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big house plants real long ago. And that's a good start," said Robert Niles, head of climate science at the World Wildlife Fund. "We see increased rates of fire, they are burning more trees."

The decline was expected because of more carbon-intensive and less carbon-efficient uses of natural gas in power plants and other power generation technologies. However, when all of this was taken into consideration, the decline has stalled. In fact, electricity generation dropped by about 75 percent between 2006 and 2014. In short, though, U.S. coal could have an immediate impact on climate by changing from 1.6 to 4.5 degrees Celsius below pre-industrial levels by 2025.

"We know that the world is changing already, but it's still not enough and there's certainly not enough resources to do it all," Niles said. "One of those needs is fossil fuels, and that's a part of the problem. We're at the beginning of an even process to address the climate impact."

This article was last updated at 11:39 p.m. June 7, 2017, and re-posted at www.climate.gov. The new version has been updated.

Corrections & Amplifications

Some previous versions of this story called the use of natural gas, even though it was natural gas that was used in burning coal plants. The real use is natural gas. The quote that was incorrectly attributed to the correct citation was












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