Michael Bloomberg pumps $500 million into bid to close all US coal plants
21 Sep 2023
[1/2]Former mayor of New York Michael Bloomberg speaks during a
meeting with Earthshot prize winners and finalists at the Glasgow Science
Center during the UN Climate Change Conference (COP26) in Glasgow, Scotland,
Britain, November 2, 2021. Alastair Grant/Pool via REUTERS/File Photo Acquire Licensing Rights
UNITED
NATIONS, Sept 20 (Reuters) - Former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg
announced on Wednesday he will pump $500 million into the next phase of his
energy transition campaign, aiming to shut down "every last" coal
plant in the United States and slash gas-fired capacity in half by 2030.
The $500 million infusion into his decade-long Beyond Carbon
initiative aims to "finish the job on coal" by working with state and
local organizations to force the closure of the roughly 150 coal plants that
have not yet retired, slash current gas generation in half and block the
construction of new gas-fired plants.
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Bloomberg already has spent over $500 million to support the
Sierra Club's Beyond Coal campaign, which originally aimed to retire 30% of the
U.S. coal fleet by 2020. The campaign ended up accelerating the retirement of
over 60% of coal plants by that year and putting $85 million toward a similar mission to fight
the expansion of petrochemical plants in the U.S.
"By working with our partners across the country, we hope
to transform the way we power America by moving beyond fossil fuels and
replacing them with renewable energy," said Bloomberg, who is the U.N.
Special Envoy on Climate Ambition and Solutions.
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The money would support litigation brought against utilities and
power companies by grassroots groups, state and local policy advocacy and
financing to assist local communities with coal plant closures, Bloomberg
Philanthropies said.
U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres told a climate summit at
the annual high-level U.N. General Assembly that time was running out to tackle
climate change, thanks in part to the "naked greed" of fossil fuel interests.