Thomas W. Overton
Articles By

Thomas W. Overton

  • Panda Power Funds Rolls on with Another New Gas Plant

    Even for the rapidly expanding gas-fired power sector, Dallas-based Panda Power Funds has been making waves. On Dec. 20, the private equity firm announced another deal: It has completed the acquisition and financing of Moxie Energy’s planned 829-MW Patriot generating station, a combined-cycle project to be located in Clinton Township, Pa. (Figure 1). Construction is […]

  • Gas Group Warns EU Will Badly Miss 2050 Carbon Emissions Goals Under Current Policies

    The European Union (EU) cannot meet its 2050 carbon emissions goals without reform of its carbon-pricing scheme, according to a report from the European Gas Forum released on Dec. 13. While progress toward the goals has been made, the report warns that the pace of decarbonization will stall in the 2020s because low carbon prices, […]

  • Colorado Legislature Kills Effort to Repeal Renewable Energy Mandate

    The Democrat-controlled Colorado Senate on Jan. 15 blocked a bill that would have reversed the state’s controversial renewable energy mandate for rural electric cooperatives. Colorado has had a renewable portfolio standard (RPS) since 2004, when it became the first state in the U.S. to mandate a percentage of renewable generation in retail electricity sales, but […]

  • EPA Publishes Draft Carbon Pollution Rules

    The EPA published the latest version of its new source performance standards (NSPS) for carbon pollution from new power plants in the Federal Register on Jan. 8, setting in motion a 60-day public comment period. The action stems from the 2007 Supreme Court decision in Massachusetts v. EPA that defined greenhouse gases as an air […]

  • NRC Issues Notice of Violation for San Onofre

    The Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) on Dec. 24 formally issued a Notice of Violation to Southern California Edison (SCE) for failing to properly vet the design of replacement steam generators at the San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station in California. The steam generators later developed excessive tube wear, forcing SCE to shut down the plant in […]

  • MISO Sees Growing Role for Natural Gas in Midwest

    Lower gas prices, expanding infrastructure, and coal retirements are likely to drive a much greater role for natural gas in the Midwest, according to a new study by the Midcontinent Independent Service Organization (MISO). The study, released Dec. 6, is the third phase of ongoing assessment that MISO initiated in 2010 after recognizing the impending […]

  • Fracking May Cut Total Water Use From Increase in Gas-Fired Power

    Those enormous amounts of water used in hydraulic fracturing may not be the environmental headache they appear to be. That’s because of the downstream effects of more abundant, less expensive natural gas unlocked by the process, known as “fracking,” according to a new study from the Bureau of Economic Geology (BEG) at the University of […]

  • EIA: Natural Gas to Overtake Coal by 2035

    The latest projections from the Energy Information Administration (EIA) are unlikely to quell concern in the coal industry, as the EIA has increased its projections for natural gas production and power burn, while continuing its gloomy outlook for coal. The EIA’s Annual Energy Outlook Early Release, posted Dec. 16, boosts its estimates of natural gas […]

  • Solar Photovoltaic Seeing Another Record Year in U.S.

    Solar photovoltaic (PV) installations in the United States for 2013 will surpass 4 GW for the first time, spurred by continually falling prices and surging popularity of residential rooftop solar, according to a report from the Solar Energy Industry Association (SEIA) released this week. Notably, the U.S. is projected to beat Germany in solar PV […]

  • White House Calls for Federal Agencies to Source 20% of Energy from Renewables by 2020

    Continuing his promise to take action on climate change outside of new legislation, President Obama today issued an executive order calling for federal agencies to secure 20% of their energy from renewable sources by 2020. This would nearly triple the federal government’s current consumption of renewable energy. A 2009 order had previously set the target […]

  • EIA: Gas Power Burn Down from 2012—But Coal Hasn’t Recovered

    According to the latest data from the Energy Information Agency (EIA), while gas power burn is down from its peak last year, generation from coal has not recaptured much of what it lost. EIA estimates show that electric power sector gas consumption was, on average, down 13% through November compared to the same period in […]

  • GAS POWER Direct 12-03-2013

    Gas Power Direct   Archive   |   Post Jobs   |   View Jobs   |   Email to Friend   |   Subscribe   December 2013 In This Issue California Builds a High Efficiency CHP Plant for Its Capital ComplexConference Presenters: World Shale Gas Growth Is Aloft on Uncertain Dynamics Coal-Fired Power Continues […]
  • California Builds a High Efficiency CHP Plant for Its Capital Complex

    When the State of California needed a new Central Utility Plant (CUP) to provide electricity, steam, chilled water, and compressed air to its 5.5 million square foot, 23-building campus in downtown Sacramento, the requirements were stiff. The original CUP was sending as much as 15 million gallons of heated water per day to a spray […]

  • Coal-Fired Power Continues Dramatic Decline in Southeast

    Once the dominant fuel in the southeastern U.S., coal has been hammered by plummeting gas prices and more efficient gas-fired plants, according to the most recent figures from the Energy Information Administration (EIA). Though the region has seen a steady increase in gas-fired capacity over the past decade, as recently as 2008, coal still provided […]

  • COAL POWER Direct Nov 25, 2013

    COAL POWER DIRECT  
  • TEPCO Begins Removing Fuel from Fukushima Daiichi Unit 4

    Tokyo Electric Power Co. (TEPCO) today began the delicate process of removing spent fuel from Unit 4 of the crippled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant. The six-unit site has two reactor groups, comprising Units 1–4 and Units 5 and 6. Unit 4 is the only reactor of its group that did not suffer a meltdown following […]

  • Google and KKR Invest in Six More Solar Projects

    Google and investment firm KKR announced on Nov. 14 that they are investing in six solar photovoltaic (PV) facilities in California and Arizona that are currently under development by San Francisco–based renewable energy company Recurrent Energy. The projects are expected to be operational by January. The six facilities, five in California and one in Arizona, will have […]

  • MANAGING POWER Direct 11-12-13

    Managing Power Direct  
  • How Do Safety Leaders and Managers Create a Culture of Safety?

    Knowing that safety is important is clearly not enough to create (or even put a dent in creating) a culture of safety and incident-free environments. We have heard the messages: “Safety First,” “Target Zero” and, as a very dedicated guy in rural Louisiana explained it, “We ain’t toleratin’ no more dead dudes!” As powerful and […]

  • Coal Companies Must Battle NIMBYism with Better Tactics

    Coal projects continue to be met with NIMBY [Not in My Back Yard]-type groups protesting coal companies’ efforts to start new projects. Although these projects can create plenty of jobs, they are met by opposition groups who cite environmental concerns. The coal seam Medicine Bow Project in Wyoming is estimated to create 6,000 jobs, but […]

  • The Controversy Over U.S. Coal Exports

    In international trade, a gap between theory and practice has always existed. Theory stresses, as an underlying ideal, the economic benefits of trade based on comparative advantage. In practice, and for a variety of reasons—institutional constraints, political factors, ambiguity of legal doctrine, bilateral or multilateral treaty obligations—the ideal intermittently bows to reality, whether in the […]

  • Massaging the Messaging to Make Messages Meaningful

    How fast does your spam filter fill up? What about your personal message filter? We are absolutely overwhelmed with messaging. Digital ads pop up during Internet searches. Direct mail pieces fill our mailbox. Robo-calls interrupt our dinner. Traditional TV ads shout at us. Newspapers and magazines carry forgettable ads. While driving, we listen to CDs to avoid […]

  • “Smart Grid” or “Strong Grid”? Words Matter

    The Obama administration recently changed its nomenclature on a topic of much interest to readers of this publication and those in the power industry. The administration has said it prefers to talk about its policies advancing a “resilient grid” as opposed to its previous emphasis on developing a “smart grid.” The new policy thrust, for […]

  • Six Steps to Develop a Social Media Policy for Work

    Employees are increasingly turning to social media sites like Facebook and Twitter to share information about their jobs. To the chagrin of companies everywhere, employees are also using social media sites to complain about their jobs. More and more, employers are having to make tough decisions about when and how to discipline employees for negative […]

  • Trend: Banks Retreat as Regulators Advance

    It seemed like a good idea at the time. About 10 years ago, large investment banks that had long traded in energy commodities and derivatives, including playing in the wholesale, organized electric markets regulated by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC), concluded that it made sense to combine physical assets—power plants, pipelines, and the like—with […]

  • Utility Rate Proposals: Are We Aligning Compensation With Performance?

    The purpose of regulation is to align private behavior with the public interest. That public interest imposes two chief obligations. The first obligation is the utility’s obligation to serve the public. This obligation must be defined by commission-established standards for performance. The second obligation is the commission’s obligation to compensate the utility. This compensation must be based on the […]

  • Make Sure Your Metrics Help You Reach Your Goal

    Everyone loves to be identified as a top performer. In power generation, our plants strive for increased availability and reduced forced outages. We measure performance indicators (metrics), report them to the Generating Availability Data System (GADS), and benchmark ourselves against similarly designed power plants. And just when we think we are sitting pretty, we deal […]

  • Imperial South Solar PV Plant Begins Commercial Operations

    The Imperial Solar Energy Center South facility, one of the largest commercially financed solar plants in the U.S., commenced commercial operations on Nov. 1 near El Centro in California, just north of the Mexican border. The 130 MW project, which was developed by Tenaska Solar Ventures, began construction in December 2011 and consists of nearly […]

  • Duke Sets Another Coal Plant for Demolition

    Duke Energy’s drive to reorient its fleet away from coal took another step on Nov. 4 when it announced demolition plans for its 84-year-old Riverbend Steam Station in Gaston County, N.C. The 454-MW plant was one of Duke’s oldest fossil assets, having come online in 1929. It was retired in April, two years ahead of […]

  • Gas Power Direct 11-05-13

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