27 March, 2019

Coal plants emitted more than ever in 2018, putting Earth in ‘deep trouble’

Global energy experts released grim findings Monday, saying that not only are planet-warming carbon-dioxide emissions still increasing, but the world’s growing thirst for energy has led to higher emissions from coal-fired power plants than ever before.
In this May 25, 2017, photo, the Milton R. Young Station
  lignite coal-fired power plant near Center, N.D., glows
 as dusk blankets the North Dakota prairie landscape. A new
 report shows that coal plants emitted more than ever in 2018.
Energy demand around the world grew by 2.3 per cent over the past year, marking the most rapid increase in a decade, according to the report from the International Energy Agency. To meet that demand, largely fueled by a booming economy, countries turned to an array of sources, including renewables.

But nothing filled the void quite like fossil fuels, which went toward nearly 70 per cent of the skyrocketing electricity demand, according to the agency, which analyzes energy trends on behalf of 30 member countries, including the United States.


Read the story from The Spokesman-Review by Chris Mooney and Brady Dennis - “Coal plants emitted more than ever in 2018, putting Earth in ‘deep trouble’.”

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