Some more about coal in the USA?
Reuters reports 2 more coal plant closings announced this week, for mid-2018 (3000MW).
"U.S. power companies retired or converted over 14,000 MW of coal-fired plants in 2016 after shutting a record of over 17,000 MW in 2015, according to Thomson Reuters data."
http://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-coal-closures-idUSKBN16R2D4
Since the March 11, 2011 disasters, energy policy in Japan has evolved rapidly. These issues are too important for discussion to be limited to a small group of bureaucrats and industry executives.
Thursday, March 23, 2017
Coal Power Plants Frozen in India and China - Japan is the Odd Man Out
As the Japanese government looks to expand coal's share over the next 15 years (and reduce gas), Japan looks increasingly like a global outlier. Of course, even with President Trump's cheerleading for coal, it is not likely any new coal plants will be built in the U.S.A. And China and India have recently "frozen" construction of over 100 new plants, according to the Financial Times.
The global pipeline for new coal power plants is shrinking dramatically, giving hope that at least the COP21 Paris climate commitments can be met.
Of course, as the article also notes, Japan has lots of new coal plants on the drawing board. And Vietnam and Indonesia continue to push development/construction of new coal plants. Who is supplying, financing and building those plants?
The global pipeline for new coal power plants is shrinking dramatically, giving hope that at least the COP21 Paris climate commitments can be met.
Of course, as the article also notes, Japan has lots of new coal plants on the drawing board. And Vietnam and Indonesia continue to push development/construction of new coal plants. Who is supplying, financing and building those plants?
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