99% of U.S. Coal Plants Cost More to Run Than Replace With New Renewables, Study Finds

The Stanton Energy Center, a coal-fired power plant and the Stanton Solar Farm in Orlando, Florida
The Stanton Energy Center, a coal-fired power plant and the Stanton Solar Farm in Orlando, Florida on Nov. 14, 2021. Paul Hennessy / SOPA Images / LightRocket via Getty Images
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It would be cheaper to build new renewable energy capacity than it is to continue operating nearly every existing coal plant in the U.S., a new report from Energy Innovation finds.

Of the country’s remaining 210 coal-fired power plants, more than 99% cost more to run than it would cost to replace them with new renewable energy, up from 62% in 2019.

The nationwide median cost of existing coal power is $36/mW-h, compared to just $24/mWh for new solar. The only cost-competitive coal plant to operate compared to building new renewables, Wyoming’s Dry Fork Station, is just $0.32/mW-h cheaper than new renewables.

A train carrying cars loaded with coal near Dry Fork Station, a coal-fired power plant in Gillette, Wyoming, on May 8, 2017. Matt McClain / The Washington Post via Getty Images

“Coal is unequivocally more expensive than wind and solar resources, it’s just no longer cost-competitive with renewables,” Michelle Solomon, a policy analyst at Energy Innovation, told The Guardian. “There’s a huge opportunity here to invest in coal communities, build local economic resilience and save money in the process.”

For a deeper dive:

The Guardian, Bloomberg, The Hill, Gizmodo, Inside Climate News, The Washington Post, Forbes; Duke Energy: Energy News Network

For more climate change and clean energy news, you can follow Climate Nexus on Twitter and Facebook, sign up for daily Hot News, and visit their news site, Nexus Media News.

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