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posted by chromas on Thursday October 18 2018, @04:16PM   Printer-friendly
from the what-do-I-do-with-all-these-burner-inserters? dept.

Submitted via IRC for Bytram

U.S. greenhouse emissions fell in 2017 as coal plants shut

Greenhouse gases emissions from the largest U.S. industrial plants fell 2.7 percent in 2017, the Trump administration said, as coal plants shut and as that industry competes with cheap natural gas and solar and wind power that emit less pollution.

The drop was steeper than in 2016 when emissions fell 2 percent, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) said.

EPA acting administrator Andrew Wheeler said the data proves that federal regulations are not necessary to drive carbon dioxide reductions.

[...] While Wheeler gave the administration credit for the reductions, which mainly came from the power sector, the numbers also underscore that the administration has not been able to stop the rapid pace of coal plant shutdowns.

[...] Natural gas releases far less carbon dioxide when burned than coal and a domestic abundance of gas has driven a wave of closures of coal plants. In 2017 utilities shut or converted from coal-to-gas nearly 9,000 megawatts (MW) of coal plants.

[...] The trend of U.S. coal plant shutdowns is expected to pick up this year, with power companies expecting to shut 14,000 MW of coal plants in calendar year 2018.


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  • (Score: 3, Informative) by DeathMonkey on Thursday October 18 2018, @10:02PM (3 children)

    by DeathMonkey (1380) on Thursday October 18 2018, @10:02PM (#750681) Journal

    There was no training.

    The Obama Idea to Save Coal Country [politico.com]

    As part of the 2016 budget, the Obama White House created something called the POWER Plus plan specifically to help Appalachian communities that were getting left behind because of the rapidly changing energy market.
    For Kentucky alone, that would mean $20 million a year for five years. The money would likely have gone to promote other businesses sectors like manufacturing and tourism and to retrain miners for new jobs like writing computer code.

    Job training and community college put coal miners on a new path [pbs.org]

    Coal miners in the heart of Appalachia face unemployment and uncertainty as the expansion of automation and natural gas threatens the industry that’s been an economic bedrock. But a West Virginia nonprofit matches displaced workers to sustainable jobs in agriculture or carpentry while helping them pursue associate degrees.

    Awaiting Trump's coal comeback, miners reject retraining [reuters.com]

    When Mike Sylvester entered a career training center earlier this year in southwestern Pennsylvania, he found more than one hundred federally funded courses covering everything from computer programming to nursing.

    What’s Up in Coal Country: Alternative-Energy Jobs [nytimes.com]

    The seminar was the last of three that week organized by Goldwind Americas, which is ready to provide as many as 850 giant wind turbines for a power plant planned in the state. The company was looking for candidates, particularly unemployed coal miners like Mr. Davila, to become technicians to maintain and operate the turbines.

    Clinton is making coal country a generous offer, but it’s not buying [grist.org]

    Last week, Hillary Clinton lost the West Virginia primary to left-wing challenger Bernie Sanders, 51 to 36 percent. She lost even though her climate and energy agenda would go easier on coal communities than Sanders’. She lost even though she’s laid out a comprehensive $30 billion plan that would provide suffering coal communities with health care, education, and job retraining.

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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Thursday October 18 2018, @10:12PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday October 18 2018, @10:12PM (#750684)

    Plans to make miners into javascript programmers and nurses 20 years too late? No one is going to hire these dudes as programmers because they wont play the pc games. Another plan designed to fail, just like obamacare.

  • (Score: 0, Redundant) by Sulla on Thursday October 18 2018, @10:40PM

    by Sulla (5173) on Thursday October 18 2018, @10:40PM (#750693) Journal

    Bill and the Dems kill the jobs, ruin the communities, then come back a decade later and say "hey we wanna help trust us". No wonder they didn't buy.

    --
    Ceterum censeo Sinae esse delendam
  • (Score: 0, Redundant) by khallow on Thursday October 18 2018, @11:21PM

    by khallow (3766) Subscriber Badge on Thursday October 18 2018, @11:21PM (#750707) Journal
    I note that two of those links didn't even link to a training program. Clinton's plan in particular was just a bribe to get West Virginia to vote for her in the primaries. The rest reminds me of the old American Indian schools. Basically, token efforts at education or training for appearance.