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  • Roundup: Energy Legislation, California, and Trash-to-Cash

    By Kennedy Maize Partisan Correctness: Does Harry Reid Speak for Harry Reid? Who’s speaking approximate truth here? Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) said this week in a press conference that he expects energy and climate legislation, which has narrowly passed the House, will get punted into next year. The reason, Reid said, is the […]

  • Schwarzenegger to Veto Bills for Calif. RPS Increase, Orders Agency to Adopt Regulations

    California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger (R) signed an executive order on Tuesday directing the California Air Resources Board (CARB) to adopt regulations by July 31, 2010, to increase California’s Renewable Portfolio Standard (RPS) to 33% by 2020—one of the strictest in the country.

  • NRC’s Review of ESBWR Proceeds

    GE-Hitachi (GEH) Nuclear Energy last week said it had submitted a final design certification document for the Economic Simplified Boiling Water Reactor (ESBWR) to the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC). The submittal allows the regulatory agency to proceed with its evaluation of the third-generation reactor design.

  • APS Gets $70.5 Million to Study Algae-Based Carbon Mitigation, Hydrogasification

    An innovative project that uses algae to mitigate carbon emissions from a coal-fired power plant owned by Arizona Public Service (APS) has received a $70.5 million grant from the Department of Energy (DOE).

  • Exelon Signs $1.2 Billion Deal for SWU from USEC’s American Centrifuge Plant

    Exelon, the largest nuclear generator in the U.S., on Thursday signed a $1.2 billion contract to purchase separative work units (SWUs) from USEC’s American Centrifuge Plant to fuel its reactors starting in 2012.

  • Garona Owner Appeals to Spain Govt. to Keep Plant Open

    Nuclenor, the operator of Spain’s oldest nuclear power plant, the 466-MW Santa Maria de Garoña, on Monday appealed a government decision to close the plant in 2013. Nuclenor said it had “solid reasons to support the continued operation of the [plant] until 2019.”

  • EPA to Revise Power Plant Wastewater Discharge Rules

    The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) said on Tuesday that it has completed a multi-year study of power plant wastewater discharges and concluded that current regulations—issued in 1982—have not kept pace with changes in the power industry over three decades. It now plans to revise existing standards for water discharges from coal-fired power plants. Revisions could include tightened restrictions on contaminants in wet scrubber wastewater streams.

  • Alstom Withdraws from Clean Coal Coalition

    Alstom last week pulled out of the American Coalition for Clean Coal Electricity (ACCCE), an industry group that advocates for the “robust” use of coal and advancement of cleaner coal technologies. The French company widely active in the development and testing of carbon capture technologies said it broke with the coalition because of its questionable support for climate legislation—the same reason Duke Energy cited when it withdrew from the ACCCE earlier in the week.

  • FPPI to Seek Federal Clean Coal Funding for Pa. IGCC Project

    Competition for funding under the Energy Department’s Round 3 Clean Coal Power Initiative (CCPI) heated up on Monday as Future Power PA Inc. (FPPI) announced it had applied for about $610 million for a proposed integrated gasification combined cycle (IGCC) power plant with carbon sequestration in Pennsylvania.

  • Let’s Get Real about Health Care

    By Kennedy Maize Companies that offer health insurance plans to their employees – and that covers most power companies – need to pay close attention to the Washington debate on national health insurance plans now current in Congress. So far, most of the sound and fury over the Obama (and congressional) plans are bogus, kicked […]