According to Divest Oregon’s “Risky Business” report, Oregon’s State Treasury has an estimated $1 Billion invested in coal. That’s in spite of the state having decided back in 2016 that coal produced energy was bad for Oregonians, becoming the first US State to pass legislation to rid itself of electricity produced by coal. By statute, Oregon utilities must be free of all coal-fired power by 2030 (SB1547).
Oregon now has no operating coal fired power plants. PGE shuttered the last facility near Boardman in 2020, eliminating about 2 million tons of greenhouse gas emissions, once the State’s largest single source of climate warming pollution. The plant’s 656-foot-tall smokestack and 19 story boiler building was imploded this September,
demolishing the last symbol of coal power generation in Oregon.
If coal power is bad for Oregon, how can it be good elsewhere and worthy of our investment?
The case against burning coal has long been clear but, according to a recent
NY Times Op Ed from the Rockefeller Foundation, “we’re continuing to move in the wrong direction.” “To avert worsening climate disasters,” they write, “…
one task is more urgent than all others: the rapid phase down of planet warming emissions from coal-fired plants…”
(emphasis added).
Their key findings:
This means, they argue, that we need to stop investing in coal plants – immediately. Cleaner and cheaper technologies, such as wind and solar, are now available and by 2030 will likely out compete coal for energy generation. There is a need for energy investment, but it is in alternative energy and most acutely in emerging nations currently reliant on coal.
Geopolitically, they acknowledge, a just transition from coal will not be simple. But the core of the Rockefeller message is clear: divestment from coal is urgent and the single most important action we can take for a livable future.
Our message to Treasurer Read is the same: Oregon needs the Treasury to exit from the estimated $1 Billion of investments in the coal industry.