It’s Thursday, January 23, and Arizona’s largest utility is coming clean.
Arizona Public Service, the largest utility in the state, has joined a growing list of utility companies pledging to eliminate carbon emissions from their production of electricity. On Wednesday, the company announced its plans to produce 45 percent of its electricity from renewable sources by the end of the decade and to fully decarbonize by 2050.
Decarbonization started to take off in the utility sector in 2018, when Xcel Energy, whose service area spans eight states, made a similar pledge. Since then, at least three additional utilities have hopped on the bandwagon. But there’s just one pesky problem these companies need to solve: Nobody knows how they’re going to do it!
Jeff Guldner, Arizona Public Service’s new CEO, admitted as much to the Arizona Republic on Wednesday. “I take some comfort from the fact that there are others who also believe we can get here to 100 percent by 2050, even if we don’t know what the answers are,” he told the newspaper. Guldner said the plan will require technology that isn’t available yet.
But the company is already planning to take a major stride toward its goal by shutting down coal-fired power plants. APS announced that it will shut down its Four Corners Power Plant, a coal-burning plant in New Mexico, by 2031 — seven years earlier than previously announced.
The Smog
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