(press release)
Salem, MA—The Salem Harbor power plant in Salem is the 3rd dirtiest power plant in Massachusetts based on carbon dioxide (CO2) pollution for 2007, according to a new analysis of government data released today by Environment Massachusetts.
“It's
time for the oldest and dirtiest power plants to clean up their act,” said
Environment Massachusetts Citizen Outreach Director Risa Pedzewick. “Fossil
fuel-fired giants have dominated our electricity for decades and have been
allowed to pollute without license. In
order to stop global warming and reap all the benefits of clean energy, we must
require old clunker power plants to meet modern standards for global warming
pollution.”
Power
plants currently do not have to meet any global warming pollution standard,
meaning that they are an unchecked contributor to global warming. In fact, power plants are the nation’s single
largest source of global warming pollution.
The
growing impacts of global warming will impose threats to our safety and immense
financial cost on our society, and most notably for Massachusetts, -eg. sea
levels rise inundating our coast. To avoid the worst effects of global warming,
the science shows that the United States must cut its global warming pollution
by 35 percent by 2020.
The new
report from Environment Massachusetts, “America's
Biggest Polluters: Carbon Dioxide Emissions from Power Plants in 2007,”
looks at carbon dioxide emissions from power plants across the country using
2007 data from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency; 2007 is the most
recent year for which final data is available.
The report examines both age of and pollution from power plants to
document the fact that we are reliant on an energy infrastructure that is both
old and polluting. The key findings
include the following:
- The oldest operating power plant in Massachusetts is the Kendall
Square plant in Cambridge. The Salem Harbor plant is a close second. The Kendall
Square plant has been operating for 50 years, built within just two
decades of the television first becoming commercially available. Many of the plants in Massachusetts are
decades-old. In fact, 10 of
Massachusetts 20 plants were built before 1969.
Nationally, the report shows that America's power is dominated by old
and polluting plants, and that the oldest and dirtiest plants often go
hand-in-hand. Power plants built three
decades ago or more produced 73 percent of the total global warming pollution
from power plants in 2007. Older power
plants on average are dirtier per unit of energy than newer ones.
“America's power is both decades-old and dangerously polluting. We’re reliant on technology that’s as old as
the very first commercially available televisions. Televisions have gone from black-and-white
clunkers to super high-definition flat screens, but they’re still powered by
the same dirty electricity,” Pedzewick said.
“Clean
energy holds the future of America—to make our nation energy independent,
create millions of new jobs, and stop the worst effects of global warming. In order to realize this clean energy future,
power plants must stop polluting with impunity,” Pedzewick said.
The U.S. Senate is slated to consider legislation in the next few months
to establish the first-ever federal limits on global warming pollution and
standards and incentives for clean energy.
In addition, EPA has proposed a rule to require power plants and other
large smokestack industries to use available technology to cut their global
warming pollution when new facilities are constructed or existing facilities
are significantly modified.
However, fossil fuel industries are fighting the transition to clean
energy. The American Coalition for Clean Coal
Electricity, a coal industry lobby group, spent at least $40 million dollars in
2008 alone – more than $100,000 a day – on lobbyists and advertising on
energy. Earlier this year, they hired
lobbyists who forged phony constituent letters to Congress opposing action on
clean energy.
We urge Senators Kerry and Kirk to vote for a strong clean energy bill
that will cut global warming pollution and create clean energy jobs.”
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