The U.S. power plant industry has raised alarm over the Biden administration's aggressive plan to cut carbon emissions from electricity production, dubbing it unfeasible. Edison Electric Institute (EEI), a leading utility trade group, has criticized the heavy reliance on expensive and commercially unavailable technologies like carbon capture storage (CCS) and low-emissions green hydrogen in the proposed standards. They claim such plans are "not legally or technically sound". EEI's opposition signals potential significant hurdles for Biden's climate agenda which aims at achieving net-zero emissions by 2035 in the power sector.
West Virginia along with 20 other states also opposes this rule due to its impact on coal plants, effectively forcing them to close down. Nonetheless, environmental lobbyists insist that the proposal allows ample lead time for implementation and ensures reliability of electricity supply.
However, the specific standards mapped out for existing natural gas power plants have been singled out as particularly concerning due to facility limitations preventing retrofitting with CCS or hydrogen technologies. Major grid providers have underscored their worries about implementing these ambitious technological shifts within proposed timelines while maintaining reliable electrical grids.