A thread on the recent extreme weather and power outages. @SierraClub at this time is most concerned about the safety of our colleagues, friends, and families as harsh weather continues to hit the central and southern US, bringing blackouts throughout countless communities. 1/6
While this episode of extreme weather gripping communities may pass quickly, the overall problem won’t. We need change. 2/6
Large swaths of gas and coal power plants were not able to operate during this extreme weather. And while some renewables were also forced offline, clean energy was more reliable than fossil fuels during this crisis. 3/6
Fossil fuels have once again failed us and our energy grid continues to fail the marginalized as the effects of climate change continue to accelerate. 4/6
These events underscore the urgent need for a 21st-century power grid of clean, reliable energy that doesn’t make us sick or worsen the climate crisis, and can withstand the increasingly extreme weather that climate change continues to deliver. 5/6
This @bradplumer piece sums it up well. As @JesseJenkins puts it, "What makes this problem even harder is that we’re now in a world where...the past is no longer a good guide to the future. We have to get much better at preparing for the unexpected.” 6/6 nytimes.com/2021/02/16/cli…
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One word we didn't hear in the debate last night: coal. Our first debate with real questions on climate and environmental justice was also the first I recall with no mention of coal, a sharp contrast to Trump's grandstanding about coal 4 years ago. Why? 1/ nytimes.com/2020/10/05/us/…
Trump promised to revive coal but couldn't overcome public demand for clean energy, a decade of advocacy that's moving us @BeyondCoal, and the reality that renewable energy is cheaper than coal - I talked to @NPR's Morning Edition about that this week. 2/ npr.org/2020/10/19/925…
Just this week, one of the nation's two biggest coal companies, Arch Resources, announced it's speeding up its "exit strategy" from the thermal coal market - that's the coal burned in power plants and is the vast majority of coal mined in the US. 3/ stltoday.com/business/local…
My thoughts on the big news that Arch is accelerating its exit from thermal coal: Our country has been shifting away from coal for the last ten years, because coal can no longer compete with the affordable clean energy that the public is demanding. 1/ marketwatch.com/story/arch-res…
Arch's decision to finally act on that reality is a clear signal that the decline of coal in the US won't be reversed, which is why it's so essential to support a fair and robust national transition for workers and communities as we move to a clean energy economy. 2/
Arch and other coal companies must avoid the 'cash grab' that we are seeing around the country, where companies renege on their workers' promised benefits and refuse to help local jurisdictions economically deal with the coal industry's shrinking presence. 3/