Posted on 11/14/2007 5:57:18 PM PST by NormsRevenge
WASHINGTON - There's growing worry about global warming, but how much of it is the work of that power plant just outside town? And if Congress limits heat-trapping greenhouse gases, will it affect utility and electric bills? And who's the biggest corporate culprit when it comes to climate change?
Answers to these questions may be only a couple of computer clicks away.
A new interactive online database unveiled Wednesday provides maps, color-coded categories and detailed information about who is putting 10 billion tons of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere annually from power plants around the world about a fourth of it from the United States.
The Web site, which includes information from 4,000 utilities and 50,000 plants, shows not only the biggest CO2 emitters, but also the facilities and companies that are most green, releasing little if any carbon.
"We're trying to provide complete, balanced information. It's an open site," said David Wheeler, a senior researcher at the Center for Global Development, where he directed the creation of the massive database.
Using an array of information filters, a user can find out how much CO2 comes from electricity plants in a particular city or county, in a congressional district, from a specific company, or an individual plant.
Dubbed the Carbon Monitoring for Action database, or CARMA (http://www.carma.org), it proclaims itself as "the world's best place for power-plant voyeurism."
And there is a bundle of interesting information.
Australians produce 11 tons of CO2 for each of its people from their power plants the highest anywhere compared to 9 tons per person in the United States and 2 tons per person in China.
But the United States has the most CO2 emissions (2.79 billion tons), followed by China (2.66 billion tons). China, which soon is expected to pass the United States, is home to three of the world's five most CO2-polluting utilities.
China's Huaneng Power International leads all of the world's power companies, releasing nearly 292 million tons of CO2 annually. That's far more than Southern Co. and American Electric Power, the two biggest U.S. carbon emitters that each account for about 170 million tons a year, ranking sixth and seventh in the world.
Such information provides a "a vivid illustration that rich countries and developing countries must work together to overcome the challenge of climate change," said Wheeler, an expert on environmental economics.
Wheeler said in an interview that the interactive database should be of interest not only to individual citizens, but also to investors, insurers and corporate executives as Congress moves closer to imposing limits on carbon emissions to address global warming.
"Never before has this kind of detailed information been made available on a global scale," said Nancy Birdsall, president of the Center for Global Development, a think tank that examines how rich nations interact with developing countries.
While the federal government keeps annual statistics on U.S. CO2 emissions, CARMA seeks to provide its Web site visitors more complete, worldwide data by expanding on the government's numbers through independent research and extrapolations based on fuel use and electricity production.
The database also strives to be consumer friendly.
With a click of the computer mouse, one can see a map showing the top CO2 producers in the world and then move in closer to find information about the individual utility bringing electricity into your home.
Each emitter has a color code from green (the cleanest) to blue, yellow, orange and finally red (most polluting). The icons become larger the more CO2 a plant or company produces. A large red icon shows a plant producing a lot of electricity and a lot of carbon. A green one shows little if any carbon, often a nuclear power plant.
Click on American Electric Power, the Ohio-based utility that owns 25 coal-burning power plants, and one sees a large red icon. It is the country's second largest emitter of CO2 at 169,000 tons a year. Southern Co., based in Atlanta, releases a little more CO2, but its code is a mix of red and orange because of its use of nuclear energy along with CO2-producing coal. Duke Energy, 12th on the list of worldwide CO2 emitters, nevertheless gets an orange icon, also reflecting its ownership of nuclear power plants.
But of most interest to consumers may be the "digging deeper" option that displays CO2 emissions by plants or companies in a region, state, congressional district, town or by ZIP code. The Ohio Valley, the Southeast and Texas rank high in CO2 emissions, reflecting heavy fossil fuel use, while the West Coast, where nuclear and hydroelectric power are in heavy use, has comparatively little CO2 pollution from power plants.
Texas power plants account for the most CO2 (290 million tons) of any state, and Vermont the least (437,000 tons).
On the Net:
Carbon Monitoring for Action: http://www.carma.org
Center for Global Development: http://www.cgdev.org
Luddites (and Darlocks) of the world UNITE!
Here are your targets!
ATTACK, ATTACK, ATTACK!
Resistence is futile!
(/sarc)
The same people bitching about greenhouse gases were opposing
nuclear power. They are a bunch of anti-capitalist luddites
and hypocrites who personally are heavy energy users.
Yet, the U.S. is the main target of the Kyoto Accord and China is exempted from it. That leaves little doubt about the purpose of the global warming hoax and the efforts of the environmentalists.
CO2— MM’ plant food.
Other sites claim 27 billion tons of carbon dioxide (broadly compatible with 8 billions of carbon) and still others merely claim 7 - 13 billion tons of carbon per year (Seems they can’t get more than 50 % accurate in the estimates....)
1 carbon atom (AW = 12) joins with one molecule of O2 (AW = 32) to make one CO2 molecule (AW = 44)
Makes a difference, doesn’t it? Particularly since these guys are claiming to be “monitoring” advertising their “local” knowledge of emitters.
By the way, just who is paying for their work? Why are they paying for this work to be done? How much are the enviro’s paying for this “advertisement” against the coal power plants?
WHO is gaining by these guys getting paid for their website?
LOL. Affect (shouldn't it be Effect?) electric bills.
Hell, if they demand carbon limits, the electric bill is the least of you problems. Trying to get through the day or keeping your job without coal-fired electricity is going to be the problem.
Imagine rolling blackouts not just once every few years during a hot summer, but every day of the week. Year round, coal provides over 50% of our electricity and every time the economy grows, demand for electricity grows right with it and despite the propaganda about "renewables' they can never keep pace with even demand growth let alone current base-load demand for power.
Economic disaster and permanent poverty will be the effect of carbon limits.
Minor point, but that should be MW (Molecular Weight) for O2 and CO2.
Hmmm. For some reason that strikes me as bull sh!t.
Imagine the power being on for 2 hours per day. Imagine the $/kWh cost of that limited power being 10x what it is now. Imagine the earth burping up all the sequestered underground CO2 a couple hundred years in the future and suffocating a few hundred thousand people.
New NIMBY’s?
~~ AGW ping~~
Before you correct someone get it right yourself. Affect is a verb, effect is a noun. NormsRevenge was right, you are wrong.
Norm didn’t write this .. it’s an AP article, and I only asked — see the question mark.
Yes, let’s see who is the most green; that is, who is releasing the most plant food into the environment.
Send money, cashiers check, and I will promptly forward an independent carbon or carbon dioxide emissions estimate, notarized.
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