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Why not in Missouri?
Sierra Club &
Springfield, IL Forge Landmark Clean Energy Agreement
Sierra Club and the City of Springfield have finalized a ground-breaking plan
to replace an old coal-fired power plant with a cleaner facility coupled with
an ambitious energy efficiency program and a monumental investment in wind power.
The agreement also represents the first enforceable agreement in the nation
by any city or utility to significantly reduce its global warming pollution.
Overall, the landmark energy
agreement would do the following:
- Replace the City’s
Lakeside coal plant, one of the dirtiest coal plants in the nation, with the
cleanest coal-fired power plant in the nation—the new plant will emit
99 percent less sulfur dioxide than the existing power plant
- Cut mercury emissions
from its existing and new coal plants by 90 percent by 2009 (the most stringent
requirement in the nation)
- Cut overall sulfur dioxide
emissions from its existing and new coal plants by 75 percent by 2012 (the
lowest SO2 pollution limit in the Midwest)
- Meet the goals of the
Kyoto Protocol by cutting the City’s global warming pollution by 25
percent (600,000 tons annually) below its 2005 levels by 2012, the most stringent
global warming reduction commitment by any utility in the U.S. It’s
the equivalent of removing 103,000 automobiles off of our highways
- Double Illinois’
installed wind capacity by adding a record 120 megawatt of new wind turbines—this
includes 60 MW to power the State’s Springfield office buildings, including
the State Capitol—this represents one of the largest investments by
any state in clean energy
- Boost the City’s
investment in energy efficiency funding ten-fold to a record $4 million over
the next decade
- Establish an internship
program for college students to work on clean energy projects