New York Times - Somini Sengupta
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An open pit mine in Burdwan, West Bengal, India. Coal is the single largest source of electricity worldwide. Rebecca Conway for The New York Times |
HANOI, Vietnam — Coal, the fuel that powered the industrial age, has led the planet to the brink of catastrophic climate change.
Scientists
have repeatedly warned of its looming dangers, most recently on Friday,
when a major scientific report issued by 13 United States government
agencies warned that the damage from climate change could
knock as much as 10 percent off the size of the American economy by century’s end if significant steps aren’t taken to rein in warming.
An October report from the
United Nations’ scientific panel on global warming found that avoiding the worst devastation would require a radical transformation of the world economy in just a few years.
Central to that transformation: Getting out of coal, and fast.
And yet, three years after the Paris agreement, when world leaders promised action, coal shows no sign of disappearing. While coal use looks certain to eventually wane worldwide, according to the
latest assessment by the International Energy Agency, it is not on track to happen anywhere fast enough to avert the worst effects of climate change. Last year, in fact, global production and consumption increased after two years of decline.
Cheap,
plentiful and the most polluting of fossil fuels, coal remains the
single largest source of energy to generate electricity worldwide. This, even as renewables like solar and wind power are rapidly becoming more affordable. Soon, coal could make no financial sense for its backers.
So, why is coal so hard to quit?
Because
coal is a powerful incumbent. It’s there by the millions of tons under
the ground. Powerful companies, backed by powerful governments, often in
the form of subsidies, are in a rush to grow their markets before it is
too late. Banks still profit from it. Big national electricity grids
were designed for it. Coal plants can be a surefire way for politicians
to deliver cheap electricity — and retain their own power. In some
countries, it has been a glistening source of graft.
And even while renewables are spreading fast, they still have limits: Wind and solar power flow when the breeze blows and the sun shines, and that requires traditional electricity grids to be retooled.
“The
main reason why coal sticks around is, we built it already,” said Rohit
Chandra, who earned a doctoral degree in energy policy at Harvard,
specializing in coal in India.
The battle over the future of coal is being waged in Asia.
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A coal-fired power plant under construction in Ramagundam, Telangana State, India. Rebecca Conway for The New York Times |
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The control room of a power plant in Mancherial, Telangana. Rebecca Conway for The New York Times |
The world’s coal juggernaut
Home to half the world’s population, Asia accounts for
three-fourths of global coal consumption
today. More important, it accounts for more than three-fourths of coal
plants that are either under construction or in the planning stages — a
whopping 1,200 of them, according to
Urgewald, a German advocacy group that tracks coal development. Heffa Schücking, who heads Urgewald, called those plants “an assault on the Paris goals.”
Indonesia
is digging more coal. Vietnam is clearing ground for new coal-fired
power plants. Japan, reeling from 2011 nuclear plant disaster, has
resurrected coal.
The world’s juggernaut, though, is China. The country consumes half the world’s coal. More than 4.3 million Chinese are employed in the country’s coal mines. China has added 40 percent of the world’s coal capacity since 2002, a huge increase for just 16 years.
“I had to do the calculation three times,” said Carlos Fernández
Alvarez, a senior energy analyst at the International Energy Agency. “I
thought it was wrong. It’s crazy.”
Spurred
by public outcry over air pollution, China is now also the world leader
in solar and wind power installation, and its central government has
tried to slow down coal plant construction. But an analysis by Coal
Swarm,
a U.S.-based team of researchers that advocates for coal alternatives,
concluded that new plants continue to be built, and other proposed
projects have simply been delayed rather than stopped. Chinese coal
consumption grew in 2017, though at a far slower pace than before, and
is on track to grow again in 2018, after declining in previous years.
China’s coal industry is now scrambling
to find new markets, from Kenya to Pakistan. Chinese companies are
building coal plants in 17 countries, according to Urgewald. Its
regional rival, Japan, is in the game too: nearly 60 percent of planned
coal projects developed by Japanese companies are outside the country,
mostly financed by Japanese banks.
That contest is particularly stark in Southeast Asia, one of the world’s last frontiers of coal expansion.
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An open pit mine in Sindh Province, Pakistan. Rizwan Tabassum/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images |
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A
cooling tower at a coal-fired plant in Hebei Province, China. More than
4.3 million workers are employed in the country’s coal mines. Kim Kyung Hoon/Reuters |
‘Even the trees are dying’
Nguy
Thi Khanh has seen the contest close-up in Vietnam. Born in 1976, a
year after the end of the war, she remembers doing homework by the light
of a kerosene lamp. In her northern village, the electricity failed
several hours a day. When it rained, there was no power at all. When it
came, it came from a coal plant not far away. When her mother hung
laundry to dry, ash settled on the clothes.
Today,
pretty much every household in Vietnam, population 95 million, has
electricity. Hanoi, the capital, where Ms. Nguy now lives, is in a
frenzy of new construction, with soaring demand for cement and steel —
both energy guzzlers. The economy is galloping. And, up and down the
coast, 1,600 kilometers in length, foreign companies, mainly from Japan
and China, are building coal plants.
One
such project is in Nghi Son, a onetime fishing village south of Hanoi
and now home to a sprawling industrial zone. The first power plant
opened here in 2013. Japan’s overseas aid organization, the Japan International Cooperation Agency, paid for it. The Japanese trading house Marubeni developed it.
A
second coal-fired power plant, far bigger, is under construction next
door. Marubeni is building that too, along with a Korean company. The
Japan Bank for International Cooperation, an export credit agency meant
to lower financial risk for private lenders, is helping to fund it.
In
the shadow of the smokestack, Nguyen Thi Thu Thien was drying shrimp on
the side of the road and complaining bitterly. She had moved out of her
house after the power plant built an ash pond right in front. “The coal
dust has blackened my house,” she said. “Even the trees are dying. We
can’t live there.”
She
and the others drying shrimp on the road were doubly angry that the new
plant would need a new port, and that would displace their husbands,
who tie up their fishing boats there.
Trucks
rumbled by, throwing up dust, as the women emptied their baskets of
shrimp. They kept every bit of themselves covered: wide brimmed hats,
face masks, gloves.
Coal accounts
for 36 percent of the country’s power generation capacity now; it is
projected to grow to 42 percent by 2030, according to the government. To
feed those plants, Vietnam will need to import 90 million tons of coal
by 2030.
But coal projects are also sparking community opposition rare in a country that squelches dissent. Villagers
blocked a highway
in 2015 to protest a Chinese project in the southeast. The provincial
authorities quashed another proposed plant in the Mekong Delta.
Most plants in Vietnam use old, polluting technologies that many investors, including
Marubeni, have recently promised not to back
in future projects. A company spokesman said by email that it would
continue with the Nghi Son project “to contribute to stable power supply
and to economic growth.”
Vietnam
says it is on track to meet its emissions reductions targets under the
Paris accord. So, too, China and India, with far bigger carbon
footprints. But those targets were set by the countries themselves, and
they will not be enough to keep global temperatures from rising to
calamitous levels. The United States has said it will exit the Paris
climate pact.
Those sobering facts loom over the next round of international climate negotiations, starting Dec. 3 in the heart of Poland’s coal country. The American delegation
plans to promote coal at the event, just as it did at
last year’s talks in Bonn, Germany.
A potent political force
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A miner in Telegana State, which, until recently, suffered chronic power failures. Rebecca Conway for The New York Times |
In the public imagination,
the coal miner has long been a symbol of industrial virility, a
throwback to an era when hard labor — particularly men’s labor, rather
than robots — fueled economic growth.
That idea has been central to politics.
German coal miners have lifted the fortunes of that country’s far-right party. Poland’s right-wing government has promised to
open new coal mines.
Australia’s prime minister, Scott Morrison, rose to power as a champion of coal.
President Trump has promised,
unsuccessfully so far, to revive coal mining jobs and instructed his
Environmental Protection Agency to roll back rules to reduce emissions
from coal-fired power plants.
That message might be welcome in American coal country, but the industry’s future in the United States is
not promising.
There are cheaper fuels, including natural gas; gas now accounts for
around 31 percent of total power generation in the United States, the
same share as coal. China has imposed tariffs on coal imports from the
United States, in the tit-for-tat trade dispute. More than 200 coal
plants have closed since 2010, and
coal consumption has continued to decline, contrary to Mr. Trump’s
false claims.
Coal mining jobs have plummeted over the last decade, despite a modest
increase of about 4 percent in the first 18 months of the Trump
presidency.
‘We have coal. We are producing more every year.’
The economics, and the political calculus, are very different in the world’s biggest democracy: India, population 1.3 billion.
Ajay Mishra, the career civil servant in charge of energy in the central Indian state of Telangana, knows firsthand.
Five
years ago, he said, daily power cuts cursed his state. Ceiling fans cut
out on stifling summer afternoons. Factories ran on diesel-guzzling
generators. The people of Telangana were furious.
State
officials had to do something to fix the electricity problem. They
harnessed the sun, briefly making Telangana a leading solar power
producer in India. They also turned to what government officials have
relied on for over a century: the vast vein of coal that sat
underground, stretching across the hills and forests of central India.
Telangana
now has round-the-clock electricity. Its farmers get it free to pump
water. It sweetens the re-election bid of Telangana’s top elected
official, K. Chandrashekar Rao, in state polls later this year.
“We have coal,” Mr. Mishra said. “We are producing more every year. For the next 100 years we have it.”
On a warm Tuesday in October, about a four-hour drive from Hyderabad, the capital of Telangana, an army of men in indigo shorts went underground to dig it out.
A
simple pulley drew them in, a bit like a ski lift, except here, it took
them deeper and deeper down a shaft. The creak of the pulley was all
you could hear, and water, drip-dripping inside the earth. Here and
there, off to the side, stood miners, their forms barely visible in the
darkness, except for the belted flashlights that snaked across their
bodies.
At about 900 feet below the
surface, where the air was black and cool and the coal under our feet
was squishy, a burst of explosives broke down a wall of coal. Small, sooty chunks
were piled into tubs and wheeled out, then loaded onto coal trucks that
hurtled down the country roads, sprinkling a layer of ash everywhere.
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Miners reinforced the roof of a coal pit in Telangana. Rebecca Conway for The New York Times |
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A power station in Telangana. Rebecca Conway for The New York Times |
So
deeply is India invested in coal, this, like other mines, is state
owned. So are most power plants. Coal subsidizes the country’s vast rail
network.
That person at the top of
that system, India’s prime minister, Narendra Modi, has sought to cast
himself as a champion of clean energy.
But Mr. Modi has been inaugurating new coal mines, too. His government has made it
faster for industry,
including mining, to get environmental clearances, rankling
environmentalists. India’s state-owned companies are building new
coal-fired plants across the country, almost all of them financed by
public sector banks.
In an interview
in the capital, New Delhi, India’s energy secretary, Ajay Bhalla, said
some 50 gigawatts of additional coal capacity were under construction.
That’s a fraction of what was under development even a decade ago, when
India’s energy demand was projected to soar. Many of those plants are
meant to replace older, more polluting ones. But coal would not sunset
anytime soon, he predicted, not until there’s a cheap and efficient way
to store energy from solar and wind energy.
Analysts
say India must retool its electricity grid for the post-coal era.
Battery technology is fast advancing. Microgrids can replace traditional
electricity systems. Many existing coal plants are now running below
capacity, several are idle, and new energy efficiency standards could
slow down demand to the point where there may be a glut of costly
coal-fired plants. Left holding this bundle of stranded assets: The public sector banks that financed them.
For now, though, coal accounts for 58 percent of India’s energy mix.
“It’s not that I’m using the coal very willingly,” Mr. Bhalla said. “But I have to.”
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A coal worker in Telegana. The state now has round-the-clock power. Rebecca Conway for The New York Times |
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