Los Angeles ditches plan to invest billions in fossil fuels
Los Angeles is abandoning a plan to spend billions of dollars rebuilding three natural gas power plants along the coast, Mayor Eric Garcetti said Monday, in a move to get the city closer to its goal of 100% renewable energy and improve air quality in highly polluted communities.
The mayors decision marks an abrupt change of course for the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power, where top staffers have argued in recent months that the gas plants are critical to keeping the lights on in the city. Environmental groups have urged DWP to replace the aging facilities with cleaner alternatives, saying the gas-fired plants need to go because they contribute to climate change and local air pollution.
Los Angeles has steadily moved away from coal for electricity, divesting from the Navajo plant in Arizona three years ago and announcing plans to stop buying power from Utahs Intermountain plant by 2025. But with coal, the most polluting fossil fuel, now nearly removed from the citys energy mix, its time to start planning for a future with zero planet-warming energy sources, Garcetti said Monday and that means no natural gas.
Its the right thing to do for our health. Its the right thing to do for our Earth. Its the right thing to do for our economy, Garcetti said. And now is the time to start the beginning of the end of natural gas.
This is the Green New Deal, he added, referring to the sweeping climate change policies championed by Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y) and endorsed by several contenders for the Democratic presidential nomination. Not in concept, not in the future, but now.
The mayors decision comes several months after state lawmakers passed a bill requiring California to get 100% of its electricity from climate-friendly sources by 2045, up from a previous target of 50% renewable by 2030.
https://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-garcetti-los-angeles-gas-plants-20190211-story.html