Coal announcements that changed the game in 2024
18 Dec 2024
While
coal-fired power continues to be part of our energy mix, several announcements
were made in 2024 signalling that coal is no longer king and cleaner
alternatives are being sought.
Here are five of those
announcements:
Ratcliffe-on-Soar power
station, near Nottingham UK, closed its doors for the last time on 30 September
2024, marking the closure of the UK’s last coal-fired power plant.
The announcement was
made by plant owner Uniper, which confirmed the power station would cease
operating at midnight. The plant began generating power in 1967 and according
to the Uniper release, has produced enough energy to make more than 21 trillion
cups of tea since commissioning.
On 31 August 2024
Danish energy company Ørsted shut down its last coal-fired combined heat and
power plant, Esbjerg Power Station, located in the Western part of Denmark.
The yearly consumption
of coal at Esbjerg Power Station has been approximately 500,000 tonnes, which
is equivalent to approximately 1.2 million tonnes of carbon dioxide emissions.
Fossil fuel-led
electricity generation in Europe fell to its lowest-ever level in the second
quarter of this year, according to a new report from energy data analyst Montel
Analytics.
The quarter was also
characterised by record-high solar generation, the largest wind output ever
seen in a second quarter, and generally high renewable generation which caused
an increased number of negative day-ahead prices across Europe.
The University of
Michigan has released the findings of a study, which they are calling the “most
comprehensive coal-to-nuclear analysis to date”.
The study, Investigation of potential sites for coal-to-nuclear energy
transitions in the United States, ranks the feasibility of
converting 245 operational coal power plants in the US into advanced nuclear
reactors, a strategy being considered by electric utilities and the Department
of Energy.
The US Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA) has announced final rules to crack down on emissions
from coal-fired and new natural gas-fired power plants.
The highly-anticipated
announcement outlined a suite of measures aimed at reducing air, water and land
pollution from the power sector. As the sector makes long-term investments in
the transition to clean energy, EPA said the rules are designed to work with
power companies’ planning processes. Regulators say they project the rules will
result in reductions of 1.38 billion metric tonnes of carbon pollution overall
through 2047.