Cheap coal 'threatens UK pollution targets'
Coal on the global market is so cheap that it threatens the UK
government attempts to tackle climate change, the chairman of the
Environment Agency has warned. Lord Smith said the UK's share of
electricity generated by coal is up to a third, the highest since 1996.
Unless this trend is curbed, he said, the UK will miss its targets on
curbing climate change and sulphur pollution.
The price of coal has been driven down by the dash for shale gas in
the US. Gas is less polluting than coal, so carbon dioxide (CO2)
emissions have fallen in the US. But European power generators have
gobbled up the resulting cheap coal, driving carbon emissions up in
several nations.
UK emissions of sulphur, which is damaging to health, have risen when
they are supposed to be falling. Lord Smith has called upon the
government to commit to long-term targets to remove almost all carbon
pollution from electricity generation by 2030.
MPs are due to vote on this issue soon. He also called upon ministers
to resist attempts by power generators to keep open old coal stations
which are due to close under an EU directive on air pollution.
Lord Smith told the BBC, "There's lots of talk about a dash for gas
but in effect we're in a dash for coal that's completely unsustainable.
The government must ensure it doesn't continue."
Lord Smith said it is important the UK develops its own reserves of
shale gas, so long as gas power stations are able to store the resulting
CO2 emissions in the future.
"If we lock ourselves into gas generation for the next 40 years
without capturing the CO2 emissions, we will never meet our targets on
climate change," he said. "At the current rate of progress we will miss
our future carbon budgets."
A government spokesman said measures were in place to ensure new coal
power stations could not be built unless they captured their carbon
emissions. There were no plans, he said, to extend the life of old coal
power stations.
BBC
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