, roughly 12,500 MW of coal-fired power plant
capacity retired from 2010 to 2014 due to economic reasons. Employing these
well-established tools and practices, the region saw a large quantity of new
resources added, without reducing reliability.
Clean Energy Resources and Reliability
In complying with the Clean Power
Plan, states and power companies will be able to draw on reliable, low-cost
clean energy resources like demand response, renewable energy, and energy
efficiency. Energy efficiency is almost three times cheaper than the
next cheapest alternative and primed for enormous growth. Resources like
demand response help prevent blackouts, such as in the case of the 2013
polar vortex. And renewable energy continues to grow, with states such as
Maine, California, and Iowa already using it to meet close to
one quarter of their entire demand.
Claims that we can’t have clean air
and a reliable power grid are as old as the Clean Air Act itself — and have never
proven accurate. As far back as the 1970s, a power company issued an ad
claiming the lights would go out as a result of the Clean Air Act. In recent
years, some power companies that oppose public health protections under the
Clean Air Act have made similar claims that the Mercury and Air Toxics
Standards and Cross-State Air Pollution Rule will harm electric reliability.
Numerous Experts Have Indicated that the Clean Power Plan is
Achievable
A
diverse collection of energy experts and power company officials have recently
made comments noting the feasibility of achieving the emission reduction goals
of the Clean Power Plan; describing their experience in reducing carbon
emissions in a cost-effective way as well as explaining approaches to ensure
reliability is maintained while making progress to reduce carbon emissions.
Flexibility in the Clean Power Plan
EPA’s
Clean Power Plan wholly preserves the ability of grid operators, power
companies, and other institutions to deploy the well-established tools and
practices that ensure the reliable operation of the power grid.
The
Plan provides state-wide goals for emission reductions, while affording states
ample flexibility in how those goals must be met. States are not limited
to using any particular pathway to meet the Plan, and can deploy a variety of
existing and new policies to meet the state-wide greenhouse gas reduction
goals, including flexible market-based tools. This already existing flexibility
allows grid operators the freedom to use long-standing and tested actions to
ensure reliability.
Although
the Clean Power Plan represents an important step forward for our country, it
builds on a nation-wide trend toward a cleaner and more efficient power sector
that is already under way. As noted above, carbon emissions from the power
sector are already 15% lower than in 2005 – reflecting a sharp decline in
coal-fired power generation, as well as a significant increase in natural gas
generation and renewables and rising investment in energy efficiency.
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