US Could Achieve Over $80 Billion
In Lower Energy Costs By Focusing On Safer, Renewable
Energy
Nov. 29, 2011 - energy-daily.com
It is a myth that switching to safe, renewable
energy would mean an unreliable U.S. power supply
that also is too expensive to afford. That is the
major conclusion of a new Synapse Energy Economics
report prepared for the nonprofit Civil Society
Institute that details a future with more energy
efficiency and renewable energy and less reliance
on coal and nuclear power.
Titled "Toward a Sustainable Future for the
U.S. Power Sector: Beyond Business as Usual 2011" and
available online, the new Synapse/CSI report outlines
a realistic transition to a cleaner energy future
that would result in a net savings of $83 billion
over the next 40 years.
The Synapse report also details other major benefits,
including: the avoidance of tens of thousands of
premature deaths due to pollution; the creation
of hundreds of thousands of new jobs; sharp cuts
in carbon pollution; and significant cuts in water
consumption for power production.
The new Synapse report findings for CSI are particularly
significant in view of the fact that a strong majority
of Americans want the U.S. to make the investments
needed to be a clean energy leader on a global
basis.
More than three in four Americans (77 percent)
- including 65 percent of Republicans, 75 percent
of Independents, 88 percent of Democrats, and 56
percent of Tea Party members - agree with the following
statement: "The U.S. needs to be a clean energy
technology leader and it should invest in the research
and domestic manufacturing of wind, solar and energy
efficiency technologies." (For details on
this November 3, 2011 CSI national opinion survey
go here.)
Key highlights of the new Synapse/CSI report include
the following:
+ Due in part to a significantly increased emphasis
on energy efficiency, power sector carbon dioxide
(CO2) emissions by 2020 would fall 25 percent below
2010 levels; by 2050, such pollution would be 81
percent below 2010 levels. Under status quo trends,
CO2 emissions would grow 28 percent from current
levels by 2050.
+ The steep health and environmental (including
water use) impacts of coal-fired electricity are
dramatically reduced and, by 2050, eliminated altogether
when all such facilities are retired. For example,
over 50,000 premature deaths are avoided relative
to status quo trends linked to pollution from coal-fired
plants.
+ The construction and operation of the new power
plants in the first decade would create roughly
3.1 million new job-years - the equivalent of 310,000
people employed for the entire decade.
+ Natural gas use in 2050 would be reduced 28
percent from projected levels for 2050.
+ By retiring about one quarter of the existing
fleet of nuclear power reactors and not building
any new ones, the risks associated with nuclear
power generation and the nuclear fuel cycle are
reduced considerably.
Civil Society Institute President Pam Solo said: "U.S.
policymakers and others who assume that a safe,
renewable energy future - including an end to reliance
on coal-fired electric power and a sharply reduced
reliance on nuclear power and natural gas - is
impractical and too expensive for the U.S. to achieve
are wrong. The truth is that America can and should
embrace a workable and cost-effective future that
is built on safe, renewable energy. Not only is
it feasible and less expensive to do so, but we
really have no other choice as a nation, given
the concerns about coal emissions, natural gas
'fracking,' and nuclear reactor safety."
Synapse Energy Economics President Bruce Biewald
said: "The results of our new analysis are
very encouraging. We find that a transition to
efficiency and renewable energy for our electricity
is likely to be less expensive than the business-as-usual
status quo approach. There are indications now
that the cost of replacing coal with clean energy
is falling. The current and projected price of
coal has increased, and the price of photovoltaic
systems has fallen sharply since 2009, a result
of unprecedented growth in this sector globally.
Further, the financial community is placing higher
risk premiums on technologies with carbon emissions,
making renewable energy and efficiency more attractive."