CEC examines air pollution from North America's 3,000
fossil-fuel power plants
Montreal, December 7, 2011- North America's
3,000 fossil fuel burning power plants continue to produce
two-thirds of the region's electricity and, at the same time,
generate the majority of certain harmful air pollutants and emit
more greenhouse gases than any other industrial sector.
North American Power Plant Air Emissions, a new report and
database released by the Commission for Environmental Cooperation
(CEC), provides detailed information on the electric power sector
in North America.
It also profiles, on a plant-by-plant basis, the air emissions
of six of the most-important contaminants-the greenhouse gases
carbon dioxide, nitrogen oxides, and methane; sulfur dioxide;
mercury; and particulate matter-emitted by North America's fossil
fuel-fired power plants.
These pollutants-especially sulfur dioxide, mercury and
greenhouse gases-are linked to a range of environmental and public
health problems facing the people of North America today, including
acid rain, smog, asthma, and global climate change. For sulfur
dioxide alone, the major contributor to acid rain, fossil-fuel
power plants are responsible for 71 percent of reported emissions
from industrial facilities across North America.
The production of electricity from burning coal is significantly
more important in terms of a source of CO2 than the current output
of the tarsands,'' said Evan Lloyd, executive director of the
Commission for Environmental Cooperation, an inter-governmental
organization established in conjunction with the North American
Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) in the 1990s.
"The information we've collected in this report is vital to
understanding the magnitude and impact of these power plant
emissions on our environment, climate, and health, not just locally
but across North America," said Lloyd.
"North America's continuing reliance on fossil fuel electricity
comes at a steep price in terms of air pollution and public health,
and underlines the challenge, and the long-term benefits, of making
the transition to a cleaner, low-carbon economy," he added.
The detailed information found in the report will help industry,
regional and federal authorities in Canada, Mexico and the United
States make better decisions on energy alternatives and on reducing
and preventing pollution,.
Greenhouse gases
North America's fossil-fuel electricity generating sector is a
major contributor to emissions of greenhouse gases, representing 33
percent of North American and six percent of global emissions,
mainly carbon dioxide. The combustion of coal accounts for the bulk
of these emissions.

Coal-fired power plants in Canada and the United States, along
with Mexican oil-fired facilities, produced the largest emissions
overall of greenhouse gases (GHGs), particularly CO2, although in
Canada and Mexico, natural gas-fired power plants were major
sources of methane as well as nitrous oxide, both extremely potent
greenhouse gases.
Sulfur dioxide -
The CEC study finds that a relatively small percentage of
facilities across the region account for much of the sector's
sulfur dioxide (SO2) emissions, a criteria air contaminant
associated with a variety of impacts on the environment and human
health-including the creation of smog, acid rain and regional haze,
and the development of respiratory illnesses. The report reveals
that the overall per-plant emission levels of the top five SO2
emitters of Mexico and the United States were very similar, and
significantly higher than those of the top five SO2 emitters of
Canada.
Mercury - The data
in this report show that mercury emissions in the three countries
were mainly from the combustion of coal. For Canada and the United
States, coal-fired power plants accounted for 98 percent of all
mercury releases from fossil-fuel electricity generating
facilities, and in Mexico, they accounted for nearly 88
percent.
Gauging environmental performance
The report reveals that factors other than fuel type, such as
total electricity generation, capacity, age and efficiency of power
plants, also figure significantly-with many of the top pollutant
emitting facilities not necessarily the top electricity generators.
For instance, for the pollutants considered in the report, per
capita emissions are higher in the United States than in Canada and
Mexico.
However, for certain pollutants, such as CO2, overall the
largest US facilities, many of them coal-fired power plants, had
lower emissions per unit of electricity produced than the largest
facilities in Canada and Mexico. Similarly, for SO2, Mexico's three
highest emitters had considerably higher emissions per unit of
electricity produced than the highest three emitters of Canada and
the United States, suggesting differences in environmental controls
and performance.
A North American picture of power plants
The report compiles data from 2005, the latest publicly
available information from all three countries. The report reveals
the relationship between pollutant emissions and the type and size
of facilities and the technologies and fuels they use-a unique mix
for each country.
For instance, coal-fired plants in the United States generate
close to half of that country's electricity, while Canada produces
60 percent of its electricity from hydroelectric generation. In
Mexico, oil and natural gas-fired plants generate more than
two-thirds of that country's electricity.
North American Power Plant Air Emissions builds upon the
first-such CEC assessment (published in 2004) that compiled
information on emissions of two criteria air contaminants and
limited information on mercury and carbon dioxide emissions from
power plants in North America for the year 2002.
The latest report provides a more extensive coverage, with
analyses from over two thousand additional facilities and of
additional pollutants, including
methane, nitrous oxide and particulate matter, thereby offering a
more complete picture of power plant contributions to air emissions
across North America.
The current report also highlights some of the significant
emission reductions achieved by a number of power plants featured
in the previous publication. The report also notes that from 2002
to 2005 increases in electricity production have also been
accompanied by increases in the use of relatively cleaner fuels
such as natural gas, increased use of fuels from renewable sources,
as well as the implementation of control technologies.
The report also makes a statement about the importance of
improved availability and comparability of pollutant emissions data
from the three countries.
Although the emissions inventory data for Canada and Mexico have
improved significantly from 2002 to 2005, they are not yet at par
with the level of detail of the US data. Facility-level data on
electricity generation or pollution-control technologies for
Canadian facilities are not publically available.
In Mexico, the majority of the air emissions data were estimates
based on facility fuel consumption, due to the lack of
site-specific monitoring data.
North American Power Plant Air Emissions
Online
Interested parties can read the report and explore the CEC's air
emissions database for 3,144 fossil-fuel power plants online at www.cec.org/powerplants. The data can be
downloaded and can also be viewed using Google Earth.
The Commission for Environmental Cooperation (CEC) was
established by Canada, Mexico and the United States to implement
the North American Agreement on Environmental Cooperation (NAAEC),
the environmental side accord to NAFTA. More information at www.cec.org.