News

  • Federal Judge: Vermont Yankee Can Stay Open

    A federal judge last week ruled that Entergy’s Vermont Yankee nuclear power plant—Vermont’s only reactor—can remain operating beyond a state-mandated shutdown deadline. State laws that would force the closure of the 40-year-old plant, which recently garnered a 20-year operating license extension from the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC), are preempted by federal law, the judge said.

  • Jackson Committed Not to Enforce Boiler MACT Standards, Despite Federal Court Decision

    In response to a recent decision by a federal court judge that reinstates rules stayed by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) in early 2011 and that govern hazardous air pollutant standards for industrial boilers and commercial and industrial solid waste incinerators—so-called Boiler MACT rules—EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson said the agency was committed not to enforce those standards until April, when a new revised suite of boiler standards will be finalized.

  • EIA: Coal Generation to Plummet Through 2035 on Demand Slump, Environmental Rules

    Over the next two decades, the U.S. power profile will be markedly different as generation from coal declines, natural gas power and renewables surge, and nuclear generation decreases slightly, said the Energy Information Administration (EIA) in its early release version of the Annual Energy Outlook 2012 on Monday. The full report, scheduled to be released this spring, presents updated projections of U.S. energy markets through 2035.

  • Obama Backs “All-of-the-Above” Energy Strategy in State of the Union Address

    President Barack Obama championed an “all-out, all-of-the-above strategy” in Tuesday’s State of the Union address to develop all U.S. energy sources, though his focus rested on renewables and natural gas—with no mention of coal or nuclear power.

  • FERC Issues First Pilot Hydrokinetic License to New York Tidal Project

    The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) on Monday issued its first pilot project license to Verdant Power’s 1,050-kW Roosevelt Island Tidal Energy (RITE) project.

  • GAO: ARPA-E Should Ask Private Applicants About Prior Private Funding

    The Department of Energy’s (DOE’s) Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy (ARPA-E) funding selection criteria to private companies could be improved by requiring applicants to provide guided explanations of why private investors were unwilling to fund projects, the Government Accountability Office (GAO) finds in a new report.

  • DOE to Fund Design, Licensing of Small Modular Reactors

    The Department of Energy (DOE) on Friday announced a draft funding opportunity to establish cost-shared agreements with private industry for the design and licensing of small modular reactors (SMR), targeting their deployment by 2022.

  • EPA GHG Reporting Program Data: Power Plants Were Largest Emitters of CO2 in 2010

    The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) last week released, for the first time, data collected under its Greenhouse Gas (GHG) Reporting Program. The data set shows that in 2010, power plants were the largest direct emitters of GHGs, followed by petroleum refineries. The database was released as the agency continues work on GHG standards for new and modified power plants, which may be released by the end of this month.

  • EIA: Policy Could Prompt Accelerated Decline of Coal Power, Renewables

    The U.S. power sector will see heightened electricity consumption over the next two years, a spurt in natural gas–fueled power generation that is expected to offset a slight decline in coal power, and a significant decline in hydropower generation that could mark a decline in overall renewable generation, the Energy Information Administration (EIA) says in its latest short-term outlook.

  • Cliffside Settlement Legally Binds Duke to Shutter 1,600 MW of Coal Capacity

    A settlement reached between Duke Energy and conservation groups on Tuesday legally binds the North Carolina–based utility to shutter 1,667 MW of coal-fired capacity from aging plants and tighten pollution controls at the new 825-MW pulverized coal unit that is scheduled to come online this year at its Cliffside Steam Station on the Rutherford/Cleveland County line in North Carolina.