gas-fired power plants in the USA in 2015 was about 46 percent, vis-à-vis about 33 percent for all coal-fired plants (as reported by the US Energy Information Administration [EIA]). Furthermore, in terms of specific CO 2 emissions (i.e., pounds of CO 2 emitted per MWh of electricity generated), coal-fired generation is by far the worst culprit, at nearly 150 percent more than that by natural gas-fired generation (again, in 2015 per the EIA).In 2015, natural gas and coal each accounted for about a third of all US electricity generation, with more than 1,700 power plants utilizing the former and more than 500 power plants utilizing the latter. Almost all natural gas-fired power plants are based on gas turbine technology. Finally, in several months of 2016, US natural gas-fired electricity generation surpassed coal-fired generation. The top two driving factors leading to this trend are low natural gas prices due to the shale gas boom and the much more favorable emissions characteristics of natural gas vis-à-vis coal and all other types of fossil fuels.