GAO Report Released: Electricity: Significant Changes Are Expected in Coal-Fueled Generation, but Coal is Likely to Remain a Key Fuel Source
by Taryn Rucinski
Recently, the Government Accountability Office (GAO) released a report, titled Electricity: Significant Changes Are Expected in Coal-Fueled Generation, but Coal is Likely to Remain a Key Fuel Source GAO-13-72 (Oct. 29, 2012). The details of the 54-page report, available here, are discussed below:
Coal
is a key domestic fuel source and an important contributor to the U.S.
economy. Most coal produced in the United States is used to generate
electricity. In 2011, 1,387 coal-fueled electricity generating units
produced about 42 percent of the nation's electricity. After decades of
growth, U.S. coal production and consumption have fallen, primarily due
to declines in the use of coal to generate electricity.
According
to the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), using coal to generate
electricity is associated with health and environmental concerns such as
emissions of sulfur dioxide, a pollutant linked to respiratory
illnesses, and carbon dioxide, a greenhouse gas linked to climate
change. In response to recent environmental regulations and changing
market conditions, such as the recent decrease in the price of natural
gas, power companies may retire some units, which could affect the coal
fleet's generating capacity--the ability to generate electricity--and
the amount of electricity generated from coal. Power companies may also
retrofit some units by installing controls to reduce pollutants.
GAO
was asked to examine (1) how the fleet of coal-fueled electricity
generating units may change in the future in terms of its generating
capacity and other aspects and (2) the future use of coal to generate
electricity in the United States and key factors that could affect it.
GAO conducted a statistical analysis of plans for retiring coal-fueled
units, interviewed stakeholders, and reviewed information on industry
plans and long-term forecasts by EIA and others. GAO is not making any
recommendations in this report.
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