This could be the year for Green Energy
JAKE JOHNSON for Common Dreams
A new analysis of federal data shows that wind and solar alone could generate more electricity in the United States than nuclear and coal over the coming year, critical progress toward reducing the country's reliance on dirty energy.
The SUN DAY Campaign, a nonprofit that promotes sustainable
energy development, highlighted a recently released U.S. Energy Information
Administration (EIA) review finding that renewable sources as a
whole—including solar, wind, biomass, and others—provided 22.6% of U.S.
electricity over the first 10 months of 2022, a pace set to beat the agency's
projection for the full year.
"Taken together, during the first ten months of 2022, renewable energy sources comfortably out-produced both coal and nuclear power by 16.62% and 27.39% respectively," the SUN DAY Campaign noted Tuesday. "However, natural gas continues to dominate with a 39.4% share of total generation."
The new EIA figures show that electricity output from solar
alone jumped by more than 26% in the first 10 months of last year. In just
October, the SUN DAY Campaign observed, "solar's output was 31.68% greater
than a year earlier, a rate of growth that strongly eclipsed that of every
other energy source."
Ken Bossong, the campaign's executive director, said that
"as we begin 2023, it seems very likely that renewables will provide
nearly a quarter—if not more—of the nation's electricity during the coming
year."
"And it is entirely possible that the combination of just
wind and solar will outpace nuclear power and maybe even that of coal during
the next twelve months," Bossong added.
The encouraging data comes amid the broader context of U.S.
failures to sufficiently accelerate renewable energy production and phase out
fossil fuel use, which is helping push greenhouse gas emissions to record-shattering levels globally.
Gas production, a major contributor to highly potent
methane pollution, likely broke an annual record in the U.S. last
year, according to the latest federal data. One recent analysis
found that the U.S. is currently pursuing more new oil pipeline capacity by length than
any other country.
The Climate Action
Tracker (CAT), a site created by a group of scientists to
analyze nations' emissions targets and progress, rates the U.S. as
"insufficient" overall, arguing the country's "climate policies
and action in 2030 need substantial improvements to be consistent with the
1.5°C temperature limit."
On the positive side, CAT welcomes the recent passage of the
Inflation Reduction Act (IRA), a law that's set to boost the U.S. build-out of renewable energy
infrastructure.
"However, while the largest share of the IRA is directed to
clean technologies, it also includes several concessions for the fossil fuel
industry such as requiring minimum acreages of public lands for drilling
leases," CAT notes. "These concessions contradict President Biden's
promise on his first day in office to ban new oil and gas drilling on federal
lands."