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Power Government United States

New Mexico the Most Coal-Heavy State To Pledge 100 Percent Carbon-Free Energy By 2045 (arstechnica.com) 205

New Mexico's state House of Representatives passed the "Energy Transition Act" on Tuesday, where it's expected to be signed quickly by Governor Michelle Lujan Grisham. The bill "commits the state to getting 100 percent of its energy from carbon-free sources by 2045," reports Ars Technica. From the report: The bill includes interim goals mandating that 50 percent of the state's energy mix be renewable by 2030 and 80 percent of the energy mix be renewable by 2040. The state currently buys no nuclear power, which is not renewable but qualifies as a zero-carbon energy source. The bill passed yesterday does not require that 100 percent of the state's energy be renewable by 2045; it just specifies that no electricity come from a carbon-emitting source.

New Mexico is unique among these states because it is a relatively coal-heavy state, generating 1.5 gigawatts of coal-fired electricity as of November 2018. Last month, the state's Public Service Company of New Mexico had slated its 847MW San Juan coal plant for shut down by 2022, but a New York hedge fund called Acme Equities swooped in with an offer to buy the 46-year-old plant. According to Power Magazine, Acme intends to retrofit the plant with carbon capture and sequestration technology. If the deal goes through, Acme would use the captured carbon in enhanced oil recovery, where carbon is forced into older or weak oil wells to improve the pressure of the well and extract more oil. But with the passage of this bill, Acme's offer may not stand. New Mexico In Depth writes that the bill puts "$30 million toward the clean-up of the [San Juan] coal-fired power plant and the mine that supplies it and $40 million toward economic diversification efforts in that corner of the state and support for affected power plant employees and miners."

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New Mexico the Most Coal-Heavy State To Pledge 100 Percent Carbon-Free Energy By 2045

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  • by SuperKendall ( 25149 ) on Wednesday March 13, 2019 @09:01PM (#58270296)

    The summary states $40 million has been allowed to help coal workers and other residents of the norther corner of the state - but will that really be enough to help them Native American communities that suffer from coal plant shutdowns? (html links for text don't seem to be working, check out https://www.abqjournal.com/121... [abqjournal.com] for details).

    It sure seems like the offer to buy the plat and retrofit it with scrubbers and recapturing technology was a win-win that should have been lauded as a green solution that also helped the residents of that part of the state.

    • by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Wednesday March 13, 2019 @09:34PM (#58270418)

      will that really be enough to help them Native American communities that suffer from coal plant shutdowns?

      Does this new law even apply to the Navaho coal plants? States usually have no jurisdiction on Indian land.

      • Unlikely, actually. I would imagine, for example, should Arizona follow, that the Navjo generating station outside Page will remain. (The smoke is impressive)
  • Specifies (Score:1, Troll)

    by AHuxley ( 892839 )
    Whats the new cost of energy going to be day and night?
    When the sun is down and the wind speed changes?
    • by Ichijo ( 607641 )

      That's a silly question. The wind is always blowing somewhere.

    • New Mexico already does not use the coal it mines, almost all of it is exported.

    • Battery storage currently adds about $0.07/kWh, and should drop by half or better in the next 15 years as cell cost and cycle life improve. When you add grid benefits, the consumer cost can be substantially lower as it offsets transmission premiums.

      • My residential retail cost TOTAL (including all fees, etc) for electricity is currently only about $0.162/kW-hr. An increase of $0.07/kW-hr would be a 50% increase in my energy prices.

        • Your $0.162 is likely made up of about $0.07 in energy costs and the remainder is distribution costs, based either on peak demand or bundled into energy cost depending on your tariff. What should happen is that the extra $0.07 helps to offset generation (solar/wind are about $0.04-5 currently, when available), and/or a transmission costs. It could potentially add up to $0.02 to your rate over time, but it just depends on your exact situation. (That extra is essentially providing increased availability, w

  • ... and we think this is somehow a wonderful thing. *SMH*

    mnem
    "Clean Coal" is, and always has been, a fucking lie.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    https://justoneminute.typepad.... [typepad.com]

    “A committed, lifelong Green pounds the table for nuclear power. People familiar with the baseload problem and the unreliable nature of wind and solar won’t find the plot surprising, but the detailed studies of California’s seasonal use and generation from wind and solar were new to me.”

  • by kenwd0elq ( 985465 ) <kenwd0elq@engineer.com> on Thursday March 14, 2019 @12:58AM (#58271026)

    Two, perhaps 3 nuclear power plants should be able to replace their coal fired plants. Coal and oil are going to be too valuable as feedstocks for chemical processes to just burn the stuff.

    • Two, perhaps 3 nuclear power plants should be able to replace their coal fired plants.

      I'm in no way anti-nuclear and its not as if NM is a stranger to uh nukes, but its got vast amounts of empty space and vast amounts of sunshine. Its pretty much the ideal place for solar.

    • Nuclear power plants are not getting built because the cost/benefits are not there -- otherwise you'd see more than just the Georgia plant going up that is 3x what they projected to build it for.

      I'm not an expert, but I do believe that MOST of the products of oil are put to use right now except for Benzene, which we have too much of but is put in gas as a good way to get rid of it (and we tolerate this, apparently). I don't think those plastics, or fertilizers are going to need the gasoline products -- so,

  • by shilly ( 142940 )

    I'm interested in this idea that Acme was going to fit CCS tech. I thought it had never been commercialised?

  • Greenie pipe dream (Score:3, Insightful)

    by bradley13 ( 1118935 ) on Thursday March 14, 2019 @06:40AM (#58271674) Homepage

    I used to live in New Mexico. Lovely place, but not terribly wealthy, which makes me wonder when I see legislation like this. If you read it, much of the legislation is about handing out money to various parties: incentives, but also reparations to plants and workers that will have to close. Bet: these handouts will be exploited to suck on the public teat.

    That aside, here's the core message:

    "...'renewable energy resource' means electric or useful thermal energy:

    • solar, wind and geothermal
    • hydropower
    • fuel cells that do not use fossil fuels to create electricity
    • biomass resource [n.b. this includes timber up to 8 inches in diameter]
    • landfill gas and anaerobically digested waste biomass

    ...does not include electric energy generated by use of fossil fuel or nuclear energy"

    So it's the usual greenie idiocy: spend other people's money on a pipe dream. Solar, of course, would be great in the high desert - except for the minor little problem that the sun doesn't shine at night. None of the named technologies can possibly produce enough power 24/7, except possibly razing and burning the forests.

    They could take a lesson from parts of Australia or Germany that have already made the same damned mistake: They wind up giving their solar power away, when they have too much of it. At night, or when it's cloudy, they have to import power, sometimes at outrageous prices.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      spend other people's money on a pipe dream

      More like stop helping people outsource their costs and redirect that money to things that will actually make life better for the average taxpayer.

    • by olau ( 314197 )

      I'm sorry, but it's not a pipe dream.

      As long as you're still overall getting the power cheaper from wind turbines or PV, it doesn't really matter that you sometimes have too much. New nuclear plants are really expensive.

      As for the intermittency - how would you handle peaks in a grid with only new nuclear plants? Not by more expensive nuclear plants sitting idle most of the time... So this is actually a (solvable) problem shared between nuclear, wind and PV.

      Below you cite the household prices in Germany - bu

    • At night, or when it's cloudy, they have to import power, sometimes at outrageous prices.
      Why would we import power at night? At night power demand is around 40% of midday peak ... go figure.
      Power imports are not particular expensive ... you have no clue about the european power market.

  • New Mexico will just unplug California.

  • They have lots of empty space for building antenna arrays. They should look at space based solar power.
  • We need to quit emitting CO2.
    What is not needed is to force our nation to use just wind/solar, which from a national security POV, that is a disaster in the making.
    Nuclear fission (replaced by fusion in the future), Geo-thermal combined with wind, solar on rooftops, and storage, would be the best idea going.

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