DWP Commits Itself to Generate Power with Hydrogen Instead of Gas

Electricity Prices To Rise Due To Renewable Energy Investments

LOS ANGELES (CNS)- Los Angeles Department of Water and Power staff insist that, as Los Angeles weans itself off the last of its coal-generated electricity, the city needs to replace that fuel with a climate-polluting natural gas plant in Utah, it was reported today.

But they also pledged the facility would eventually burn renewable hydrogen instead of natural gas -- something that has never been done before, the Los Angeles Times reported.

Following pressure from climate change activists, DWP laid out its most detailed timeline yet for transitioning from planet-warming gas to clean- burning hydrogen at a new facility that would replace the coal-fired Intermountain Power Plant. If the utility succeeds, the Intermountain plant could become a model for governments and power companies around the world, according to The Times.

“There is no way to get to 100% renewable energy that I can see right now without hydrogen in the mix. It doesn't exist,” DWP General Manager Marty Adams told the utility's board of commissioners on Tuesday, according to The Times.

Utility staff told the board it's critical to build an 840-megawatt gas-fired power plant to replace the coal-burning facility that DWP operates today. Without a traditional power plant, they said, the city might have trouble keeping the lights on when there's insufficient electricity being generated by solar panels and wind turbines.

But for the first time, DWP leadership committed to installing turbines capable of burning a mix of 30% hydrogen and 70% gas when the new power plant opens in 2025. Under the timeline described Tuesday, that ratio would steadily change until the plant burns 100% hydrogen in 2045, the deadline set by state lawmakers for a 100% climate-friendly electricity supply.

In a written statement, Mayor Eric Garcetti said committing to renewable hydrogen at Intermountain “represents a unique chance to make a meaningful reduction in greenhouse gas emissions, while ensuring a quick and seamless transition to 100% renewables.”

“The climate crisis demands that local government move as quickly as technological innovation can take us in the movement toward clean energy, and I've directed LADWP to accelerate our progress toward a carbon-free grid at every possible opportunity and location,” Garcetti said, according to The Times.

Photo: Getty Images


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