POWERnews
-
News
EPA Delays GHG Rule for More Public Input
The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) on Monday announced it would take more time to review public comment on draft rules concerning greenhouse gas emissions from power plants and propose the regulations on Sept. 30—instead of July 26 as initially planned. The agency said, however, that it is on track to have final rules ready by May 26, 2012.
-
News
GAO: Taller Smokestacks Contribute to Interstate Transport of Air Pollution
A report released on Friday by the Government Accountability Office (GAO) finds that power plant smokestacks of 500 feet or higher disperse pollutants over greater distances—and that stack height is one of several factors that contribute to the interstate transport of air pollution. The congressional investigative arm also finds that several boilers remain uncontrolled for certain pollutants, including several connected to tall stacks.
-
News
Italy Follows Germany in Saying “No” to Nuclear Power
Italy on Monday overwhelmingly voted to abandon nuclear power after Germany’s cabinet last week backed a controversial policy to shutter that country’s nuclear plants by 2022.
-
News
Body of Worker Recovered at Power Plant Structure Collapse
The body of a contract worker trapped when a large boiler structure at the Paul L. Bartow Power Plant on Weedon Island near St. Petersburg, Fla., unexpectedly collapsed was recovered late Monday night, four days after the accident occurred, Progress Energy said.
-
News
DOE Offers $2.3B in Loan Guarantees to CSP Projects, Geothermal Project
The Department of Energy in the past week made three more conditional loan guarantee offers: $2 billion to support two concentrating solar power (CSP) projects in California—the Mojave Solar Project in San Bernardino County and the Genesis Solar Project in Riverside County—and a $350 million partial loan guarantee for an Ormat-owned Nevada geothermal project.
-
News
Japan Nuclear Watchdog: Fuel Has Possibly Melted Through Daiichi 1’s Pressure Vessel
A day after Japan’s Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency (NISA) doubled estimates of the total amount of radiation released into the atmosphere after an earthquake and tsunami ravaged Tokyo Electric Power Co.’s (TEPCO’s) Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant, the government nuclear watchdog released a 750-page report in which it admits, for the first time, that nuclear fuel may have possibly melted through reactor pressure vessels and accumulated at the bottom of outer containment vessels.
-
News
China Ends Subsidies for Domestic Wind Equipment Makers after U.S. Files WTO Complaint
China has formally revoked grants to Chinese wind turbine manufacturers that agreed to use key parts and components made in China rather than purchasing imports after the U.S. filed a complaint with the World Trade Organization (WTO), saying the subsidies were prohibited under international trade rules. The U.S. took action after the United Steelworkers (USW) last September filed a trade case alleging that China used “protectionist and predatory” practices to develop its renewable sector at the expense of production and job creation in the U.S.
-
News
AEP, Duke, TVA to Develop $275M High-Voltage Transmission Line
American Electric Power (AEP) and Duke Energy on Thursday said they would jointly develop a 55-mile, extra-high-voltage transmission project with the Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA) in Indiana and Kentucky.
-
News
House Subcommittee Votes to Restore Funds to Yucca Mountain
The U.S. House Energy and Water Appropriations subcommittee on Thursday passed a bill that restores $35 million to the development of the Yucca Mountain permanent nuclear waste repository in Nevada, including $10 million that goes to the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) to continue its license application.
-
News
DOE Offers $45.6M Loan Guarantee to 20-MW Nev. PV Project
The latest recipient of a conditional commitment for a $45.6 million federal loan guarantee from the Department of Energy (DOE) is Fotowatio Renewable Venture’s 20-MW alternating current (AC) photovoltaic (PV) solar generating facility.
-
News
GenOn Settles on Water Discharge Suit Filed Under Citizen Enforcement Provision
GenOn has reportedly reached a settlement agreement with environmental groups PennEnvironment and the Sierra Club in a case that alleges the Houston-based company continuously violated its Clean Water Act discharge permit and discharged more than three million gallons of wastewater a day from its 1,700-MW coal-fired Conemaugh Generating Station in Western Pennsylvania into the Conemaugh River.
-
News
Post-Combustion Carbon Capture Center Commissioned at National Test Center
The Department of Energy has commissioned a testing facility as part of its National Carbon Capture Center (NCCC) to enable research and development of post-combustion carbon dioxide capture technologies for coal-based power plants and to speed up their deployment.
-
News
Court Remands Air Permit for $3B Texas Coal Plant
A Texas state district judge last week remanded an air permit for White Stallion Energy Center’s 1,320-MW coal- and petroleum coke–fired power plant power plant proposed to be built in Matagorda County to the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality (TCEQ), potentially posing a delay for the $3 billion project.
-
News
BOEMRE Takes Steps to Issue First U.S. Lease for Marine Energy Demonstration
The Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, Regulation and Enforcement (BOEMRE) last week announced it would take the first step toward issuing the nation’s first lease that would authorize the testing of equipment designed by Florida Atlantic University to use ocean currents offshore Florida to generate power on the Outer Continental Shelf (OCS).
-
News
GAO: U.S. Nuclear Waste Policy Plagued with Uncertainties
A report released by the Government Accountability Office (GAO) today—and presented at a House Energy and Commerce Committee hearing on the Energy Department’s role in managing civilian radioactive waste—concludes that uncertainties exist about the direction of the nation’s policy for nuclear waste disposal.
-
News
Duke Energy Likely to Shutter Two Coal-Fired Units in Indiana
Duke Energy will retire two coal-fired units at the four-unit 560-MW Gallagher Station in New Albany, Ind., instead of converting them to natural gas if regulators approve the company’s plans to buy the 640-MW natural gas–fired Vermillion Energy Facility in Cayuga, Ind.
-
News
New Jersey to Pull Out of RGGI, Shun New Coal Plants
New Jersey Governor Chris Christie on Thursday announced he would withdraw his state by the end of the year from the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (RGGI)—a cap-and-trade carbon trading system that involves 10 Northeastern states—because the “program is not effective in reducing greenhouse gases and is unlikely to be in the future,” he said. The governor also said the state would not permit any new coal plants and that it would shut down “dirtier” intermediate and peaker plants.
-
News
EPA Admits Error in Proposed Mercury MACT Rule
The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has acknowledged in a letter to non-profit power trade organization Utility Air Regulatory Group (UARG) that it made a conversion error in the way mercury emissions data was calculated to set limits for the agency’s mercury maximum achievable control technology (MACT) floor in the proposed Mercury and Air Toxics Standards (MATS) rule.
-
News
15 States Claim EPA Violated Clean Air Act with Endangerment Finding
Fifteen states on Monday, led by Texas, filed an opening brief in a legal challenge to the Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA’s) finding that greenhouse gases (GHGs) pose a danger to public health and welfare.
-
News
ICC Rejects ComEd’s Smart Grid Fee Hike Request
The Illinois Commerce Commission (ICC) on Tuesday rejected a request by Exelon Corp.’s energy delivery arm ComEd to charge customers for several smart grid initiatives, including advanced meter deployment. The commission, however, approved ComEd’s request to collect an additional $155.7 million–a 7.6% increase over current revenue—through new delivery rates.
-
News
DOE Offers Loan Guarantee for Nev. 110-MW CSP Tower Plant
The Department of Energy (DOE) on Thursday conditionally offered a $737 million loan guarantee to support SolarReserve’s Crescent Dunes Solar Energy Project, a 110-MW molten salt concentrating solar power (CSP) tower generating facility. The project would be the first of its kind in the U.S. and the tallest molten salt tower in the world, the federal agency said.
-
News
NRC Holds Up Westinghouse AP1000 Design Certification, Citing New Technical Issues
Efforts to confirm regulatory review of Westinghouse’s AP1000 reactor design have resulted in the uncovering of “additional technical issues,” which Westinghouse must resolve before the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) can consider finalizing certification for the design, NRC Chair Gregory Jaczko said on Friday.
-
News
Study: Environmental Regulation, Infrastructure, Workforce Issues Top Issues Worrying Power Executives
An annual survey of more than 100 executives from the U.S. and Canadian electric and natural gas industries by consulting firm Capgemini has found that the five most critical challenges facing the North American energy industry are environmental regulation, aging infrastructure, non-environmental regulation, an aging industry workforce, and the need for new pricing mechanisms.
-
News
BRC Subcommittee Draft Recommendations Call for Permanent Nuclear Waste Disposal Facility
Preliminary recommendations presented by three Blue Ribbon Commission (BRC) subcommittees on Friday call for, among other measures, a new entity that could quickly develop one or more permanent deep geological nuclear waste disposal facilities. The recommendations could become part of the BRC’s final recommendations due on Jan. 29, 2012, that address how the U.S. will deal with spent nuclear waste. -
News
ERCOT: Proposed EPA Rules Could Shutter 8,000 MW of Gas-Fired Generation in Texas
Four rule changes proposed by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) would likely not result in the retirement of a “significant amount” of coal plants, but they could shut down more than 8,000 MW of gas-fired generation, according to the Electric Reliability Council of Texas (ERCOT). Those retirements could reduce generation reserve margins in the state to below 2% in 2015, the Texas grid operator says. -
News
BPA Limits Power Output from Non-Hydro Sources Amid Surging Runoff Volume
The Bonneville Power Administration (BPA), a federal nonprofit agency that markets wholesale power from 31 federal hydro projects in the Columbia River Basin in the Pacific Northwest, on Friday said that high seasonal river flows and hydroelectric generation had prompted it to temporarily limit output from non-hydropower resources—including wind. A wind industry group has criticized the decision as “wrongheaded” and says it could cost wind companies tens of millions of dollars. -
News
NRC Finds All Reactors Safe, Scales Back Monitoring at Fukushima
After inspecting the abilities of the 104 nuclear reactors operating in the U.S. to deal with power losses or damage to large areas following extreme events, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) on Friday said “all reactors would be kept safe.” On Monday, it also announced it would scale back monitoring of the Fukushima Daiichi situation because “conditions at the Japanese reactors are slowly stabilizing.” -
News
Regulators Give Three New U.S. Reactors Environmental Consents
In the past week Luminant’s proposed Comanche Peak Units 3 and 4 and UniStar’s proposed Calvert Cliffs Unit 3 reactors received environmental approvals associated with applications for combined construction and operation licenses (COLs) from the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (USACE).
-
News
Pakistan Opens New Nuclear Reactor
Pakistan inaugurated its third nuclear power plant on Thursday. The 330-MW Chashma Nuclear Power Plant Unit 1, built with Chinese assistance, will help the country battle a critical power shortfall, authorities reportedly said. -
News
Three States Vote to Stay in RGGI
Delaware, New Hampshire, and Maine last week separately passed measures to continue participation in the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (RGGI), a regional cap-and-trade program that seeks to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.