A loaded CSX Transportation coal train sits parked on a spur track at Blackhawk Mining, LLC Spurlock Prep Plant on June 3, 2014 in Printer, Kentucky. We are witnessing the end of an era. Coal is fast becoming the telegraph to renewable energy’s Internet. American coal stocks are undergoing the most precipitous decline in the history of the energy industry. In 2011, four mining companies — Peabody Energy, Arch Coal, Alpha Natural Resources and Cloud Peak Energy — supplied most of the nation’s coal and together were worth nearly $40 billion. In four years, their combined value has fallen by 98 percent.
Additionally, the fossil-fuel divestment movement, which began just three years ago, is having an impact. Institutional investors representing nearly $1 trillion of portfolio value, including Stanford University, the Rockefeller Foundation and the Norwegian Sovereign Wealth Fund, have committed to divest from coal. In California, legislation passed Wednesday that would require several of the state’s largest pension funds to divest from coal as well. SB185now is heading to the governor’s desk. This stock price decline was driven by economics and by free choices by whole states, including California, to move beyond this combustible rock that pollutes our air, clogs our lungs and heats up our planet. Cheap prices for natural gas and renewable energy, with rates for wind and solar energy falling to record levels below the price of energy from new coal-powered plants, have been instrumental too. History will remember coal as much for undermining civilization as for building it. Perhaps no industry in the world has exacted as great a human cost. Coal made possible America’s rise to be the leading economy in the 20th century and also Germany’s ability to wage two world wars. In China alone, coal emissions are estimated to kill 1.6 million people annually. A recent UC Davis study found this pollution does not stop at the border. It travels high above the Pacific Ocean and over Northern California’s coastal ranges before settling as ozone in the San Joaquin Valley, where it worsens an already serious air quality problem. Coal’s contribution to global warming has led Pope Francis, Prince Charles and the Dalai Lama to call for a transition to clean energy. While coal remains America’s largest source of electricity generation, over the past six years coal-fired generation has declined from 52 to 34 percent of our electricity portfolio. We must turn away from coal — an old, dirty, increasingly less profitable technology — and invest in the high-growth, high-margin clean technologies taking its place. Renewable energy, which made up just 12 percent of California’s generation in 2008, now provides more than 25 percent of the state’s power. California is on track to reach Gov. Jerry Brown’s goal of 50 percent renewable energy by 2030, after which fossil fuels will become the alternative energy. As a result of this progress, there are now more Californians working in the solar industry than working for the state’s utilities. The United States now has twice as many solar industry employees as coal miners. As we work to accelerate the transition to a clean energy future, we need to ensure that America’s 80,000 coal miners are given the support they need and that the new energy economy’s benefits are widely shared. Exporting our know-how to the world, which needs to get off coal too, will be our next big business. Now is indeed the time to divest our pension funds from coal, cut the cord from this piece of our past and hasten our transition to a clean energy future. David Hochschild is a member of the California Energy Commission. Danny Kennedy is managing director of the California Clean Energy Fund.
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Gene HazzardDon't Be Envious of Evil Men Archives
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