Committed Emissions of the U.S. Power Sector, 2000–2018

Abstract Annual carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions from the U.S. power sector decreased 24% from 2000 to 2018, while carbon intensity (CO2 per unit of electricity generated) declined by 34%. These reductions have been attributed in part to a shift from coal to natural gas, as gas‐fired plants emit rough...

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Main Authors: Christine Shearer, Dan Tong, Robert Fofrich, Steven J. Davis
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2020-09-01
Series:AGU Advances
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1029/2020AV000162
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author Christine Shearer
Dan Tong
Robert Fofrich
Steven J. Davis
author_facet Christine Shearer
Dan Tong
Robert Fofrich
Steven J. Davis
author_sort Christine Shearer
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Annual carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions from the U.S. power sector decreased 24% from 2000 to 2018, while carbon intensity (CO2 per unit of electricity generated) declined by 34%. These reductions have been attributed in part to a shift from coal to natural gas, as gas‐fired plants emit roughly half the CO2 emissions as coal plants. To date, no analysis has looked at the coal‐to‐gas shift from the perspective of commitment accounting—the cumulative future CO2 emissions expected from power infrastructure. We estimate that between 2000 and 2018, committed emissions in the U.S. power sector decreased 12% (six GtCO2), from 49 to 43 GtCO2, assuming average generator lifetimes and capacity factors. Taking into consideration methane leakage during the life cycle of coal and gas plants, this decrease in committed emissions is further offset (e.g., assuming a 3% leakage rate, there is effectively no reduction at all). Thus, although annual emissions have fallen, cumulative future emissions will not be substantially lower unless existing coal and gas plants operate at significantly lower rates than they have historically. Moreover, our estimates of committed emissions for U.S. coal and gas plants finds steep reductions in plant use and/or early retirements are already needed for the country to meet its targets under the Paris climate agreement—even if no new fossil capacity is added.
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spelling doaj.art-3baf88ccdc6e47edb8cda66db0a11a532022-12-22T00:32:07ZengWileyAGU Advances2576-604X2020-09-0113n/an/a10.1029/2020AV000162Committed Emissions of the U.S. Power Sector, 2000–2018Christine Shearer0Dan Tong1Robert Fofrich2Steven J. Davis3Global Energy Monitor San Francisco CA USADepartment of Earth System Science University of California Irvine CA USADepartment of Earth System Science University of California Irvine CA USADepartment of Earth System Science University of California Irvine CA USAAbstract Annual carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions from the U.S. power sector decreased 24% from 2000 to 2018, while carbon intensity (CO2 per unit of electricity generated) declined by 34%. These reductions have been attributed in part to a shift from coal to natural gas, as gas‐fired plants emit roughly half the CO2 emissions as coal plants. To date, no analysis has looked at the coal‐to‐gas shift from the perspective of commitment accounting—the cumulative future CO2 emissions expected from power infrastructure. We estimate that between 2000 and 2018, committed emissions in the U.S. power sector decreased 12% (six GtCO2), from 49 to 43 GtCO2, assuming average generator lifetimes and capacity factors. Taking into consideration methane leakage during the life cycle of coal and gas plants, this decrease in committed emissions is further offset (e.g., assuming a 3% leakage rate, there is effectively no reduction at all). Thus, although annual emissions have fallen, cumulative future emissions will not be substantially lower unless existing coal and gas plants operate at significantly lower rates than they have historically. Moreover, our estimates of committed emissions for U.S. coal and gas plants finds steep reductions in plant use and/or early retirements are already needed for the country to meet its targets under the Paris climate agreement—even if no new fossil capacity is added.https://doi.org/10.1029/2020AV000162natural gasclimate changeCO2 emissionsGHG emissionsdecarbonizationcoal
spellingShingle Christine Shearer
Dan Tong
Robert Fofrich
Steven J. Davis
Committed Emissions of the U.S. Power Sector, 2000–2018
AGU Advances
natural gas
climate change
CO2 emissions
GHG emissions
decarbonization
coal
title Committed Emissions of the U.S. Power Sector, 2000–2018
title_full Committed Emissions of the U.S. Power Sector, 2000–2018
title_fullStr Committed Emissions of the U.S. Power Sector, 2000–2018
title_full_unstemmed Committed Emissions of the U.S. Power Sector, 2000–2018
title_short Committed Emissions of the U.S. Power Sector, 2000–2018
title_sort committed emissions of the u s power sector 2000 2018
topic natural gas
climate change
CO2 emissions
GHG emissions
decarbonization
coal
url https://doi.org/10.1029/2020AV000162
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AT dantong committedemissionsoftheuspowersector20002018
AT robertfofrich committedemissionsoftheuspowersector20002018
AT stevenjdavis committedemissionsoftheuspowersector20002018