Coal-Fired Power Intensifies a Heat-Island Over Four Corners Region
Navajo Generating Station (NGS) -
In August 2015, I ate lunch at the  Wahweap Overlook to Lake Powell. One year prior, I had visited the same place and eaten lunch while looking out over Lake Powell.
 This  time, I was amazed to see that the Lake level was slightly higher
 than the previous year. Then I remembered the southwestern  monsoon of May 2015. Throughout that month, unusually strong thunderstorms  made their way north from the Gulf of California and into the Four Corners region.
 Even in these  drought-stricken times, intense storms appear to turn 
back the clock on  scarcity, quenching both land and lake.
During
 my visit, a throng of French-speaking tourists viewed the ethereal  
sight of so much water in a sandstone desert. None of them seemed to 
notice the three tall  concrete stacks standing in the distance, on the 
far side of the lake.  Although dwarfed by the landscape, each of the 
three flue gas stacks stands 775  feet tall. At that height, they are 
among the tallest structures in Arizona. The  stacks and the coal-fired 
power plant that they service comprise the Navajo Generating  Station (NGS).
Prior to the installation of new burners in 2009,  NGS was the largest 
emitter of nitrogen oxide in the country. As a greenhouse  gas, nitrogen
 oxide is 300 times more powerful than carbon dioxide. In 2011, NGS 
emitted 71,000 tons of sulphur dioxide, 14,000 tons of nitrogen oxide 
and 586  pounds of mercury into the air above Lake Powell and Page, 
Arizona. As such, NGS  remains one of the  largest heat and pollution sources in the Four Corners region.
Heat Island Effect -
 If you have visited Phoenix, Arizona in the summer, you will be familiar with  the term, “heat island”.
 During the day, pavement and buildings absorb heat from  the sun. At 
night, the convective qualities of dry desert air are insufficient  to 
dissipate the heat of the day. As a result, nighttime often feel as hot 
as  daytime. Only the slow change of seasons brings relief to residents 
and visitors  alike.
If you have visited Phoenix, Arizona in the summer, you will be familiar with  the term, “heat island”.
 During the day, pavement and buildings absorb heat from  the sun. At 
night, the convective qualities of dry desert air are insufficient  to 
dissipate the heat of the day. As a result, nighttime often feel as hot 
as  daytime. Only the slow change of seasons brings relief to residents 
and visitors  alike.
Near Lake Powell, the coal fired NGS plays a significant role as a heat 
generator. Fuel  consumed in 2011 provided 170,529,313 Million Btu of 
heat input. As coal burns  in the enormous furnaces at NGS, all of that 
heat is either absorbed at ground  level or sent up the flue gas stacks 
and into the environment. There, the heated  flue gases, still laden 
with sulfur dioxide, nitrogen oxide, fly ash and heavy  metals such as 
mercury meet the   giant methane bubble
 already in place over the Four  Corners region. Picture a gaseous blob 
of airborne chemicals propelled into the  high atmosphere. Effluent from the giant flue stacks of NGS and  other coal-fired  power plants in the region often punch through the atmospheric inversion layer.  Once this heated stream of gas disperses, it creates a  persistent  regional haze  over  much of the Southwest.
much of the Southwest.
What are the final consequences of having a highly volatile chemical 
heat island  hovering over the Four Corners region? First, the heat 
island deflects rainfall  away from the area, further exacerbating 
(perhaps creating) the persistent  regional drought. With their rise on a
 cloud of methane, these greenhouse gases  head directly toward the 
stratosphere, and beyond. Perhaps we need a new “Blue  Marble” photo from space, showing the degradation of our atmosphere over the  past fifty years.
Four Corners Regional Drought -
 For geodetic proof of the Four Corners regional drought, look no further than  Google Maps.
 Most people are familiar with zooming in on a Google map, thus  
increasing the resolution of small objects. While zooming in on the  Wahweap  Overlook,
 I discovered that the midlevel map of the area was a USGS Landsat Map 
of  undetermined age. By zooming in one additional level, I discovered a
  Google Data
  map of more current vintage. Click on the thumbnail image of Lake 
Powell on this  page to see a top and bottom comparisons of the two 
maps.
For geodetic proof of the Four Corners regional drought, look no further than  Google Maps.
 Most people are familiar with zooming in on a Google map, thus  
increasing the resolution of small objects. While zooming in on the  Wahweap  Overlook,
 I discovered that the midlevel map of the area was a USGS Landsat Map 
of  undetermined age. By zooming in one additional level, I discovered a
  Google Data
  map of more current vintage. Click on the thumbnail image of Lake 
Powell on this  page to see a top and bottom comparisons of the two 
maps.
In the 2015 Google Data map, significant portions of the former lake are
 now dry  land. If not for a new channel cut across it, the former 
Antelope Island would  require the more apt name of “Antelope 
Peninsula”. Also in the 2015 view, new  shoals are visible in each of 
the first four primary basins, hinting that more dry  land will surface 
in the future. At the upper end of the lake, sediment clogs the  river, 
exacerbating evaporation and producing what scientists call  methane volcanoes in the mud.
This is Part 2 of a three-part article. To return to Part 1, please click  HERE.  To read Part 3, please click  HERE.
    
By James McGillis at 11:02 PM | Colorado River | Comments (0) | Link

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