The Public Utilities Commission of Ohio on Wednesday rejected a bid by AEP to guarantee revenue for a coal fired plant in Ohio.
PUCO Rejects Deal
Potential Bad News for FirstEnergy?
AEP notes in a press release that the ruling (wherein PUCO adopted AEP's Electric Security Plan) essentially makes legal the creation of a PPA or Power Purchase Agreement -- the sort of instrument it is believed FirstEnergy seeks for both Davis-Besse (a single unit nuclear plant) and for Sammis (a coal fired plant.) As can be seen in the above links, some pundits are wondering if the adoption of the concept without actually allowing AEP to do it bodes ill for FirstEnergy; some people, including this author, are wondering if the precedent has not been set for a successful PPA application by FirstEnergy for these two plants.
More information:
PUCO Website - PUCO Adopts Electric Security Plan for AEP Ohio
AEP Responds to PUCO Ruling
Friday, February 27, 2015
Wednesday, February 4, 2015
FutureGen shut down - not Ohio, but interesting
Just after having written a piece for ANS on the future of nuclear in Illinois (which by the way is attempting to build a major grid interconnection with Ohio) and having read a bit about Illinois' plans to build next-generation clean coal, the clean coal project as it stood seems to have been dealt a death blow.
The concept was that carbon captured from the coal burning was to be stored in enormous underground geologic formations of sandstone that can hold the carbon for .. well, forever. Thus, Illinois - which has a large amount of coal in state which many folks in many walks of life would like to use, for many varied reasons - would be able to continue to burn coal AND would have somewhere to put the captured carbon.
In this link we now see that the whole project has been defunded.
So I offer this link not about Ohio, but about Illinois to ask you this question: Since the project was killed only by the cancellation of US Dep't of Energy funding, is the Dep't of Energy essentially saying it's anti-coal? Should we.... can we read that into this chain of events?
Does this mean anything for the future of potential clean coal plants in Ohio? Well, if this is any indication, I am beginning to wonder myself. After all, we expect .. and SHOULD expect .. Federal money to help develop the substitutes for the energy generation we are going to lose if the EPA Clean Power Rule works as (seems to be) planned to eradicate coal. Coal - and all that goes with it, including coal miners, railroaders, utility men - would rather not see this all just get suddenly shut off. (Although I might note that the railroads are still gridlocked, and the removal of coal from their rails would not necessarily bankrupt them.) So the Federal government can't just "taketh away and taketh away," leaving us with higher power prices, brownouts or blackouts and loss of lots of jobs.
There are people out there who believe that this sort of thing isn't just happening in a vacuum. There are those who are asserting that the Administration and the EPA have a clear cut policy to rapidly drive out coal, and drive up energy prices. The latest weapon, as asserted in the previous link? Highway funding. If you can believe that.
So now that we see the larger scheme, is it any wonder DOE cut off funding for advanced coal generation research and development? Lots to think about.
The concept was that carbon captured from the coal burning was to be stored in enormous underground geologic formations of sandstone that can hold the carbon for .. well, forever. Thus, Illinois - which has a large amount of coal in state which many folks in many walks of life would like to use, for many varied reasons - would be able to continue to burn coal AND would have somewhere to put the captured carbon.
In this link we now see that the whole project has been defunded.
So I offer this link not about Ohio, but about Illinois to ask you this question: Since the project was killed only by the cancellation of US Dep't of Energy funding, is the Dep't of Energy essentially saying it's anti-coal? Should we.... can we read that into this chain of events?
Does this mean anything for the future of potential clean coal plants in Ohio? Well, if this is any indication, I am beginning to wonder myself. After all, we expect .. and SHOULD expect .. Federal money to help develop the substitutes for the energy generation we are going to lose if the EPA Clean Power Rule works as (seems to be) planned to eradicate coal. Coal - and all that goes with it, including coal miners, railroaders, utility men - would rather not see this all just get suddenly shut off. (Although I might note that the railroads are still gridlocked, and the removal of coal from their rails would not necessarily bankrupt them.) So the Federal government can't just "taketh away and taketh away," leaving us with higher power prices, brownouts or blackouts and loss of lots of jobs.
There are people out there who believe that this sort of thing isn't just happening in a vacuum. There are those who are asserting that the Administration and the EPA have a clear cut policy to rapidly drive out coal, and drive up energy prices. The latest weapon, as asserted in the previous link? Highway funding. If you can believe that.
So now that we see the larger scheme, is it any wonder DOE cut off funding for advanced coal generation research and development? Lots to think about.
February 4, 2015
Wednesday, January 28, 2015
Toledo Blade on PUCO hearing
Offered in the link below is this recent Toledo Blade article on the PUCO hearing on Davis-Besse.
Toledo Blade - Hearing Draws Varied Crowd on Rate Plan
The article is pretty well balanced, but I would hasten to note here that there is a fossil fired plant caught up in this as well .. something to make us think about the future, which surely incorporates EPA Clean Power Rule effects somewhere down the line.
Toledo Blade - Hearing Draws Varied Crowd on Rate Plan
The article is pretty well balanced, but I would hasten to note here that there is a fossil fired plant caught up in this as well .. something to make us think about the future, which surely incorporates EPA Clean Power Rule effects somewhere down the line.
January 28, 2015
Friday, January 9, 2015
Economic Impacts of Davis-Besse
• New NEI Report Lays Out Benefits from Davis-Besse
It's quite common these days for folks to band together in an effort to close already-operating nuclear power plants. When that happens, there's a wide body of evidence to suggest that there are real, tangible and painful negative impacts; people don't consider that these will happen, regardless of purity of intent, every time a nuclear plant is shut down anywhere. Some are willing to take those risks -- but many who are vocal and active are themselves in a position to weather higher energy prices, don't know (or aren't related to) anyone who will lose their job and home, aren't in the loop on how the communities will weather the loss of income that accompanies the departure of such a large economic force in an area.
We have no problem applying this thinking to an automobile factory. Ford, or Chevrolet shuts just one plant or even lays off a part of the staff and it makes headlines. The comparison is valid and it's important to note that shutting nuclear plants does something else -- it takes away large, stable power generating sources in a move that can make electricity more expensive and much more carbon intensive. There's evidence to show it can be less reliable as well if this happens in a cold area where much of the fuel for electric power is natural gas; there are also problems with the shipment of coal these days on the highly overloaded and gridlocked US railroads which, through decades of mergers, have eliminated parallel (competitive) routes to reduce infrastructure to the point that we now can't get coal or oil to where it needs to be on time. East coast utilities are buying Russian coal.
This taken together is why a study just released by the Nuclear Energy Institute on the economic impacts of Davis-Besse is so important. The study lays out in plain terms what the plant means to Ohio and of course in so doing implies what would be lost were it closed.
>You can read a summary of the report at this link.
>The entire 26 page report is available as a .pdf file at this link.
We can take some lessons in this matter from the recently closed Vermont Yankee plant - a situation in which the stated advantages of a nuclear plant as described above are now converted into losses to the communities, to carbon free power generation and to the power grid.
>UMass-Donahue report on impact of Vermont Yankee closure .pdf file.
Why should we pay special attention?
Here's a simple fact you might want to know. Professional anti-nuclear activists who were active in the Vermont area drumming up support to close Vermont Yankee are now beginning to come to Ohio to campaign to shut Davis-Besse. They don't live in Vermont, and don't have to suffer the impacts of the closure; they don't live here either, and won't be around if or when Davis-Besse would be closed prematurely. Would you rather let well paid anti-nuclear campaigners who jet around the country decide that you need more expensive, less reliable energy? Would you let them lose you hundreds of jobs and remove a billion dollars a year from Ohio's economy? Read the reports above and decide for yourselves if this is something out-of-staters should be controlling.
It's quite common these days for folks to band together in an effort to close already-operating nuclear power plants. When that happens, there's a wide body of evidence to suggest that there are real, tangible and painful negative impacts; people don't consider that these will happen, regardless of purity of intent, every time a nuclear plant is shut down anywhere. Some are willing to take those risks -- but many who are vocal and active are themselves in a position to weather higher energy prices, don't know (or aren't related to) anyone who will lose their job and home, aren't in the loop on how the communities will weather the loss of income that accompanies the departure of such a large economic force in an area.
We have no problem applying this thinking to an automobile factory. Ford, or Chevrolet shuts just one plant or even lays off a part of the staff and it makes headlines. The comparison is valid and it's important to note that shutting nuclear plants does something else -- it takes away large, stable power generating sources in a move that can make electricity more expensive and much more carbon intensive. There's evidence to show it can be less reliable as well if this happens in a cold area where much of the fuel for electric power is natural gas; there are also problems with the shipment of coal these days on the highly overloaded and gridlocked US railroads which, through decades of mergers, have eliminated parallel (competitive) routes to reduce infrastructure to the point that we now can't get coal or oil to where it needs to be on time. East coast utilities are buying Russian coal.
This taken together is why a study just released by the Nuclear Energy Institute on the economic impacts of Davis-Besse is so important. The study lays out in plain terms what the plant means to Ohio and of course in so doing implies what would be lost were it closed.
>You can read a summary of the report at this link.
>The entire 26 page report is available as a .pdf file at this link.
We can take some lessons in this matter from the recently closed Vermont Yankee plant - a situation in which the stated advantages of a nuclear plant as described above are now converted into losses to the communities, to carbon free power generation and to the power grid.
>UMass-Donahue report on impact of Vermont Yankee closure .pdf file.
Why should we pay special attention?
Here's a simple fact you might want to know. Professional anti-nuclear activists who were active in the Vermont area drumming up support to close Vermont Yankee are now beginning to come to Ohio to campaign to shut Davis-Besse. They don't live in Vermont, and don't have to suffer the impacts of the closure; they don't live here either, and won't be around if or when Davis-Besse would be closed prematurely. Would you rather let well paid anti-nuclear campaigners who jet around the country decide that you need more expensive, less reliable energy? Would you let them lose you hundreds of jobs and remove a billion dollars a year from Ohio's economy? Read the reports above and decide for yourselves if this is something out-of-staters should be controlling.
January 9, 2015
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