In Wyoming, a sparsely populated state where cattle outnumber people more than 2-to-1, electricity is cheap, coal is king, winters are cold and distances are so vast that driving dozens or even hundreds of miles to reach a shopping mall or healthcare is a way of life.
That formula makes the Cowboy State the nation’s leader in per capita carbon dioxide emissions related to burning energy, according to a new U.S. Energy Information Administration report published Monday. The report ranks states by their carbon emissions per person, providing a look into energy and emissions efficiency across the country.
Carbon dioxide emissions are the driving force behind climate change and the prime target of the Obama administration’s Clean Power Plan, which aims to cut carbon emissions from power plants and boost energy efficiency.
Per-capita carbon emissions from burning energy are falling slightly in most states, and the general trend in emissions is “down and stable,” EIA analyst and report author Perry Lindstrom said.
The EIA ranks states by both total energy-related carbon emissions and per capita emissions. Texas, the nation’s top energy producer and home to 26 million people, is king of total emissions. The states with the lowest per capita emissions are generally on the coasts and use a lot of renewables and natural gas, or are simply home to a lot of people.
Wyoming, with a population of just 584,000, is a standout state, burning 117 million tons of carbon dioxide per person in 2013 — seven-times the national average. By contrast, New York, with a population of 19.7 million, burned 8 million tons of carbon dioxide per capita in 2013.
Wyoming is the nation’s second-largest energy producer, producing nearly 40 percent of all the coal mined in the U.S. All of that coal contributes to the state’s cheap electricity — the third cheapest in the U.S., according to the EIA — nearly 90 percent of which comes from coal-fired power plants.
And, like North Dakota, the second-highest per capita carbon emitter, winters are bitterly cold in Wyoming, averaging between 5°F (-15°C) and 10°F (-12.2°C). That means a lot of energy is burned just to keep homes warm, Lindstrom said.
But just because a state is in a cold climate and has a low population doesn’t necessarily mean its emissions are high. Vermont, a geographically smaller state, is both of those, but most of its electricity is produced using hydropower and natural gas.
“If you’re a coal state, you use coal,” Lindstrom said. “If you’re next to a lot of hydropower, that’s how your system evolved over time.”
Read original article at Where Cows and Coal Rule, So Does CO2
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