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Emerging New Coal Technologies Workshop

The New York State Apollo Alliance convened a roundtable panel of experts on January 15, 2008, to discuss emerging coal technologies, and their potential application in the western part of the state. This workshop, held in the State Capital complex in Albany, NY, was organized in response to requests that the NYS Apollo consider supporting a 750 megawatt plant that is proposed for Huntley Station, in Erie County. The developer, NRG Energy Inc., intends to use Integrated Gasification Combined Cycle (IGCC) technology, with Carbon Capture and Sequestration (CCS) to reduce emissions of carbon dioxide, a greenhouse gas, by 65 percent.

Speakers included:

Kelly Bennett, Vice President, Sterling Planet; Chair, NYS Apollo Alliance
Lee Davis, Vice President, NRG Energy
John Martin, PhD, Senior Project Manager, NYSERDA
Bob Muldoon, Associate Regional Representative, Sierra Club
Jared Snyder, NYS Department of Environmental Conservation
John Steelman, Program Manager, Natural Resources Defense Council Climate Center
Phil Wilcox, IBEW Local 97

For more information, including a DVD of the panel presentation, contact Trang Tran at ttran@wdiny.org.

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View the presentations

Huntley Station - Phil Wilcox, IBAW

Meeting the Climate Challenge in Time- John Steelman, NRDC

The True Cost of Coal- Bob Muldoon, Sierra Club

Carbon Sequestration in New York and its Potential to Reduce Carbon Dioxide Emissions- John P. Martin, Ph.D., NYSERDA

WDI has assumed a leadership role in the New York State Apollo Alliance. Apollo brings labor together with businesses, environmentalists, educators and advocates for environmental justice and supports the creation of well-paying new and transitional jobs, which are essential to creating energy independence and environmental protection.

Resources
Apollo Alliance Newsletter July 2007: Volume 1, Issue 2

Article- Climate Crisis: Why a new “New Deal” Approach Makes Sense-- by Sean Sweeney, PhD, Director of the Global Labor Institute at Cornell University’s School of Industrial Labor Relations.

New York State Apollo Ten Point Plan

Meeting the challenge of the new clean energy economy requires rethinking present policies, redirecting resources, breaking old boundaries and forging new alliances. It means abandoning old approaches that traded-off the health of the economy for the health of the environment and sacrificed good jobs and technology innovation. The Apollo Alliance's ten-point plan will create manufacturing jobs and new technologies, a stronger economy and a healthier, safer environment by pursuing the following broad strategies:

1. Green the Infrastructure. Create and retain good new, healthy jobs in New York State, fight global warming, protect the environment and grow the economy by investing in construction and retrofitting of high performance buildings with innovative financing and incentives, improved building operations, and updated codes and standards. This will reduce energy needs, promote health and safety, revitalize urban areas, improve schools and help working families, businesses, and government agencies realize substantial cost savings. It will also improve student performance and staff productivity.

2. Promote Energy Efficiency and Conservation. The greatest single source of new energy available today is increasing the efficient use of existing power generation. Green existing buildings, improve motor vehicle fuel efficiency, and expand hybrid and electric mass transit before building new polluting power plants.

3. Create Thousands of Green Collar Jobs. Make New York State a national leader in the construction of high performance buildings. Promote research and development, marketing campaigns, and technical assistance for manufacturers working in the green technology sector. Invest in existing industries to upgrade capacity and create new incentives, including investments from state and local pension funds.

4. Transition Workforce from the Old to the New. Link job growth and economic development. Create good paying jobs with benefits. Promote education to train a skilled workforce. Create new jobs through energy audits and retrofits, building deconstruction and reconstruction, brown fields remediation, and specialized pre-apprenticeship and apprenticeship trainings. Encourage government to take the lead in creating high performance jobs with public buildings, public schools, affordable housing, parks, and transit infrastructure. Encourage the business community to invest in high performance real estate and the technologies of the future by demonstrating growth potential.

5. Promote Healthy Green Communities. Significantly expand urban open spaces and create skilled jobs by greening city, suburban and rural environments. Provide incentives for a green roofs solar initiative. Reduce air-conditioning needs in summer by planting urban trees and using energy efficient technologies, and reduce heating costs in winter through energy conservation. Promote public health by building bikable, walkable communities.

6. Build Healthy and High Performance Schools. Children are uniquely vulnerable to toxic contaminants and no one is in charge of making sure that school environments are clean and healthy. Healthy and high performance schools are designed, constructed, and maintained to optimize the health of students and staff. New York State invests over $1.5 billion annually on school construction and renovation, and nearly as much is spent by school districts locally. Healthy and high performance schools benefit children, teachers and staff and strengthen communities.

7. Invest in Renewables. Reduce dependency on foreign oil and diversify energy sources by promoting existing technologies in solar, wind, biomass, micro-hydro, and geothermal, and by setting ambitious but achievable goals for increasing renewable generation. Bring highly skilled construction jobs to New York State by augmenting incentives for residents and businesses to install solar units. Promote state and local policy -- including implementation of state renewable portfolio standard goals -- that link clean energy and good jobs. Invest in increased solar and wind power. Research and develop new technology for distributed renewable generation. Rely on indigenous resources, which retain income rather than export revenues.

8. Bolster Energy Distribution Systems. Ensure that existing energy distribution systems are adequately maintained and upgraded to prevent future blackouts and secure public safety. Make certain that New York State maintains its competitive edge by ensuring a consistent, independent and reliable power supply. Promote distributive sources of energy by enabling access to the grid without overburdening poor and working communities and communities of color.

9. Develop Transit Alternatives. Increase mobility, job access, and transportation that uses alternative fuels. Reduce air pollution, congestion, environmental toxins, and waste by investing in effective multi modal networks including mass transit, light rail, ferries, convenient and safe bicycle routes and low- and non-polluting vehicles.

10. Eliminate Waste. Move away from the throwaway society by pursuing a statewide waste reduction policy that creates green collar jobs by reusing, remanufacturing, and recycling existing materials. Through government incentives, link zero waste to green industrial retention.

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