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ENVIRONMENTAL UPDATE |
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MASSACHUSETTS SIERRA CLUB | Legislative | Home 10 Milk Street, Ste 632, Boston, MA 02108-4621 | Ph:617.423.5775 | Fax:617.890.0338 |
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LEGISLATION |
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| The Massachusetts Chapter works to pass important environmental bills and the state and local level. To get involved in our legislative program, please contact legislate@sierraclubmass.org. No Increase in Coal Burning (S) Bans the new construction of coal-burning facilities or coal-gas conversion facilities. Coal produces more global warming CO2 than any other fuel. Its mining is environmentally devastating. There’s no such thing as “clean coal” despite the hype that the coal industry want you to believe. Does not affect existing coal facilities. BILL TEXT: An Act to Reduce Coal Burning and Use Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives in General Court assembled, and by the authority of the same, as follows: Chapter 164 of the General Laws, as appearing in the 2002 Official Edition, is hereby amended by inserting after section 69I the following section: Section 69I½. Notwithstanding the provisions of this chapter or any law to the contrary, an electric generating facility constructed or commencing operation on and after January first, two thousand ten shall not utilize coal, gasified coal, nor any other product derived primary from coal. Additional Information If coal is to remain a part of our energy future, it must be mined responsibly, burned cleanly and guaranteed to not worsen global warming pollution. At this time, there is no existing coal technology that meets these standards, including Integrated Gasification Combined Cycle (IGCC) or carbon capture and sequestration (CCS). If we don't build all
these new coal-fired power plants now, won't we be setting ourselves up for
rolling blackouts and jeopardizing our energy future?
What role can coal play
in a cleaner, healthier energy future? Isn't coal the most affordable energy choice, providing energy at half the cost of other fuels? Wrong. Coal is very expensive. The cost of coal prices has skyrocketed over the past year, and the cost of building coal plants has escalated more than 50 percent in some instances. And consider other costs associated with coal: From lung disease to the loss of mountaintops because of irresponsible mining to health care and environmental destruction, the hidden costs of coal are immense. Future carbon dioxide regulations may also increase the cost of coal. With the cost of efficiency and renewables now equal to or less than the cost of coal in many places, building new coal-fired power plants is a poor investment for our pocketbooks and our future. Can't coal help reduce
our reliance on oil? Don't we have a 250
year supply of coal right here in America? Isn't clean energy too
far away and too expensive to be practical? Not only is clean energy good for the environment, it is good for the economy, too. In 2007 the development of new wind energy added $9 billion to the U.S. economy. Not to mention wind is already competitively priced and is cheaper than coal in many places. The cost of efficiency is as little as half the cost of new coal-fired power plants. A greater investment in renewables and efficiency would not only help lower our energy prices but would also help local economies. A recent study by the Apollo Alliance found that renewable energy generated 40% more jobs per dollar invested than coal. What about "clean coal"
technologies, like IGCC? What about carbon
capture and sequestration demonstration projects like the now-cancelled
FutureGen plant? Can replacing light
bulbs really reduce the need to build new coal fired power plants? What should we do about existing coal plants? Old coal-fired power plants, which are the worst contributors to global warming, smog, acid rain and respiratory problems, need to be cleaned up and retired. We should work towards reducing our dependence on coal and achieving a 2% reduction per year in global warming emissions through energy efficiency and renewable energy that can both guarantee our energy future and provide cleaner, healthier options for meeting our energy needs. We have the technology available today to begin moving beyond coal by meeting our energy needs with sources that are clean, safe, reliable and affordable. Don't we need to aggressively move ahead with new coal technology because China and India are going full-speed into their own coal rush? That's why we're promoting the America Leads scenario. By setting an example and developing new technologies, we can make it more likely that developing nations will leap frog over the industrial nation's fossil fuel based development model into an energy system based on renewables. China has already launched a campaign to get 15% of its energy from renewables by 2020. It also has a higher fuel economy standard for new vehicles of 33 mpg in 2005 and 36 mpg in 2008. Please note: Bill text is based on pre-filing information provided by State legislative personel. In some cases, bills as filed may differ slightly.
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