Tag: Electricity

Mar
24

Green News Report March 24 2011 Audio

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Green News Report March 24 2011 Audio

TWITTER: @GreenNewsReport.
The ‘GNR’ is also now available on your cell phone via Stitcher Radio’s mobile app!.
IN TODAY’S RADIO REPORT: Update on Japan’s nuke crisis: Tap water warning lifted for Tokyo infants, but spreading elsewhere; Workers at stricken plant hospitalized for radiation exposure; Nukes now less popular in the US (for some reason); King crab invasion at the South Pole; PLUS: Japanese villages struggle to maintain tradition amidst disaster… All that and more in today’s Green News Report!…
Got comments, tips, love letters, hate mail? Drop us a line at GreenNews@BradBlog.com or right here at the comments link below. All GNRs are always archived at GreenNews.BradBlog.com.
IN ‘GREEN NEWS EXTRA’ (see links below): Head exploder: GOPer wants creationism taught in school; WorldWaterDay: Which nations are most at risk?; BP Oil Disaster: Pipe piece caused blowout preventer failure; Google Maps now displaying EV charging stations; GA tree farm re-establishing American Chestnut; USDA gives GM crops boost over organics; Road salt killing Twin Cities’ lakes; EU Chief: French GM maize ban illegal; HUGE lease sale for WY coal; Lead, chemicals taint some urban gardens; EPA, DOJ sue MI’s largest coal plant; Canada is getting warmer: study …

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Mar
23

Louisiana Power Plants Say Theyre Prepared For Quakes

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Louisiana Power Plants Say Theyre Prepared For Quakes

Seeing Northeast Japan in ruins is a jarring reminder of lives lost to killer waves and storm surge in Louisiana and of past power outages and hurricane damage to industrial plants. Our terrain is less vulnerable to quakes than Japan, but local power-plant operators say, to be on the safe side, they’re prepared for bigger tremors than the state has felt so far.
Roy Dokka, Louisiana State University civil and environmental engineering professor and geologist, said small earthquakes occur in southeast Louisiana all the time though the region lacks instruments to detect and monitor them adequately. He is executive director at the LSU Center for GeoInformatics. The state’s only seismic monitor is housed at Loyola University in New

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Mar
22

Green News Report March 22 2011 Audio

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Green News Report March 22 2011 Audio

TWITTER: @GreenNewsReport.
The ‘GNR’ is also now available on your cell phone via Stitcher Radio’s mobile app!.
IN TODAY’S RADIO REPORT: Not out of the woods yet: Japan’s nuclear and humanitarian crisis continues as electricity returns to the Fukushima nuclear plant which remains precariously on edge while radiation poisoning is found in milk, vegetables and sea water — but Japan’s wind farms come to the rescue and new nuke reviews are set for US plants; PLUS: Surprise! A new 100-mile oil slick spotted in the Gulf of Mexico … All that and more in today’s Green News Report!
Got comments, tips, love letters, hate mail? Drop us a line at GreenNews@BradBlog.com or right here at the comments link below. All GNRs are always archived at GreenNews.BradBlog.com.
IN ‘GREEN NEWS EXTRA’ (see links below): New tech could make desalination portable, cheaper; Delay in coal plant rules cost thousands of lives; Record rains hit Philipines, cause more flooding in Australia; German town where recycling really pays; US Chamber of Commerce: “The gang that couldn’t lobby straight”; New UK plastic recycling plant takes all sorts; How not to change a climate skeptic’s mind; Shipwreck threatens island’s penguins; Wolves could be de-listed; King Crabs Invade Antarctica for First Time in 40 Million Years …

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Mar
20

I Demand Cheaper Electricity

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I Demand Cheaper Electricity

The biggest single source of electricity in the United States is coal-fired power plants. And that electricity is way too expensive. The Environmental Protection Agency this past week proposed a rule to make that electricity much cheaper.
You see, burning coal has the unfortunate side effect of releasing mercury and arsenic into the air. It is generally agreed that burning coal for electricity puts at least 48 tons of mercury into the air — the largest unregulated source of

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Mar
17

Confessions of an APPLEaholic From Addiction to Sobriety

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Confessions of an APPLEaholic From Addiction to Sobriety

The day the tsunami struck Japan, Apple launched its tsunami-seller, the iPad2. My calendar for 3.11.11 — the date of the massive 9.0 earthquake — was steady:
1.Write
2.Teach
3.5 p.m.: Stand in line for iPad2
When the first iPad was unleashed, like Harry Potter’s magical wand, but for adults — I stood in line for three hours to buy the shiny portal for my parents. The hype around the iPad2 this spring is almost unbearable. And, like a true APPLEaholic, I was driven by “the hunger.” After all, it was Eve who first ate that apple promising the Tree of Knowledge.
I count myself among the disciples to Steve Job’s elegant technology, his sleek, design style born of his calligraphy training, his artistry and eloquence that make Microsoft geeks look like dunderheads — or worse,

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Mar
16

Weekly Climate Science Roundup

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Weekly Climate Science Roundup

Nearly every week it seems there are new papers on how ecosystems are responding to climate change, as well as how climate change is affecting species extinction rates. Last week was no different: one paper shows shifting biomes in Alaska, and another compares modern rates of extinction to the “great” extinctions of Earth’s history. The paper on extinction makes for a fascinating read, addressing the key question: how do today’s human-driven extinctions compare to the major biodiversity catastrophes of the past?
Other studies, detailed below, increase our knowledge of the world's largest ice sheets, and one study reveals more complexities of growing crops for use as biofuels. These studies, and a number of others published between March 1-7, are summarized here:
Paper Title: Has Earth’s sixth mass extinction already arrived?
Journal: Nature
Authors: Anthony

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Mar
15

Green News Report March 15 2011 Audio

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Green News Report March 15 2011 Audio

TWITTER: @GreenNewsReport.
The ‘GNR’ is also now available on your cell phone via Stitcher Radio’s mobile app!.
IN TODAY’S SPECIAL RADIO REPORT: Natural disaster, humanitarian disaster, and now man-made disaster, as 50 nuclear plant workers are all that stand in the way of full nuclear meltdown at Fukushima in Japan … All that and more in today’s Green News Report!
Got comments, tips, love letters, hate mail? Drop us a line at GreenNews@BradBlog.com or right here at the comments link below. All GNRs are always archived at GreenNews.BradBlog.com.
IN ‘GREEN NEWS EXTRA’ (see links below): Politifact says GOP lies about gas prices; 5 myths about EPA agenda; House GOP votes to discard science; CA farmers: pesticides vs. new bike paths;

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Mar
04

Thirsty in Tanzania Africas Infrastructure Challenge of Climate Change and Development

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Thirsty in Tanzania Africas Infrastructure Challenge of Climate Change and Development

When most Westerners think of East Africa, the initial images that come to mind may be of civil war-torn Somalia, starving families in Ethiopia, and exotic safaris in Kenya. These representations can be traced to various elements in our information and communication streams — such as the last time you looked at a map of the region and saw a mysterious dotted line between Ethiopia and Somalia instead of a typical solid border. Or perhaps you recall the extensive media coverage from a couple of decades ago of Ethiopia’s tragic famine during the 1980s. You may even have a positive impression of East Africa thanks to the 1985 adventure drama, Out of Africa, starring Robert Redford and Meryl Streep (the film gathered seven Academy Awards and did wonders for Kenya’s tourism

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Mar
01

Green News Report March 1 2011 Audio

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Green News Report March 1 2011 Audio

TWITTER: @GreenNewsReport.
The ‘GNR’ is also now available on your cell phone via Stitcher Radio’s mobile app!.
IN TODAY’S RADIO REPORT: Dems call for probe in U.S. Chamber of Commerce plot to target citizens like us; Indictment in WV coal mine disaster investigation; Deepwater drilling permits resume in the Gulf, but that’s still not good enough for Republicans; Climate scientists in fake ‘ClimateGate Scandal’ vindicated — AGAIN; PLUS: More on the WI GOP power play to privatize Wisconsin’s power plants … All that and more in today’s Green News Report!
Got comments, tips, love letters, hate mail? Drop us a line at GreenNews@BradBlog.com or right here at the comments link below. All GNRs are always archived at GreenNews.BradBlog.com.
IN ‘GREEN NEWS EXTRA’ (see links below): NYT “fracking” bombshell: toxic & radioactive water dumped in rivers; US

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Feb
14

Living Briefly without Electricity

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Living Briefly without Electricity

It’s not a real winter in these parts without one good ice storm–the kind that covers all the trees with a clear-crystal-candy coating, stops all the traffic, and invariably, knocks out the power for a while. Which is an important reminder of just how close to primitive chaos we would be without a steady supply of that electric juice. In fact, I wrote this blog post on a paper tablet (gasp!) using a pen (shocking!).
When the electricity goes out there are essential things that become impossible to do. I can’t use my coffeemaker; I can’t use my oven (the stovetop is gas, and the fridge and freezer are on a backup generator,

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Feb
10

Green News Report February 10 2011 Audio

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Green News Report February 10 2011 Audio

TWITTER: @GreenNewsReport.
The ‘GNR’ is also now available on your cell phone via Stitcher Radio’s mobile app!.
IN TODAY’S RADIO REPORT: Bush EPA secretly acknowledged climate change; Saudi Arabia’s oil reserves — overstated?; Obama boosts high-speed rail funding, GOP cuts it … PLUS: The Republican war on the EPA … All that and more in today’s Green News Report!
Got comments, tips, love letters, hate mail? Drop us a line at GreenNews@BradBlog.com or right here at the comments link below. All GNRs are always archived at GreenNews.BradBlog.com.
IN ‘GREEN NEWS EXTRA’ (see links below): Palm oil giant to halt Indonesia deforestation; Georgia forests worth more than $37 billion annually; Search for wind-related grid problems finds a bigger concern; IBM hunting for lithium-air car battery; Sea lice from salmon farms infect wild salmon; CDC won’t study effects of Chinese drywall exposure; Chevron wins restraining order in Ecuador oil pollution case; Fighting for water in CA’s arid Imperial Valley; Tribes push OR to adopt strict water pollution rules; Virginia State Water Control Board loses authority over coal mine waste water; NJ

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Oct
13

Streets Unlit After Dusk In Parts of New Orleans

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Streets Unlit After Dusk In Parts of New Orleans

This article was published in “The Louisana Weekly” in the Oct. 11, 2010 edition.
Patches of New Orleans are dark as a country lane at nightfall because of corroded wiring from Katrina, missing power lines or voltage that’s turned off during road construction. After sundown, residents — especially the elderly — hole up in parts of the Lower Ninth Ward, Lakeview and other communities, while drivers wish their night vision was better.
The go-to company for street-light complaints is Robinson Industries, Inc., an electrical construction firm that’s repaired local lights since mid-2007, when it was the lowest bidder on a city maintenance contract. Entergy New Orleans, the former contractor, decided to give up that work in 2007.
“The city has nearly 55,000 street lights and 97.5% of them are working,” said Dwight Robinson, controller of Robinson Industries. About 1,500 lights are out now. Street lamps that need a new bulb or a photo cell to flick lights on at dusk are usually fixed within a week, he said. But other fixtures can require costly repairs that take time and often need approval from the city.
“Lakeview’s underground wiring is still affected by salt waters from Katrina,” Robinson said. The storm left wires in that community a corroded mess. What’s more, “Lakeview, New Orleans East and the Ninth Ward are greatly affected by ground subsidence, causing wiring to break,” he said. Subsidence is a sinking of the land’s surface. City workers and contractors use an expensive, “jack-and-bore,” tunneling process to fix broken, underground wiring.
Robinson said “in the Lower Ninth Ward, the main problem is that electrical wiring hasn’t been replaced where there aren’t houses, so we don’t have power lines to connect street lights. Numerous light fixtures and arms are still missing in that area” from Katrina’s wrath. Repairs for storm-related damage to lights are not covered by the company’s maintenance contract, however.
Of the 1,500 light outages, Robinson said “about 1,200 are due to budgetary and other constraints placed on us by the city.” He said non-routine expenses involving voltage and wiring must be authorized by City Hall, where the Dept. of Public Works oversees street lights.
The city’s recovery effort can interrupt voltage, Robinson said. Voltage is turned off to prevent injuries in areas where streets are under repair. “Road construction is underway on Paris, Mirabeau, St. Bernard, and St Charles Avenues and many other thoroughfares,” he noted. “In some cases, lines were cut by mistake during road repairs, and contractors planting trees on neutral grounds cut power lines. Funding to fix those lines has been a problem.” But, he said, the city’s insurance should cover some of it.
Robinson said “300 lights are out for other reasons. Sometimes, wiring is okay, but we can’t physically get to the lights because the streets are just dirt and sand and are inaccessible during construction.” The main reason for outages, however, is that lights simply go on the blink. “Our crews patrol at night and report bad fixtures, which a day crew then replaces.”
He said lights are also out when his company needs to find matching fixtures and poles, a process that can take time because old lamps are ornate.
Residents phone street-light complaints into a hotline at Robinson Industries. “While the vast majority of street lights are working, the ones that aren’t can impact a number of people,” Robinson said. “One street light that’s out may generate calls from five persons, so if 1,500 are out, that’s 7,500 phone calls.” He hears a fair amount of ranting and raving from the public, he said. Robinson Industries is based in Miami but its owners are from New Orleans.
Devona Dolliole, Mayor Mitch Landrieu’s communications director, said “the city’s streetlight problems from corroded wiring doubled after Katrina, and after that, Hurricane Gustav set the streetlight-repair schedule back by an entire year. The city has made progress in repairs, however, and about 97% of the lights are on now, versus 90% to 95% in recent years.”
Dolliole has a higher figure for disabled lights than Robinson, and said “across the city, 1,600 open orders exist for streetlights that are out. Corroded wiring and third-party damage are the major and most expensive issues. Vandalism, while it exists, is a relatively minor problem.”
Mayor Landrieu will deliver a budget to the City Council on Oct. 15, with a public-works allocation for streetlights. Dolliole said “$2 million was budgeted for street lights in 2010, but the program costs $4.3 million.” She didn’t explain how the gap will be covered. Robinson said his company will rebid its maintenance contract with the city soon, and declined to comment on its current value.
Dolliole said “in addition to Robinson Industries and other contractors who are repairing streetlights, City Hall has one Dept. of Public Works employee devoted full time to lights.”
She said “we heard a lot from the public about street lights being out in the Mayor’s community meetings, held around town in August. This administration takes public safety and quality of life very seriously and they are top priorities.” She pointed to a new development, saying the city plans to use grant money from the U.S. Dept of Energy and state Dept. of Natural Resources to install 1,300 LED, or light-emitting diode, street lights soon. Energy-saving, LED lights are composed of tiny, high-intensity bulbs that should help brighten the way for some local residents.
In the Lower Ninth Ward, you need a flashlight or lantern to navigate certain streets after sundown. Mack McClendon, executive director of the Lower 9th Ward Village, a non-profit group, said “we have entire blocks of street lights that remain out since Katrina. You can walk for several blocks and not see a light, especially on the north side of the Lower Ninth above North Galvez St.”
McClendon continued “when places are lit up, it deters crime. Since Katrina, light outages are part of the blight problem that’s been associated with crime.” He said street lights are a particular worry for the neighborhood’s senior population. “Before Katrina, 65% of residents were elderly here, and many of them came back and rebuilt. But they’re afraid to go out in dark streets.”
The Lower 9th Ward Village hears frequent complaints about streetlights at town hall meetings and when its volunteers go door to door, surveying neighborhood issues, McClendon said.
Al Petrie, spokesman for the Lakeview Civic Improvement Association, said a lot of lights have been replaced in his area recently, but added “in the more than five years since Katrina, some streets here still have no lights. Certain light fixtures in Lakeview haven’t worked at all since then, despite continued complaints by residents.” Petrie said digging to replace corroded wiring sometimes causes working lights to go out.
As the days get shorter, dark streets are worrisome, Petrie said. “We’re concerned about safety. We still have lights out on Harrison Avenue between West End Boulevard. and Orleans. People walk over to Harrison Ave. for dinner.”
The Lakeview Civic Improvement Association is waiting to see what Robinson Industries accomplishes from a to-do list of broken lights that the group submitted, before sending the company another list, Petrie said. end

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Oct
07

The Sorry State of Environmental Journalism

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The Sorry State of Environmental Journalism

Crossposted with www.thegreengrok.com.The New York Times makes a technical flub. Does it matter?EPA has moved to crack down on nitrogen oxide pollution from the Four Corners Power Plant in Arizona.
This is anecdotal and, well, a generalization, but I find that the American people have an appallingly poor understanding of the environment and how it works. And it’s not just me; I hear similar complaints from many of my colleagues in the environmental sciences.
For evidence, take a look at some of the conclusions from a 10-year study on the subject, synthesized in the 2005 report [pdf] Environmental Literacy in America, published by the National Environmental Education Foundation (formerly known as the National Environmental Education and Training Foundation, a private nonprofit chartered by Congress in 1990 to advance environmental education around the world):
“At a time when Americans are confronted with increasingly challenging environmental choices, we learn that our citizenry is by and large both uninformed and misinformed.”As an example, only 27 percent of the people polled knew that coal-burning was the primary source of electricity in the United States; 40 percent thought that hydropower is the major source. (Actual numbers are: ~46 percent for coal, ~7 percent for hydropower. See chart below.)And perhaps most disturbingly: “Despite the fact that two-thirds of the American public say they know a fair amount about the environment, large numbers actually subscribe to environmental misapprehensions. Ironically, for several issues, those who think they know the most are the ones who are most likely to believe the environmental myth.”
U.S. Electricity by Energy Source, Through June 2010
Americans get their electricity primarily from power plants fueled by coal, natural gas, and nuclear energy. (Source: U.S. Energy Information Administration)
Normally, a lack of understanding of technical issues would be lamentable but not a major problem at least in so far as our ability to govern as a nation.
But in the case of the environment it is a problem — as members of a democratic society, we are called upon to make decisions (or vote for representatives who will have to make decisions) about our environment and thus about our health and our family’s health.
How can we be expected to make those choices when we do not understand the issues or their ramifications for the country?
For example, how can individual voters make judgments about how to (or even whether to) limit the impact of our electricity-generating system on air quality and climate change if we do not understand the huge role coal plays in that system? It’s little wonder that some of our fellow citizens are unconcerned about greenhouse gas and/or air pollution (not to mention the waste) from burning coal because “a majority of Americans think our electricity is generated in ways that have little or no impact on air quality.”
It is especially sobering to learn that the folks who think they are very knowledgeable about the environment are most likely to have it wrong. There are apparently a lot of self-proclaimed environmental experts out there practicing without license, so to speak. (This goes beyond the environmental realm, by the way, as the new film Waiting for Superman points out — among 30 developed countries, according to the documentary and its trailer [video], which is getting a lot of play, Americans rank 25th in math and 21st in science and “have fallen behind” in just about every other area except … “confidence.”)
Shrinking Science Desks Not Helping Combat the Problem
Not a great state of affairs. What to do about it?
Obviously education is a tool of choice, some of which must clearly come in the classroom. But most Americans have long left the classroom and must get their information from other sources, like, for instance, from journalists.
Sadly, my experience suggests that the state of environmental understanding for many journalists these days is not that much better than that of the average American. One contributor to the situation is the rapid demise of the science journalist and the environmental journalist in particular in the nation’s newspapers. According to a news feature in the journal Nature, about 95 U.S. newspapers had “dedicated science sections” in 1989; Cristine Russell, a freelance science writer and president of the Council for the Advancement of Science Writing, found [pdf] that between 1989 and 2005 that number had slipped to 34.
Some Particulars of Particles
Even at the New York Times — that supposed bastion of intellectual might — environmental standards are declining. Case in point: in an article in today’s paper (“Coal Plant Would Get New Controls”) about the government’s proposal to install pollution controls at the Four Corners Power Plant in Arizona, reporter Felicity Barringer writes: “No other power plant in the country … emits as high a level of nitrogen oxides as the Four Corners one. Such particles [emphasis mine] contribute to forming ozone and regional haze.”
Wrong. Nitrogen oxides are gases not particles. Particles do not lead to the formation of ozone.
Why is that distinction important? The explanation is a little complicated, but I will try to give you the main points.
Particles can affect the light that enters our eyes — think smoke. Gases like nitrogen oxides are invisible to the naked eye. A reader of the NYT article might expect to look at the plume from the plant’s smokestacks and see lots of smoke. But there is very little particle matter or smoke emanating from power plants these days, although there are gaseous pollutants. What he or she would see is some smoky looking stuff from the stack that is actually water droplets that disappear as they evaporate. That reader might then think: “Where are particles? There’s no problem here. Another example of the Environmental Protection Agency screwing around where they don’t need to.”
In fact, as the plume moves away from the plant, the invisible nitrogen oxides begin to undergo chemical reactions that eventually lead, sometimes miles and miles downwind, to the formation of ozone and haze. And that is why EPA has proposed its rule for a plant it ranks as one of the “largest pollution sources in the United States.”
Hey, New York Times: stop blowing smoke.

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Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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Aug
30

Power plants and fish life

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Power plants and fish life

(Originally published as an op-ed in the Times Union on August 8, 2010).
By Kyle Rabin and Reed Super
The Indian Point nuclear power plant has been grabbing headlines again, this time because of its devastating impact on fish. But that plant is just one of 25 aging power plants in New York which are damaging the ecology of the state’s rivers, lakes and estuaries. From the Great Lakes to the Hudson River to Long Island’s shores, power plants built in the middle of last century, most of them fossil-fueled, withdraw billions of gallons of water every day using antiquated “once-through” cooling water intake systems. (New York ranks third highest among the 50 states with respect to power plant water withdrawal.)
Their thirst for water almost insatiable, New York’s power plants suck in and kill nearly 17 billion eggs, larvae and young fish each year. An additional 171 million larger fish are injured or killed annually when they are trapped on intake screens. Undocumented is the destruction of countless microscopic aquatic organisms such as phytoplankton, which play a critical role at the lower levels of the food chain. These power plants also discharge used cooling water, now hot, back to the waters surrounding the plant.
State and federal regulators have found that the loss of large numbers of aquatic organisms affects not only stock of various species but also the overall health of ecosystems. Power plants’ destruction of aquatic creatures’ eggs and larvae saps biological energy from the waterbody and alters the natural functioning of the food chain.
Plants built since 2001 have been required to use “closed-cycle” cooling, which recycles cooling water and reduces water withdrawals and fish mortality by 95 percent. The debate currently under way concerns a proposed state policy that identifies closed-cycle cooling as the performance goal for the 25 large, most damaging existing power plants. This proven technology would finally implement the legal requirement to use the “best technology available” that was imposed nearly 40 years ago. Closed-cycle cooling can be added, quite affordably, to most old plants. In fact, such retrofits have been completed at over a half-dozen nuclear and fossil fuel plants, with more underway.
For decades, the owners of New York’s 25 aging power plants have avoided installing closed-cycle cooling, largely by perpetuating myths designed to scare the public.
The power industry’s threat that many plants would close down, rather than upgrade their cooling systems, simply isn’t borne out by the numbers. Nor are their claims that electricity prices would soar. And cheaper technologies, such as special screens fitted to the intake, simply aren’t as effective as closed-cycle cooling and do nothing to prevent hot water discharges. Because power company profits in New York are high, they can afford to install closed-cycle cooling. Requiring the 25 antiquated plants to upgrade would reduce the corporate bottom line slightly, but consumers would see less than a 1 percent increase on their monthly power bill. The plants that set the market price are newer ones that already have closed-cycle cooling, and thus New Yorkers are paying for closed-cycle cooling, but just aren’t getting it. Those findings were recently documented in a detailed economic analysis on file with the state that no one has been able to refute.
The industry has also exaggerated the aesthetic (e.g. height) and environmental (air pollution) impacts of closed-cycle cooling. Modern closed-cycle cooling systems don’t necessarily require large towers but rather an array of much smaller “cells” that blend in with existing site structures. Industry claims regarding air quality impacts are based on unrealistic scenarios. In fact, the retirement of an outdated power plant or two would translate to an overall improvement in air quality.
While the power industry understandably wants to protect its massive profits, our precious waterways and the fish that inhabit them are public resources of the people of New York state. For several decades, the aging power plants have been like the big ones that got away. Now it is up to our state government to finally reel in the industry and end this senseless destruction.
Kyle Rabin is director of the Network for New Energy Choices. Reed Super is a public interest environmental attorney.

Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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