EPA To Require Coal And New Gas Power Plants To Cut Emissions

The power plant rules align with changes that have been happening in the sector in the past decade. Electric utilities have moved sharply away from coal, largely switching to natural gas.

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency on Thursday rolled out its final rules to cut emissions from existing coal-fired and new gas power plants.

Those plants will have to ultimately cut their carbon dioxide emissions by 90 percent or shut down.

The new rules include updated limits on mercury and other toxic pollutants from plants that burn coal. They also include changes to how power plants dispose of the wastewater that results from treating coal emissions to remove toxic pollutants.

Finally, the rules require the cleanup of coal ash disposal sites that were closed prior to 2015.

“By developing these standards in a clear, transparent, inclusive manner, EPA is cutting pollution while ensuring that power companies can make smart investments and continue to deliver reliable electricity for all Americans,” said EPA Administrator Michael Regan.

The power plant rules align with changes that have been happening in the sector in the past decade. Electric utilities have moved sharply away from coal, largely switching to natural gas.

“This year, the United States is projected to build more new electric generation capacity than we have in two decades – and 96 percent of that will be clean,” said White House Climate Adviser Ali Zaidi.

Renewables such as wind and solar account for an increasing percentage of power generation and have surpassed coal.

Still, fossil fuel producing states, and some industry groups, are expected to challenge the new rules. Some will argue that the rules will have a negative economic impact on power plant communities. Others will say the rules will make the power grid less reliable.

“We will be challenging this rule,” said West Virginia Attorney General Patrick Morrisey in a statement issued soon after the new rules were published. “The U.S. Supreme Court has placed significant limits on what the EPA can do—we plan on ensuring that those limits are upheld, and we expect that we will once again prevail in court against this out-of-control agency.”

Morrisey, who’s running in West Virginia’s Republican primary for governor, led a successful challenge of the Obama administration’s Clean Power Plan. The Supreme Court’s ruling in West Virginia v EPA two years ago constrained the EPA’s rulemaking process. Morrisey and others are likely to argue that the agency still overstepped its authority.

Others say the grid simply isn’t ready for a massive shift away from traditional baseload power to more intermittent sources of energy such as wind and solar.

“This barrage of new EPA rules ignores our nation’s ongoing electric reliability challenges and is the wrong approach at a critical time for our nation’s energy future,” said Jim Matheson, CEO of the National Rural Electric Cooperative Association.

Adding to the uncertainty, a change in administrations after this year’s election could result in a rollback of the new rules.

If the rules hold up, the EPA projects $370 billion in climate and public health benefits over the next two decades. The agency’s analysis predicts a reduction of 1.38 billion tons of CO2 through 2047, the equivalent of the annual emissions of 328 million gasoline powered cars.

The EPA is also gathering public input on a proposal to cut emissions from existing gas-fired power plants. Natural gas is currently the nation’s top source of electricity, and though it produces lower carbon emissions than coal, the production and transportation of gas emits methane, a more powerful heat-trapping gas than CO2.

The EPA’s principal solution for coal and gas plants to comply with the new rules is carbon capture and storage. But the technology has not been deployed successfully on a commercial scale, and power plant operators say that the rules will force fossil fuel plants to effectively shut down.

“It is obvious that the ultimate goal of these EPA regulations is to stop the use of fossil fuels to produce reliable energy in the United States by forcing the premature closure of coal plants and blocking new natural gas plants,” said U.S. Sen. Joe Manchin, D-West Virginia, chairman of the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee.

Another powerful foe of the EPA rules vowed Thursday that she’d introduce a bill to repeal them.

“To protect millions of Americans, including energy workers, against executive overreach that has already been tried and rejected by the Supreme Court,” said U.S. Sen. Shelley Moore Capito, R-West Virginia, “I will be introducing a Congressional Review Act resolution of disapproval to overturn the EPA’s job-killing regulations announced today.”

Capito is the senior Republican on the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee, which oversees the EPA and confirms its administrator.

Legislature Paves Way For New Green Technology

The process of taking carbon out of the air and storing it is called carbon sequestration. Trees naturally sequester carbon by absorbing it out of the air, using it for energy, and storing some of that energy in their roots. 

New green technology called carbon capture can take CO2 released during the burning of greenhouse gasses out of the air. Air is filtered through a fan that uses technology to remove the CO2, turn that CO2 into a liquid, and then pump it into the ground.

The process of taking carbon out of the air and storing it is called carbon sequestration. Trees naturally sequester carbon by absorbing it out of the air, using it for energy, and storing some of that energy in their roots. 

New green technology called carbon capture can take CO2 released during the burning of greenhouse gasses out of the air. Air is filtered through a fan that uses technology to remove the CO2, turn that CO2 into a liquid, and then pump it into the ground.

This is a possible answer to the excess CO2 in the atmosphere that is causing the climate crisis. 

The Senate passed House Bill 5045 Friday. The bill gives the state the authority to enforce Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), rules so the state can regulate carbon sequestration. This is part of a bid for the EPA to grant the state the ability to regulate the new technology. It requires that the states abide by or exceed carbon sequestration regulations put forth by the EPA. 

Randy Smith, R-Tucker, the lead sponsor of the bill, said this will help the state get the new technology up and running quickly by bypassing long permit wait times typical with the EPA. 

“So EPA is going to put the rules out there,” Smith said. “And normally they enforce these rules. So basically, it just gives the state of West Virginia the authority to enforce the EPA rules, you know, because we can’t supersede the federal (law).”

Smith said he wants West Virginia to be on the forefront of this technology.

“West Virginia is sort of one of the leaders of trying to get the rules and regulations in place, when the technology gets there,” Smith said, “Then we’re ahead of the game.”

Others worry about the risks of a leak in the underground carbon storage that could taint drinkable groundwater supplies. 

Around the state some have concerns with West Virginia’s bid to manage the new technology following countless disasters related to the mismanagement of industry in the state.

Smith said this bill is a proactive measure to get rules and regulations into place so those disasters don’t happen. 

“The first step is to make sure that when this does happen, that we’ll be able to manage it,” he said. “You know, there’s a lot of geological information that has to go (into it), they’re not gonna be able to just put it in an abandoned gas well or anything like that. These will be specialty wells, where they can’t leak to make sure stuff like that doesn’t happen if this technology does take off.” 

Others opposed to the new technology say it perpetuates the use of fossil fuels. 

The bill has passed both chambers, but it goes back to the House next to see if changes made in the Senate are agreeable to the delegates. 

Another notable bill passed today would make it illegal for drivers to cruise in the left lane if they are not passing, or under other specific situations like avoiding a stationary emergency vehicle or avoiding construction. 

West Virginia Part Of Nearly $1 Billion Regional Hydrogen Hub

President Joe Biden is set to announce the Appalachian Regional Clean Hydrogen Hub later Friday. The hub, also called ARCH2, will include Ohio and Pennsylvania. 

West Virginia is among the states receiving funds from the U.S. Department of Energy to create a regional hydrogen hub.

President Joe Biden is set to announce the Appalachian Regional Clean Hydrogen Hub later Friday. The hub, also called ARCH2, will include Ohio and Pennsylvania. 

The region will be eligible for as much as $925 million of the $7 billion in total going to seven regional hubs across the country.

The White House projects 18,000 construction jobs and 3,000 permanent jobs resulting from the investment in the Appalachian hub.

Other hubs will be established in the mid-Atlantic, California, the Gulf Coast, the Upper Midwest, the Great Lakes and the Pacific Northwest.

The Appalachian hub will lean on the region’s abundant supply of natural gas to make hydrogen. Of the other hubs, only the Gulf Coast will also use natural gas, called blue hydrogen. 

Most of the others will use renewable energy, including wind, solar and hydro, known as green hydrogen.

The Great Lakes hub will use nuclear power, known as pink hydrogen. 

Appalachia’s hub will store the carbon dioxide generated from the production process.

The seven hubs are expected to generate three million metric tons of hydrogen annually, which will be used to decarbonize industrial sectors that produce 30 percent of U.S. carbon emissions.

The initiative is projected to cut 25 million metric tons of CO2 each year, part of the Biden administration’s larger goal of cutting emissions to meet the targets of the Paris Agreement.

“With this historic investment,” said Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm in a statement, “the Biden-Harris administration is laying the foundation for a new, American-led industry that will propel the global clean energy transition while creating high quality jobs and delivering healthier communities in every pocket of the nation.”

U.S. Sen. Shelley Moore Capito noted that funding for the hydrogen hubs came from the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act of 2021. Capito participated in the negotiation of that legislation and was key to its Senate passage.

“I consistently supported efforts to help make this project a reality,” she said in a statement. “I’m thrilled for the ARCH2 Team, and am so proud West Virginia will continue its tradition as an innovative, energy-producing state through a regional hydrogen hub.”

Hydrogen Production Facility Announced For Mason County

Fidelis New Energy announced plans Wednesday to develop a hydrogen production facility in Mason County, as well as a hydrogen powered data center.

Fidelis New Energy announced plans Wednesday to develop a hydrogen production facility in Mason County, as well as a hydrogen powered data center.

Gov. Jim Justice said Fidelis will invest $2 billion over time and when operational, it is estimated the project will employ up to 800 workers and be the largest natural gas user in the state. A press release specified the project will be built in four phases and employ 4,200 construction workers. 

“The state today is looking for opportunities that may be this big. I can’t promise you in any way that every single button we push will be the absolute key to Emerald City,” Justice said. “I can promise you this, that we’re going to be wise in what we do. We’re not going to endanger our environment. We’re not going to endanger our way of life. Absolutely, with all in us, we want more and more goodness and opportunity to come to us.”

The location will implement technology that enables production of hydrogen with zero lifecycle carbon emissions from a combination of natural gas, carbon capture, utilization and sequestration (CCUS) and renewable energy.

Pete Hollis, who leads Fidelis’ carbon capture and sequestration efforts said the state’s geology makes it well suited for the in-ground storage necessary to keep the project carbon neutral.

“This includes technologies, techniques and procedures that support the safe and permanent sequestration of CO2 in deep sandstones and Dolomites that are prevalent throughout West Virginia, and these will not interfere or impact any of the drinking water or existing oil and gas production,” he said. “Prior to any injection of CO2, it’s important to know that we go through a very rigorous permitting process that requires approval from the US EPA, West Virginia Department of Resources, West Virginia Geological and Economic Survey and the West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection.” 

Dan Shapiro, CEO of Fidelis, said this is the latest development in the state’s energy history.

“From the earliest days, West Virginia has been all into power and supply energy to the United States,” he said. “Mountain State powered us through wars, industrial development, the modern birth of modern chemistry that changed the course of human history and standard of living for people around the world. And now the words ‘all in’ also mean all of the above energy for energy security as well as ways to supply energy that we need using existing resources that also lower CO2 emissions.”

When all four phases of the project are operational, the state estimates permanent CO2 storage will provide over $100 million in annual revenue to the state.

Capito, Republican Senators Ask EPA To Scrap Proposed Power Plant Rules

The public has another week to comment on proposed rules for power plants. Senate Republicans, meanwhile, have asked the Biden administration to withdraw them. 

The public has another week to comment on proposed rules for power plants. Senate Republicans, meanwhile, have asked the Biden administration to withdraw them. 

U.S. Sen. Shelley Moore Capito of West Virginia and 38 of her Republican colleagues have asked the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to scrap its power plant proposal.

The requirement that coal and natural gas power plants capture all of their carbon dioxide emissions or switch to clean hydrogen after 2030 cannot be achieved, they say.

The senators say neither carbon capture nor clean hydrogen are being used on a commercial scale. 

EPA’s proposed rules would force coal and natural gas power plants to shut down, they say. West Virginia has several coal-burning power plants that generate close to 90 percent of the state’s electricity.

The EPA is accepting written comments on the proposed rules through Aug. 8.

Project Explores Potential Of Geothermal In W.Va.

The geothermal well in the Morgantown Industrial Park, which began drilling in mid May, has so far reached 1,300 feet in depth but aims to ultimately drill down 15,000 feet to determine viability of geothermal in the region.

West Virginia University (WVU) is digging deep to learn more about alternative energy and carbon capture. 

The geothermal well in the Morgantown Industrial Park, which began drilling in mid-May, has so far reached 1,300 feet in depth. 

The project aims to ultimately drill down 15,000 feet to determine if the increasing heat at such depths is viable for future use as a clean energy source across the region. 

Shikha Sharma, a geology professor at WVU and the project’s primary investigator, said this specialized drilling is only the second of its kind in the country, and first in West Virginia.

“We are not only assessing the geothermal potential of the rocks beneath us here in West Virginia, we will be going pretty deep,” she said. “We’ll also be collecting rocks, sidewall course, to assess the potential of CO2 storage in the shallow formations. Combining both things together is pretty unique.”

The project is a collaboration between several entities, but most notably the WVU Energy Institute with WVU faculty, Northeast Natural Energy and the U.S. Department of Energy. 

They hope to have their first rock samples by July and regular temperature data by the end of the year.

Sharma said depending on the study’s results, West Virginia could be well positioned to use geothermal as a renewable source of energy and heat. 

“A lot of skill sets required for drilling oil and gas wells goes into developing geothermal,” she said. “We can retool a lot of those technologies, and level up geothermal as a renewable energy technology. I think that’s another major advantage for oil and gas states like West Virginia.”

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