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posted by janrinok on Monday July 06 2015, @01:49AM   Printer-friendly
from the burning-more-than-beds dept.

A year on from the abolition of the carbon price, greenhouse pollution from electricity generation has rebounded as Australia burns more brown coal to meet its power needs.

Carbon dioxide emissions from the national electricity grid jumped by 6.4 million tonnes in the financial year after the Abbott government repealed the scheme that required big industry to buy pollution permits, according to analysis by consultants Pitt & Sherry. The 4.3 per cent increase unwound part of an 11 per cent fall in emissions across the grid in the two years the carbon price was in place.

It can mainly be attributed to Victoria's four large brown coal generators running at greater capacity more often as the electricity they generate became cheaper. Output from the ageing Latrobe Valley quartet was up about nine per cent.

With the exception of burning oil for power – a practice favoured in Saudi Arabia – burning brown coal is the most greenhouse-intensive way to create electricity. Cutting emissions from the electricity supply is widely considered the central battle in tackling climate change in coming decades. It pumps out about a third of Australia's carbon pollution.

The new data comes as the federal cabinet is set to this month consider Australia's climate change targets beyond 2020 amid international pressure over Prime Minister Tony Abbott's contrarian stance on the issue.


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  • (Score: 2) by FatPhil on Monday July 06 2015, @03:17PM

    > Solar Energy - Not renewable

    A completely disingenuous argument. The sun is, and will continue to be, generating energy at a pretty much constant rate until long past the expected survival of our species. And its deviation from that is not, as you seem to think, that it will burn out and fade as it runs out of fuel. It will not - it will burn hotter and hotter, until the earth is utterly uninhabitable, as all the water will be boiled off into space.

    Repeat after me - the sun we are nearest to will never fail to provide humans with energy, the only way humans will see Sol stop providing energy is if we've found another sun to be nearest to and looking at it through a telescope.
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