This has become a controversial point in the current US political debate. Do we save jobs in coal or shift them to renewables?
No one wants to see industries collapse and people get pushed out of work? Yet, moving to clean energy makes sense on every level. The big question becomes, what new jobs can fill the void in coal states? How quickly can they come on? Do they compensate well.
Over the last centuries old technology has been replaced by new. Jobs have been lost and gained. As renewables become more affordable and productive, coupled with efficiency gains, "cheap coal" is no longer the answer to our long-term energy needs.
We see the levelizaton of pricing among all forms of power being a great benefit to every citizen of every community. Together we can rebuild local economies in former coal strongholds. This is a shift, a historic one, not a loss. The benefits to our world will be staggering.
Mapping coal's decline and the renewables' rise
by Francesca Mccaffrey
A new study from MIT researchers, however, shows that coal's economic edge may soon be far thinner than we think. In a working paper for the MIT Energy Initiative, graduate students Joel Jean, David C. Borrelli, and Tony Wu show how replacing current coal-fired power plants with wind and solar photovoltaic generation facilities could provide benefits for the environment and for bottom lines in the near future.
The online tool they've created to help illustrate this argument is CoalMap, a web application that compares the levelized cost of electricity (LCOE)—that is, the minimum electricity price a power plant must receive to break even on investment costs over its lifecycle—of existing U.S. coal-fired plants with the expected LCOE of potential new utility-scale solar and wind generation in the same locations. The tool draws on publicly available data sets from sources including the U.S. Energy Information Administration and the National Renewable Energy Laboratory.
Users view CoalMap as a map of the continental United States showing the locations of current coal plants, with markers indicating each plant's nameplate capacity and relative cost. As users apply different carbon prices, deployment subsidies, and rates of cost decline for solar and wind, they can observe the effects of these changes on the cost-competitiveness of renewable energy across the country.
The idea for CoalMap was born at the 2015 MIT Clean Earth Hackathon, held by the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering and the MIT Office of Sustainability. There, the team—made up of Wu and Jean, both of the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science; Borrelli, an alumnus of the Department of Chemical Engineering; and Fanni Fan, an MIT Sloan School of Management MFin student—won in the energy category, rising to the Rocky Mountain Institute's challenge for hackathon participants to build a compelling map that could help regulators and policymakers take action against heavily polluting or uneconomic coal plants. "Everyone on our team was very interested in the scalability of renewable energy, especially solar, so we decided to take on the challenge," says Jean. According to Wu, the hackathon offered "a great opportunity to compare coal head-to-head with renewables."
The team subsequently met with researchers from the Rocky Mountain Institute and the Sierra Club to discuss potential avenues for using the map. The consensus, according to Jean: the map had potential as a climate change and energy outreach tool that "would be interesting to many people beyond MIT."
With its straightforward user interface, CoalMap raises awareness about the environmental and economic costs of continuing to run legacy coal plants in the U.S., while simultaneously underscoring the benefits of investing in clean energy generation. "It's incredible to see," Jean says, "how fast solar and wind costs have dropped and how soon they can become competitive with even the cheapest legacy coal if historical rates of cost decline are maintained."
Jean emphasizes that CoalMap uses just one metric—levelized cost of electricity in $/kWh—and that coal plants can run continuously, independent of time of day, while wind and solar are intermittent generation sources, making direct comparison between the technologies difficult. Even so, Jean says, CoalMap can help people visualize a low-carbon future, instilling in them "intuition about the importance of continuing to innovate in solar and wind and setting a price on carbon."
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