U.S. coal plants delay closures in hurdle for clean energy transition
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[August 10, 2022]
By Timothy Gardner
SHEBOYGAN, Wisc. (Reuters) - Travel
brochures in Sheboygan, Wisconsin, tout the town’s beaches on Lake
Michigan as the Malibu of the Midwest. But pages of glossy photos leave
out a feature of the landscape: a coal-fired power plant on the shore
that will remain open until mid 2025 instead of closing this year as
planned.
Alliant Energy Corp's Edgewater coal-fired plant in Sheboygan is one of
at least six across the country that this summer have announced delays
or potential delays to their planned closures, citing concerns about
energy shortages.
A key culprit: renewable energy deployment, which was meant to replace
these coal plants, has taken a hit in recent months because of
COVID-19-related supply chain hiccups. Utilities say import tariffs on
solar panels imposed by U.S. Commerce Department make it hard to keep up
with robust power demand.
In addition to the closure delay of its 400 megawatt (MW) Edgewater
plant in Sheboygan, Alliant's 1.1 gigawatt Columbia Energy Center in
Portage will close by June 2026, a delay of about 18 months.
WEC Energy Group Inc has delayed the closure of remaining units at its
1,135 MW Oak Creek power plant near Milwaukee for up to 18 months until
May 2024 and late 2025.
Indiana's NiSource Inc blamed solar project delays of up to 18 months
for its postponing the shutdown of the 877 MW Schahfer coal plant for
two years until 2025.
In Nebraska, the board of the Omaha Public Power District will vote on
Aug. 18 on whether to keep the 645 MW North Omaha plant open until 2026,
a delay of up to three years, due to siting delays and backlogs in
studies in switching to natural gas and solar.
And in New Mexico, PNM Resources Inc delayed the closure of a unit at
the San Juan plant by three months until September, as drought
threatened hydropower supplies and heat boosted power demand.
When burned, coal emits more of the greenhouse gas carbon dioxide than
any other fossil fuel. It also releases nitrogen oxide and sulfur
dioxide, precursors to haze and smog that harm human lungs and hearts.
All of the companies said that despite the delays, and potential delays,
they will meet their long-term voluntary goals on carbon emissions and
that scrubbers and other pollution devices have removed most of the
criteria pollutants of their emissions.
Holly Bender, a senior director of energy campaigns at the Sierra Club
environmental group, said the delays do not portend a resurgence in coal
use. Nearly 360 U.S. coal plants have shut or plan to shut in recent
years, compared with about 170 plants that remain active, according to
the organization.
Rather, Bender said, the delays serve a "warning sign of the failure to
plan for the kind of clean energy growth that is needed."
President Joe Biden's goals of cutting U.S. carbon emissions 50% by 2030
from 2005 levels and decarbonizing the power sector by 2035 will likely
depend on even more shutdowns of coal plants.
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Alliant Energy's coal plant in Sheboygan, Wisconsin, U.S. on the
shore of Lake Michigan, July 4, 2022. REUTERS/Timothy Gardner
Biden's emissions plan will get a lift if the U.S. House, as
expected, follows the Senate to pass the Inflation Reduction Act,
which analysts say will cut emissions about 40% by 2030 by giving
market certainty on hundreds of billions of dollars in clean energy
tax credits and incentives.
The U.S. coal industry has been slammed by a surge of cheap natural
gas, declining prices for renewables, and regulations cracking down
on pollution that causes direct health issues and threatened ones on
carbon dioxide. Coal generated about 20% of U.S. electricity last
year, down from about 50% in 2006.
But cutting emissions further will not be easy.
"It's imperative that we increase accountability on utilities,
regulators, and planners to ensure ... the transformation of our
power sector off coal," Bender said.
NOT HELPING THE PROBLEM
Estimating the health effects of coal plant emissions on people in
exact areas is difficult as their high smokestacks disperse
pollution into the wind. Pollution from vehicles and industry also
harm air quality.
Still, like many densely-populated, industrial U.S. areas, parts of
Sheboygan county have been out of compliance for revised U.S. ozone
standards since 2018, while all of Milwaukee county has been out of
compliance since then, according to the federal Environmental
Protection Agency.
And coal plants, even if they are in areas that are in compliance
with federal standards, can contribute to health problems, said
Tracey Hollaway, an air quality scientist at University of
Wisconsin, Madison.
"It's still affecting the air of people far downwind," she said
about the delays. "Keeping these facilities open is not helping the
problem."
It is an open question whether the delays are a harbinger of more to
come. But coal market players see at least temporary opportunities.
Joe Craft, the chief executive of Alliance Resource Partners, the
third largest U.S. coal producer, told analysts this month that
plants staying open is "going to bode well for us."
Strength in U.S. and European coal markets should drive Alliance's
year-over year margin growth from now through 2024, Craft said.
Ted O'Brien, managing partner and chief commercial officer at Oluma
Resources, a Pittsburgh-based marketer of the fuel, said nobody
believes coal plants will stay open in perpetuity, but the delays
could at least extend the life of mines.
"Maybe this does give coal staying power to maintain its corner in
the broader U.S. energy mix," O'Brien said.
(Reporting by Timothy Gardner; editing by Richard Valdmanis and
Marguerita Choy)
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