- cross-posted to:
- usnews@beehaw.org
- cross-posted to:
- usnews@beehaw.org
To achieve its climate goals, the city helped finance the largest solar farm east of the Mississippi River.
To achieve its climate goals, the city helped finance the largest solar farm east of the Mississippi River.
In defence of this argument: I’ve thought the same thing about projects in my city. Like say there’s capacity for new solar. The power company could build it and make a small impact on the power mix, or they could earmark it for a project/building and let them say they’re “100% renewable.”
Mostly just politics bs, but still feel like this could be somewhat deceptive in the wrong context.
Its not to say that new renewables arent good. It’s just dishonest. Take a look at this paragraph:
So it’s not “using 100% clean power” It’s literally just earmarking (and funding)
Sometimes it’s hard to explain negative numbers in real world contexts, but credits are real impact to total coal/gas demand.
If the credits are used to fund someone else buying renewable energy in lieu of fossil fuels, then the impact is that fewer fossil fuels are consumed.
So if I pay someone $10 to buy solar energy instead of coal they were otherwise going to buy, while I buy that same amount of coal, then the net effect is zero additional demand for coal. You can say that it’s just an accounting exercise, but the real world effect is actually real.
But how would you expect that a city can achieve “using 100% clean power” without earmarking? Should they run their own, independent power grid?
Should they? No. Need they? Yes.
The important difference is that the power is allocated to a specific small subset of very public buildings rather than a municipality or even a neighborhood.