POWERnews

  • PNM, New Mexico, EPA Settle Coal-Fired San Juan NOx Technology Dispute

    An agreement reached on Friday between PNM, New Mexico’s largest electricity provider, the New Mexico Environment Department (NMED), and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) calls for the retirement of two units at the 1,800-MW coal-fired San Juan Generating Station by 2017 to comply with federal visibility rules. The remaining two units will be retrofitted with selective noncatalytic reduction technology by 2016, a nitrogen-oxide reducing technology.

  • EPA Urged to Regulate GHG Emissions of Existing Sources Through Seldom-Used CAA Section

    A think tank affiliated with the New York University School of Law is urging the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to mandate cuts of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions in all 50 U.S. states through a little-used section of the Clean Air Act.

  • Dominion’s Farrell: Low Gas Prices, Lack of Policy Pose Setbacks for Nuclear Expansion

    Nuclear power will play a significant role in the nation’s energy future, though a nuclear expansion will be hindered by several factors—foremost among them low natural gas prices and a lack of a comprehensive national energy policy, Dominion Chair, President, and CEO Thomas Farrell II told attendees at the Platts Nuclear Energy Conference in Washington, D.C., on Wednesday.

  • House Unanimously Approves Hydro Bill, Prospects for Passage Are Positive in Senate

    The U.S. House voted 422–0 last week, approving a bill that could facilitate the development of small hydropower and conduit projects and direct the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) to consider streamlining its two-year permitting process.

  • Two Geothermal Energy Bills Reintroduced in Senate

    Two bills seeking to rapidly expand geothermal energy resources in the U.S. were reintroduced in the Senate last week.

  • Miss. House Passes Bill Backing Kemper IGCC

    Members of the Mississippi House passed a pair of rate mitigation and securitization bills that would allow the Mississippi Public Service Commission (MPSC) to approve a multiyear rate plan for Mississippi Power’s $2.88 billion Kemper integrated gasification combined cycle (IGCC) plant that is under construction in Kemper County.

  • U.S. Initiates WTO Proceedings in Indian Solar Dispute

    The U.S. last week called for World Trade Organization (WTO) consultations to settle a dispute in which it alleges that India’s national solar program appears to discriminate against U.S. solar equipment by requiring solar energy producers in the South Asian country to use Indian-made solar cells and modules.

  • Environmental Groups Sue DOI for Narrow Focus on Public Lands as Solar Zones

    A legal battle is brewing between the Department of the Interior (DOI) and three public-interest environmental groups that claim the government failed to consider degraded lands for the siting of "destructive" utility-scale solar plants, and that it focused instead on millions of acres of public land when it established solar energy zones in six southwestern states.

  • Latest Olkiluoto EPR Delay Puts Project 8 Years Behind Original Schedule

    An EPR reactor under construction by an AREVA-Siemens consortium in Finland may not start operating until 2016, two years later than its revised start date in 2014, Finnish utility Teollisuuden Voima (TVO) said on Monday. Construction of the Olkiluoto 3 (OL3) unit began in May 2005, and the new possible start date could put it eight years behind its initial schedule.

  • Northeast, Mid-Atlantic Power Plants to See Drastic RGGI Lowering of CO2 Cap

    Nine Northeast and Mid-Atlantic states participating in the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (RGGI) will see a 45% lowering of the market-based regulatory program’s carbon dioxide (CO2) cap in 2014, under an updated model rule released last week. The change is expected to reduce projected 2020 power sector CO2 emissions from the region to more than 45% below those in 2005.