National Grid serves over 20 million people throughout New York, Massachusetts, and Rhode Island, and is the largest natural gas supplier in the Northeast (as well as operating the national grid across Great Britain). In an announcement late last week, National Grid announced its Northeast 80×50 Pathway, also known as its Clean Energy, Efficiency, and Electrification: National Grid’s Northeast 80×50 Pathway. The blueprint sets out a plan to continue New York and New England’s emissions reductions: In 2015, emissions from power generation were nearly 50% below 1990 levels thanks primarily to energy efficiency, conversion from coal and oil-based generation to natural gas, and heavy deployment of renewable electricity. Overall emissions in 2015 for the Northeast showed a 16% economy-wide reduction below 1990 levels.
However, National Grid is looking to push that even further and work with the Northeast to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 80% below 1990 levels by 2050 — hence, 80×50. The emissions reduction enshrined in the Pathway would significantly decrease emissions compared to the current progression of emissions reduction.
For National Grid climate change isn’t a political question, but scientific fact, and we believe that innovation and a diverse set of stakeholders at the table will enable us to reach the clean energy future that we all want,” said Dean Seavers, US President of National Grid. “Combating climate change will require inclusive discussions that span multiple organizations and industries, and we hope the Northeast 80×50 Pathway serves as a launching point for those conversations.”
The 80×50 Pathway calls for three big shifts in the region’s energy systems by 2030 to achieve an interim reduction of 40%:
- Accelerating the zero-carbon electricity transition, by ramping up renewable electricity deployment to achieve 67% zero-carbon electricity supply
- A transformation of the transport sector, by reaching more than 10 million electric vehicles on Northeast roads (roughly 50% of all vehicles)
- A transformation of the heat sector, by doubling the rate of efficiency retrofits and converting nearly all of the region’s 5 million oil-heated buildings to electric heat pumps or natural gas
Read more at National Grid Unveils “80×50 Pathway” to Drastically Reduce GHG Emissions in US Northeast
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