Dozens of US Coal Plant Closings Delayed as Green Energy Shift Slows
02 Nov 2022
(Bloomberg)
-- As many as 40 US coal-fired power plants that were slated to shut will run
for longer than expected, with operators delaying plans to retire them as
supply-chain issues and reliability concerns slow the transition to greener
energy.
The plants have almost 17 gigawatts of capacity, and some have
pushed back their planned closures by as long as five years, according to
Andrew Blumenfeld, director of data analytics at McCloskey by Opis. Consol
Energy Inc., one of the largest US coal miners, cited the research in its
third-quarter earnings report Tuesday as evidence that demand for coal remains
robust.
The delays reveal headwinds for a large-scale shift to cleaner
energy, said Blumenfeld. Some coal plants were supposed to be replaced by solar
power, but renewables projects have had setbacks as clogged supply chains slow
panel deliveries from China. In other cases, utilities or grid operators
reconsidered closures to ensure that enough power would be available,
especially during summers marked by extreme heat waves.
“The transition is going to happen, but it will be a little more
measured,” Blumenfeld said.
(Disclaimer: Michael Bloomberg, the founder and majority owner of
Bloomberg LP — the parent company of Bloomberg News — committed $500 million to
Beyond Carbon, a campaign aimed at closing the remaining coal-fired power
plants in the US by 2030 and halting the development of new natural gas-fired
plants. He also started a campaign to close a quarter of the world’s remaining
coal plants and cancel all proposed coal plants by 2025.)