'Major Power Milestone': US Green Groups Cheer Wind, Solar Overtaking Coal
Jessica Corbett for Common Dreams
U.S.
climate advocates this week are celebrating new federal data that show
wind and solar have generated more power than coal during the first seven
months of 2024 and are on track to do so for the entire calendar year.Idiot
"This
is the kind of news we like to see!" Food & Water Watch said of the data on social media
Tuesday. "Ensuring a livable climate for all depends on us making a swift
and just transition to clean energy like wind and solar."'
The
group shared reporting from E&E News, which noted that
"the milestone had been long expected due to a steady stream of coal plant
retirements and the rapid growth of wind and solar. Last year, wind and
solar outpaced coal through May before
the fossil fuel eventually overtook the pair when power demand surged in the
summer."
"Renewables'
growth has been driven by a surge in solar production over the last year,"
the news outlet continued. "The 118 terawatt-hours generated by
utility-scale solar facilities through the end of July represented a 36%
increase from the same time period last year, according to preliminary U.S.
Energy Information Administration figures. Wind production was 275 TWh, up 8%
over 2023 levels. Renewables' combined production of 393 TWh outpaced coal
generation of 388 TWh."
Sierra
Club executive director Ben Jealous said in a
statement Wednesday that "wind and solar energy has long been the most
cost-effective choice for utilities, but now it has also outpaced coal
generation as the top source of energy, further demonstrating that clean energy
is critical to a reliable and affordable grid."
"This historic milestone marks a significant win for clean energy advocates, for ratepayers, and for people and communities across the country that simply want to breathe clean air, drink safe water, and worry less about climate disasters like floods and wildfires," Jealous continued.
"For
decades, the Sierra Club has fought to move America Beyond
Coal and onto a clean, reliable, and affordable grid," he
added. "To date, the Beyond Coal campaign has secured the retirement of
385 coal plants and counting, and on August 16th, we celebrate the two-year
anniversary of the Inflation Reduction Act, which made historic investments in
clean energy and clean energy jobs. Together, families across the country are
saving money, enjoying good paying jobs, breathing clean air, and drinking safe
water."
Along with celebrating the federal legislation signed in
2022 by President Joe Biden, Sierra Club highlighted a state law signed the
previous year by Democratic Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker.
"Illinoisans should be proud of the work we've done to
close our largest coal plants and leverage the power of clean energy to drive
economic growth while reducing pollution that's harmful to public health and
our planet," said Jack Darin, director of the Sierra Club's state chapter.
"Thanks to the Climate and Equitable Jobs Act of 2021, Illinois workers
are now building the clean energy that is replacing old, dirty fossil fuels and
bringing a brighter future to communities across our state."
Celebrations over the "major power milestone" come
as Americans prepare for a November presidential election in which Democratic
Vice President Kamala
Harris and Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz—who are endorsed by a range of climate groups—are set to face
former Big Oil-backed former Republican President Donald Trump and
U.S. Sen. JD Vance (R-Ohio).
During an April event in Florida, Trump told fossil fuel
executives that if they invested just $1 billion into his campaign, he would
gut the Biden-Harris administration's climate regulations. The
Washington Post reported that billionaire Continental
Resources founder then "called other oil executives and encouraged them to
attend fundraisers and open their wallets."
While Hamm is reportedly sharing Big Oil's priorities with
the Trump-Vance team, their approach can be summed up by a phrase they've said
on the campaign trail: "drill, baby, drill."
Although the Republican candidates have tried to distance
themselves by the Heritage Foundation-led Project 2025, the right-wing policy
agenda—crafted by many Trump allies—has also alarmed climate campaigners.
Noting the new energy data, Antonia Juhasz, a senior
researcher on fossil fuels at Human Rights Watch, said Tuesday:
"This transformation is due in large part to federal government policy
which has specifically incentivized renewable energy development and deployment
and increased regulation on the harms of fossil fuels. All of which are
specifically targeted for removal in Project 2025."
As Common Dreams reported earlier,
an analysis from the think tank Energy Innovation shows that a GOP
administration implementing the Project 2025 plan would increase U.S.
greenhouse gas emissions by 2.7 billion metric tons by 2030 compared to the
current trajectory.