December 28, 2023
By Steve Hanley
In Memphis, Community Action Helps Solar Plus Storage
Triumph Over New Thermal Generation
ChatGPT & DALL-E generated image of panoramic image depicting the
visual metaphor of renewable energy sources being supported by a
foundation of human hands.The other
day, we did a story about how Uruguay transitioned to renewable energy
in about a decade. The architect of that success said forget about the
environmental benefits, wind, solar, and battery storage today are
simply the cheapest option available when it comes to adding new
supplies of electricity to the grid. Memphis Light Gas & Water didn’t
get the memo, apparently. Part of the larger Tennessee Valley
Authority, it proposed to replace the now shuttered Allen coal fired
generating station with 200 MW of new methane gas fired generation.
That was before the community came together and pushed back hard
against the proposal.
According to the Southern Environmental Law Center, Memphis is already
facing the effects of a rapidly heating planet — increased flooding,
longer droughts, record breaking heat, and extreme winter storms.
Memphis families have lost power and water multiple times in recent
years due to the changing weather and to storms made worse by global
heating. A new study by the Environmental Defense Fund and Texas A&M
University shows that South Memphis is among the most climate
vulnerable communities in the nation.
In response to the TVA proposal, the Southern Environmental Law
Center, Sierra Club, and Memphis Community Against Pollution issued
the following statements:
“Communities in Memphis
already face some of the highest energy burdens in the country. Now,
in addition to its recent rate hike, TVA is proposing to spend
millions of dollars on a new gas plant that will lead to more added
fuel costs and even higher power bills for customers,” KeShaun
Pearson, President of Memphis Community Against Pollution said.
“Enough is enough. Memphis families shouldn’t be forced to foot the
bill for TVA’s fossil fuel spending spree. The utility should instead
invest in cheaper energy options, like solar power and energy
efficiency programs that meet our energy needs while lowering monthly
bills.”
“The Tennessee Valley Authority is once again
plowing ahead with plans to build expensive, unreliable, and outdated
fossil fuel infrastructure, this time in Memphis. Families across the
Tennessee Valley already felt the impacts of the federal utility’s
obsession with fossil fuels when TVA’s coal and gas plants failed
during last year’s winter storm, causing rolling blackouts throughout
the region,” SELC Senior Attorney Amanda Garcia said. “Instead of
putting all its eggs in the fossil fuel basket, TVA should invest in
more diverse sources of energy — including renewables and energy
efficiency — which can lower power bills while creating a more
reliable grid.”
“Sierra Club just released a study yesterday that
shows TVA has the largest planned gas buildout of any other utility in
the nation and is failing in the clean energy transition. Memphis
should not have to endure even more pollution and higher electric
bills because of TVA’s refusal to seriously incorporate energy
efficiency and renewable energy in its planning – planning that is
largely hidden from public view,” Amy Kelly, Field Organizing
Strategist for the Sierra Club, said.
Memphis Solar And Storage Plan
The whole notion
of building new methane gas fired generating plants is hard to
understand, given that the TVA is a federal instrumentality and the
Biden administration is pushing hard for renewable energy programs
that will dramatically reduce US emissions from the power generation
sector by the end of this decade. It also makes no sense when one of
the largest utilities in America, Xcel Energy, is spearheading the
new Smart
Electric Power Alliance,
a sure sign that some of the biggest hitters in energy generation have gotten
the memo about renewable energy and are prepared to act aggressively
to implement it.
SELC announced on
December 21, 2023 that Memphis Gas Light and Water has now scrapped
its proposal to build new methane fired generating plants. Instead, it
says it will invest in solar power and battery storage. At a time when
utilities across the South, including the Tennessee Valley Authority,
are planning to spend billions on fossil fuel plants and pipelines,
MLGW’s pivot to clean energy provides a roadmap to the clean energy
transition.
“We hope this will
inspire other utilities to ditch their dirty gas plants and do what is
just, fair, and equitable for our people, our environment, and future
generations.” said Keshaun Pearson, the president of Memphis
Community Against Pollution. “We
are encouraged by MLGW’s decision to pursue a path toward clean
energy. We recognize this positive first step in eliminating continued
fossil fuel expansion,” Pearson added.
“Communities like ours in southwest Memphis have
suffered for decades from the negative effects of pollution, including
pollution from TVA’s coal and gas plants. This cycle of harm inflicted
by environmental racism cannot continue. We hope this move by MLGW
officials will inspire other utilities to ditch their dirty gas plants
and do what is just, fair, and equitable for our people, our
environment, and future generations.”
Memphis And Social Justice
The decision to invest in solar instead of fossil
fuels marks a major victory for a city on the front lines of
environmental and climate injustice. Families in Memphis, especially
in predominantly Black communities in south Memphis, are overburdened
with more than their fair share of industrial pollution. Dozens of
highly polluting facilities surround the area, creating decades of
ongoing air pollution problems and leading to increased rates of
asthma and cancer in those neighborhoods. Additional gas plants would
have added to these pollution problems.
SELC says that renewables like solar also provide
a more affordable alternative to new gas plants, which rely on
unpredictable and expensive fossil fuel costs. This is especially
important in Memphis, which has one of the highest energy burdens in
the country. Energy burden measures the percentage of a family’s
income that goes toward power bills, and in Memphis 94,000 households
face a ‘severe’ energy burden of more than 10 percent.
“MLGW’s decisions to scrap its gas plans in favor
of renewables should serve as an example for utilities across the
region,” Amanda Garcia said. “Now community groups and local utility
leaders can focus on finding ways to increase energy efficiency and
lower energy burdens on Memphis families instead of fighting over
outdated fossil fuel infrastructure proposals.”
Investing in solar power and batteries will
create a more reliable grid without emitting dangerous greenhouse
gases that worsen the impacts of climate change, SELC says.
The Takeaway
Here is proof that
community activism can win
the day against last century thinking. The TVA should be ashamed that
it actually proposed building new methane gas generating plants that
would spew millions of tons of carbon dioxide into the future for up
to 50 years at a time when people are waking up to the reality that
fossil fuels cause the planet to get hotter and hotter.
But it’s not a philosophical debate. Renewables
cost less. The right wing in America is always whining about letting
the free market decide but then when the decision goes against there
narrow self interests, they abandon that position pretty damn quickly.
What happened in Memphis can happen in every other city in America,
helping to control rising energy bills while keeping copious
quantities of crude out of the air we breathe. Seems like a no brainer
to us.
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