Author Topic: Husseins regs close 15 coal fired plants in GA to close. 480 jobs gone.  (Read 202 times)

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Offline powderman

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Federal regulations blamed for Georgia utility closing 15 coal, oil power plants  Published January 08, 2013
FoxNews.com   
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  Tough federal emissions standards are being blamed for the closure of 15 coal-fired plants and the loss of nearly 480 jobs in Georgia.
Georgia Power plans to close the power plants, cutting its grid capacity by more than 15 percent, in a move the utility said was necessary to comply with federal regulations aimed at reducing air pollution.
 
"We recognize the significant impact that these retirements will have on the local communities and we took that into account when making these decisions," said Georgia Power President and CEO Paul Bowers. "These decisions were made after extensive analysis and are necessary in order for us to maintain our commitment to provide the most reliable and affordable electricity to our customers."

 
“There’s no question about it, the industry is being targeted by this administration."
- Jason Hayes, spokesman for the American Coal Council
The announcement was hailed by environmental activists but lamented by coal industry advocates, who say the Obama administration is “targeting” their industry.
“There’s no question about it, the industry is being targeted by this administration," Jason Hayes, spokesman for the American Coal Council, told FoxNews.com. He said current regulations and laws make it nearly impossible for older coal-burning plants to be upgraded in a cost-effective manner, leaving utilities like Georgia Power little choice but to shut them down.
 
In recent months, several utilities have made similar announcements, saying they opted to close aging coal plants rather than pay hundreds of millions of dollars to install pollution-control equipment to comply with federal clean-air rules.
Hayes said the Obama administration’s policies have combined with a sluggish economy and increasingly cheap natural gas – coal’s main competitor – to hurt the industry.
Georgia Power used coal to produce 70 percent of its electricity as recently as five years ago, but now gets less than half its juice from the fossil fuel, according to the Atlanta Journal-Constitution. Officials said the lost capacity will be replaced with nuclear energy and natural gas.

Although officials said customer’s bills won’t jump immediately, the cost of shutting down the plants could ultimately be passed on to consumers.
“Georgia Power’s announcement today shows utilities’ continued move away from coal, which we support as beneficial for both our health and Georgia’s economy,” Stephanie Stuckey Benfield, executive director of GreenLaw, an Atlanta-based environmental law firm, told the newspaper.
 
Federal regulators and environmentalists say power plants are responsible for about half the nation’s mercury toxins, which contaminate water and fish. The new regulations are designed to help prevent premature deaths, asthma and other health problems, but coal industry officials, say the aggressive rules are costing jobs and driving up the price of electricity.

Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2013/01/08/georgia-utility-to-shutter-15-coal-power-plants-costing-480-jobs/#ixzz2HRKgh41L
Mr. Charles Glenn “Charlie” Nelson, age 73, of Payneville, KY passed away Thursday, October 14, 2021 at his residence. RIP Charlie, we'll will all miss you. GB

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Offline kennyd

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Colorado is "decommissioning" a large coal plant, and replacing it with a gas plant.  The law is written to do away with coal, and they can't add the cost of converting a plant to our bills, but can add the cost of building new plants.  So guess which choice was made.


This adds the gas jobs, in a way, but cuts out the coal mine jobs, the railroad jobs, and the workers at the plant. 


Scrubbers can clean up the stacks more than they are if necessary.  The mercury is as much an excuse as reason; these same people want us to use nothing but mercury containing light bulbs.


I do have mixed feelings about the large strip mines.  The ones here "reclaim" the land and put grass on the carefully crafted hills, but it is still land I can't use, except for a few hunting leases allowed on some of it.  Then you have to be a hunter, can't camp, and are restricted to just certain times of the year, and even day.


Maybe these guys can get jobs in the wind turbine factories, except they are laying off around here.
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