Shuttering fossil fuel power plants may cost less than expected
Georgia Institute of Technology
Decarbonizing U.S. electricity production will require both construction of renewable energy sources and retirement of power plants now operated by fossil fuels.
A generator-level
model described in the December 4 issue of the journal Science suggests
that most fossil fuel power plants could complete normal lifespans and still
close by 2035 because so many facilities are nearing the end of their
operational lives.
Meeting a 2035 deadline for decarbonizing U.S. electricity production, as proposed by the incoming U.S. presidential administration, would eliminate just 15% of the capacity-years left in plants powered by fossil fuels, says the article by Emily Grubert, a Georgia Institute of Technology researcher.
Plant retirements are already
underway, with 126 gigawatts of fossil generator capacity taken out of
production between 2009 and 2018, including 33 gigawatts in 2017 and 2018
alone.
"Creating an electricity system that does not contribute to climate change is actually two processes -- building carbon-free infrastructure like solar plants, and closing carbon-based infrastructure like coal plants," said Grubert, an assistant professor in Georgia Tech's School of Civil and Environmental Engineering.
"My work
shows that because a lot of U.S. fossil fuel plants are already pretty old, the
target of decarbonization by 2035 would not require us to shut most of these
plants down earlier than their typical lifespans."
Of U.S. fossil fuel-fired generation capacity, 73% (630 out of 840 gigawatts) will reach the end of its typical lifespan by 2035; that percentage would reach 96% by 2050, she says in the Policy Forum article. About 13% of U.S. fossil fuel-fired generation capacity (110 GW) operating in 2018 had already exceeded its typical lifespan.
Because typical lifespans are averages, some generators operate for longer than expected. Allowing facilities to run until they retire is thus likely insufficient for a 2035 decarbonization deadline, the article notes.
Closure deadlines that strand assets relative to reasonable lifespan expectations, however, could create financial liability for debts and other costs.
The research found that a 2035 deadline for completely
retiring fossil-based electricity generators would only strand about 15% (1700
gigawatt-years) of fossil fuel-fired capacity life, along with about 20%
(380,000 job-years) of direct power plant and fuel extraction jobs that existed
in 2018.
In 2018, fossil fuel facilities
operated in 1,248 of 3,141 counties, directly employing about 157,000 people at
generators and fuel-extraction facilities. Plant closure deadlines can improve
outcomes for workers and host communities by providing additional certainty,
for example, by enabling specific advance planning for things like remediation,
retraining for displaced workers, and revenue replacements.
"Closing large industrial facilities like power plants can be really disruptive for the people that work there and live in the surrounding communities," Grubert said.
"We
don't want to repeat the damage we saw with the collapse of the steel industry
in the 70s and 80s, where people lost jobs, pensions, and stability without
warning. We already know where the plants are, and who might be affected: using
the 2035 decarbonization deadline to guide explicit, community grounded
planning for what to do next can help, even without a lot of financial
support."
Planning ahead will also help avoid
creating new capital investment where that may not be needed long-term.
"We shouldn't build new fossil fuel power plants that would still be young
in 2035, and we need to have explicit plans for closures both to ensure the
system keeps working and to limit disruption for host communities," she
said.
Underlying policies governing the
retirement of fossil fuel-powered facilities is the concept of a "just
transition" that ensures material well-being and distributional justice
for individuals and communities affected by a transition from fossil to
non-fossil electricity systems. Determining which assets are
"stranded," or required to close earlier than expected absent policy,
is vital for managing compensation for remaining debt and/or lost revenue,
Grubert said in the article.