The Los Angeles City Council voted unanimously on Wednesday to convert a natural gas power plant to a new hydrogen system that critics say may not provide enough power and could cause more environmental damage.
The proposal is part of a Green New Deal adopted by former mayor Eric Garcetti to shutter three natural gas plants in favor of renewable energy over objections that solar and wind power would not be sufficient, and that the move would cost thousands of union jobs.
Garcetti stuck with his plan even after the state suffered electricity shortages in 2020 and after Democrats lost a local special election in which the plan was a key issue.
The city council voted to take the first steps to implement Garcettis plan, according to the Los Angeles Times:
The Los Angeles City Council voted unanimously Wednesday to move forward with an $800-million plan to convert the citys largest gas-fired power plant to green hydrogen a first-of-its-kind project that was hailed by supporters as an important step to solve the climate crisis but slammed by critics as a greenwashing boondoggle that will harm vulnerable communities.
Poster Comment:
My idea is that someone builds a hydrogen plant that works and delivers electricity cheaper than natural gas and then we let the better mouse trap win.