Office of the Press Secretary
For Immediate Release
August 03, 2015
Fact Sheet: President Obama to Announce Historic Carbon Pollution Standards for Power Plants
The Clean Power Plan is a Landmark Action to Protect Public Health,
Reduce Energy Bills for Households and Businesses, Create American
Jobs, and Bring
Clean Power to Communities across the Country
Today at the White House, President Obama and Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) Administrator Gina McCarthy will release the final Clean Power Plan, a historic step in the Obama Administration’s fight against climate change.Clean Power to Communities across the Country
We have a moral obligation to leave our children a planet that’s not polluted or damaged. The effects of climate change are already being felt across the nation. In the past three decades, the percentage of Americans with asthma has more than doubled, and climate change is putting those Americans at greater risk of landing in the hospital. Extreme weather events – from more severe droughts and wildfires in the West to record heat waves – and sea level rise are hitting communities across the country. In fact, 14 of the 15 warmest years on record have all occurred in the first 15 years of this century and last year was the warmest year ever. The most vulnerable among us – including children, older adults, people with heart or lung disease, and people living in poverty – are most at risk from the impacts of climate change. Taking action now is critical.
The Clean Power Plan establishes the first-ever national standards to limit carbon pollution from power plants. We already set limits that protect public health by reducing soot and other toxic emissions, but until now, existing power plants, the largest source of carbon emissions in the United States, could release as much carbon pollution as they wanted.
The final Clean Power Plan sets flexible and achievable standards to reduce carbon dioxide emissions by 32 percent from 2005 levels by 2030, 9 percent more ambitious than the proposal. By setting carbon pollution reduction goals for power plants and enabling states to develop tailored implementation plans to meet those goals, the Clean Power Plan is a strong, flexible framework that will:
- Provide significant public health benefits – The Clean Power Plan, and other policies put in place to drive a cleaner energy sector, will reduce premature deaths from power plant emissions by nearly 90 percent in 2030 compared to 2005 and decrease the pollutants that contribute to the soot and smog and can lead to more asthma attacks in kids by more than 70 percent. The Clean Power Plan will also avoid up to 3,600 premature deaths, lead to 90,000 fewer asthma attacks in children, and prevent 300,000 missed work and school days.
- Create tens of thousands of jobs while ensuring grid reliability;
- Drive more aggressive investment in clean energy technologies than the proposed rule, resulting in 30 percent more renewable energy generation in 2030 and continuing to lower the costs of renewable energy.
- Save the average American family nearly $85 on their annual energy bill in 2030, reducing enough energy to power 30 million homes, and save consumers a total of $155 billion from 2020-2030;
- Give a head start to wind and solar deployment and prioritize the deployment of energy efficiency improvements in low-income communities that need it most early in the program through a Clean Energy Incentive Program; and
- Continue American leadership on climate change by keeping us on track to meet the economy-wide emissions targets we have set, including the goal of reducing emissions to 17 percent below 2005 levels by 2020 and to 26-28 percent below 2005 levels by 2025.
The final Clean Power Plan takes into account the unprecedented input EPA received through extensive outreach, including the 4 million comments that were submitted to the agency during the public comment period. The result is a fair, flexible program that will strengthen the fast-growing trend toward cleaner and lower-polluting American energy. The Clean Power Plan significantly reduces carbon pollution from the electric power sector while advancing clean energy innovation, development, and deployment. It ensures the U.S. will stay on a path of long-term clean energy investments that will maintain the reliability of our electric grid, promote affordable and clean energy for all Americans, and continue United States leadership on climate action. The Clean Power Plan:
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Provides Flexibility to States to Choose How to Meet Carbon Standards: EPA’s
Clean Power Plan establishes carbon pollution standards for power
plants, called carbon dioxide (CO2) emission performance rates. States
develop and implement tailored plans to ensure that the power plants in
their state meet these standards– either individually, together, or in
combination with other measures like improvements in renewable energy
and energy efficiency. The final rule provides more flexibility in how
state plans can be designed and implemented, including: streamlined
opportunities for states to include proven strategies like trading and
demand-side energy efficiency in their plans, and allows states to
develop “trading ready” plans to participate in “opt in” to an emission
credit trading market with other states taking parallel approaches
without the need for interstate agreements. All low-carbon electricity
generation technologies, including renewables, energy efficiency,
natural gas, nuclear and carbon capture and storage, can play a role in
state plans.
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More Time for States Paired With Strong Incentives for Early Deployment of Clean Energy: State
plans are due in September of 2016, but states that need more time can
make an initial submission and request extensions of up to two years for
final plan submission. The compliance averaging period begins in 2022
instead of 2020, and emission reductions are phased in on a gradual
“glide path” to 2030. These provisions to give states and companies more
time to prepare for compliance are paired with a new Clean Energy
Incentive Program to drive deployment of renewable energy and low-income
energy efficiency before 2022.
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Creates Jobs and Saves Money for Families and Businesses: The
Clean Power Plan builds on the progress states, cities, and businesses
and have been making for years. Since the beginning of 2010, the average
cost of a solar electric system has dropped by half and wind is
increasingly competitive nationwide. The Clean Power Plan will drive
significant new investment in cleaner, more modern and more efficient
technologies, creating tens of thousands of jobs. Under the Clean Power
Plan, by 2030, renewables will account for 28 percent of our capacity,
up from 22 percent in the proposed rule. Due to these improvements, the
Clean Power Plan will save the average American nearly $85 on their
energy bill in 2030, and save consumers a total of $155 billion through
2020-2030, reducing enough energy to power 30 million homes.
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Rewards States for Early Investment in Clean Energy, Focusing on Low-Income Communities: The
Clean Power Plan establishes a Clean Energy Incentive Program that will
drive additional early deployment of renewable energy and low-income
energy efficiency. Under the program, credits for electricity generated
from renewables in 2020 and 2021 will be awarded to projects that begin
construction after participating states submit their final
implementation plans. The program also prioritizes early investment in
energy efficiency projects in low-income communities by the Federal
government awarding these projects double the number of credits in 2020
and 2021. Taken together, these incentives will drive faster renewable
energy deployment, further reduce technology costs, and lay the
foundation for deep long-term cuts in carbon pollution. In addition, the
Clean Energy Incentive Plan provides additional flexibility for states,
and will increase the overall net benefits of the Clean Power Plan.
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Ensures Grid Reliability: The Clean Power
Plan contains several important features to ensure grid reliability as
we move to cleaner sources of power. In addition to giving states more
time to develop implementation plans, starting compliance in 2022, and
phasing in the targets over the decade, the rule requires states to
address reliability in their state plans. The final rule also provides a
“reliability safety valve” to address any reliability challenges that
arise on a case-by-case basis. These measures are built on a framework
that is inherently flexible in that it does not impose plant-specific
requirements and provides states flexibility to smooth out their
emission reductions over the period of the plan and across sources.
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Continues U.S. Leadership on Climate Change: The
Clean Power Plan continues United States leadership on climate change.
By driving emission reductions from power plants, the largest source of
U.S. greenhouse gas emissions, the Clean Power Plan builds on prior
Administration steps to reduce emissions, including historic investments
to deploy clean energy technologies, standards to double the fuel
economy of our cars and light trucks, and steps to reduce methane
pollution. Taken together these measures put the United States on track
to achieve the President’s near-term target to reduce emissions in the
range of 17 percent below 2005 levels by 2020, and lay a strong
foundation to deliver against our long-term target to reduce emissions
26 to 28 percent below 2005 levels by 2025. The release of the Clean
Power Plan continues momentum towards international climate talks in
Paris in December, building on announcements to-date of post-2020
targets by countries representing 70 percent of global energy based
carbon emissions.
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Sets State Targets in a Way That Is Fair and Is Directly Responsive to Input from States, Utilities, and Stakeholders:
In response to input from stakeholders, the final Clean Power Plan
modifies the way that state targets are set by using an approach that
better reflects the way the electricity grid operates, using updated
information about the cost and availability of clean generation
technologies, and establishing separate emission performance rates for
all coal plants and all gas plants.
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Maintains Energy Efficiency as Key Compliance Tool: In
addition to on-site efficiency and greater are reliance on low and zero
carbon generation, the Clean Power Plan provides states with broad
flexibility to design carbon reduction plans that include energy
efficiency and other emission reduction strategies. EPA’s analysis
shows that energy efficiency is expected to play a major role in meeting
the state targets as a cost-effective and widely-available carbon
reduction tool, saving enough energy to power 30 million homes and
putting money back in ratepayers’ pockets.
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Requires States to Engage with Vulnerable Populations:
The Clean Power Plan includes provisions that require states to
meaningfully engage with low-income, minority, and tribal communities,
as the states develop their plans. EPA also encourages states to engage
with workers and their representatives in the utility and related
sectors in developing their state plans.
- Includes a Proposed Federal Implementation Plan: EPA is also releasing a proposed federal plan today. This proposed plan will provide a model states can use in designing their plans, and when finalized, will be a backstop to ensure that the Clean Power Plan standards are met in every state.
BUILDING ON PROGRESS
The Clean Power Plan builds on steps taken by the Administration, states, cities, and companies to move to cleaner sources of energy.Solar electricity generation has increased more than 20-fold since 2008, and electricity from wind has more than tripled. Efforts such as the following give us a strong head start in meeting the Clean Power Plan’s goals:
- 50 states with demand-side energy efficiency programs
- 37 states with renewable portfolio standards or goals
- 10 states with market-based greenhouse gas reduction programs
- 25 states with energy efficiency standards or goals
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Standards for Light and Heavy-Duty Vehicles: Earlier
this summer, the EPA and the Department of Transportation proposed the
second phase of fuel efficiency and greenhouse gas standards for medium-
and heavy-duty vehicles, which if finalized as proposed will reduce 1
billion tons of carbon pollution. The proposed standards build on the
first phase of heavy-duty vehicle requirements and standards for
light-duty vehicles issued during the President’s first term that will
save Americans $1.7 trillion, reduce oil consumption by 2.2 million
barrels per day by 2025, and slash greenhouse gas emissions by 6 billion
metric tons through the lifetime of the program.
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Low Income Solar: Last month, the White
House announced a new initiative to increase access to solar energy for
all Americans, in particular low-and moderate income communities, and
build a more inclusive workforce. The initiative will help families and
businesses cut their energy bills through launching a National Community
Solar Partnership to unlock access to solar for the nearly 50 percent
of households and business that are renters or do not have adequate roof
space to install solar systems and sets a goal to install 300 megawatts
(MW) of renewable energy in federally subsidized housing by 2020.
Through this initiative housing authorities, rural electric co-ops,
power companies, and organizations in more than 20 states across the
country committed to put in place more than 260 solar energy projects
and philanthropic and impact investors, states, and cities are committed
to invest $520 million to advance community solar and scale up solar
and energy efficiency for low- and moderate- income households. The
initiative also includes AmeriCorps funding to deploy solar and create
jobs in underserved communities and a commitment from the solar industry
to become the most diverse sector of the U.S. energy industry.
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Economy-Wide Measures to Reduce other Greenhouse Gases: EPA
and other agencies are taking actions to cut methane emissions from oil
and gas systems, landfills, coal mining, and agriculture through
cost-effective voluntary actions and common-sense standards. At the same
time, the U.S. Department of State is working to slash global emissions
of potent industrial greenhouse gases, called hydrofluorocarbons
(HFCs), through an amendment to the Montreal Protocol; EPA is cutting
domestic HFC emissions through its Significant New Alternatives Policy
(SNAP) program; and, the private sector has stepped up with commitments
to cut global HFC emissions equivalent to 700 million metric tons of
carbon pollution through 2025.
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Investing in Coal Communities, Workers, and Communities: In
February, as part of the President’s FY 2016 budget, the Administration
released the POWER+ Plan to invest in workers and jobs, address
important legacy costs in coal country, and drive the development of
coal technology. The Plan provides dedicated new resources for economic
diversification, job creation, job training, and other employment
services for workers and communities impacted by layoffs at coal mines
and coal-fired power plants; includes unprecedented investments in the
health and retirement security of mineworkers and their families and the
accelerated clean-up of hazardous coal abandoned mine lands; and
provides new tax incentives to support continued technology development
and deployment of carbon capture, utilization, and sequestration
technologies.
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Energy Efficiency Standards: DOE
set a goal of reducing carbon pollution by 3 billion metric tons
cumulatively by 2030 through energy conservation standards issued during
this Administration. DOE has already finalized energy conservation
standards for 29 categories of appliances and equipment, as well as a
building code determination for commercial buildings. These measures
will also cut consumers' annual electricity bills by billions of
dollars.
- Investing in Clean Energy:In June the White House announced more than $4 billion in private-sector commitments and executive actions to scale up investment in clean energy innovation, including launching a new Clean Energy Impact Investment Center at the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) to make information about energy and climate programs at DOE and other government agencies accessible and more understandable to the public, including to mission-driven investors.
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https://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2015/08/03/fact-sheet-president-obama-announce-historic-carbon-pollution-standards
* * *
Compare these two states' emissions rates and goals:
http://www2.epa.gov/cleanpowerplan
* * *
Compare these two states' emissions rates and goals:
In 2012, California’s power sector CO2 emissions were approximately 44 million
metric tons from sources covered by the rule. The amount of energy
produced by fossil-fuel fired plants, and certain low or zero emitting
plants was approximately 138 terawatt hours (TWh)*. So, California’s 2012 emission rate was 698 pounds/megawatt hours (lb/MWh).
EPA is proposing that California develop a plan to lower its carbon pollution to meet its proposed emission rate goal of 537 lb/MWh in 2030.
...
In 2012, Arizona’s power sector CO2 emissions were approximately 37 million
metric tons from sources covered by the rule. The amount of energy
produced by fossil-fuel fired plants, and certain low or zero emitting
plants was approximately 56 terawatt hours (TWh)*. So, Arizona’s 2012 emission rate was 1,453 pounds/megawatt hours (lb/MWh).
EPA is proposing that Arizona develop a plan to lower its carbon pollution to meet its proposed emission rate goal of 702 lb/MWh in 2030.
*includes
existing non-hydro renewable energy generation and approximately 6% of
nuclear generation. The 2012 emission rate shown here has not been
adjusted for any incremental end-use energy efficiency improvements that
states may make as part of their plans to reach these state goals.
http://www2.epa.gov/cleanpowerplan
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ReplyDeleteThe Guardian (Monday 3 August 2015 06.55 EDT): Obama's clean power plan hailed as US's strongest ever climate action
ReplyDeletehttp://www.theguardian.com/environment/2015/aug/03/obamas-clean-power-plan-hailed-as-strongest-ever-climate-action-by-a-us-president?CMP=ema_565
The Guardian (Monday 3 August 2015 04.29 EDT): White House insists tough new carbon restrictions are legal under Clean Air Act
http://www.theguardian.com/environment/2015/aug/02/obama-white-house-emissions-cuts-clean-air-act