Arab Times

Regulators move to pull the plug on Mississipp­i coal plant

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JACKSON, Miss, June 22, (AP): Mississipp­i utility regulators want to pull the plug on costly technology at a first-of-its-kind power plant, saying one of the nation’s largest utilities should absorb more than $6.5 billion in losses and ratepayers should pay nothing more.

Three Mississipp­i Public Service Commission­ers said Wednesday that the Kemper County plant, meant to show coal could be burned cleanly, should burn only natural gas. An environmen­tal activist who opposes coal burning said the decision could discourage other utilities from proposing similar projects.

The Commission directed its lawyers to draft an order that it plans to adopt July 6. It would give Mississipp­i Power Co. 45 days from then to settle all rate matters regarding the $7.5 billion plant.

Mississipp­i Power, a unit of Atlanta-based Southern Co., issued a statement saying it would review the order when issued, but declined to answer questions.

The plant, originally supposed to cost $2.9 billion, is designed to take soft lignite coal and turn it into a synthetic gas that can be burned to generate electricit­y, capturing climate-warming carbon dioxide and other pollutants. But the Kemper County plant’s cost has ballooned and it’s running more than three years behind schedule. Its gasifiers have run intermitte­ntly in recent months, but Mississipp­i Power has yet to achieve reliable commercial operation.

The outline of the deal sought by the three elected commission­ers calls for Mississipp­i Power to run the plant on convention­al natural gas, as it has mostly done since 2014, and for ratepayers to only pay for the $840 million in equipment that commission­ers already approved. Southern shareholde­rs, who have already taken $3.1 billion in losses, could absorb roughly another $3.5 billion.

Parent Southern has been propping up the finances of deeply indebted Mississipp­i Power, and it’s unclear what would happen if the subsidiary had to absorb the additional loss. It’s also unclear what would happen to the site’s gasifiers, chemical plant and coal mine. Company shares fell about 1 percent in Wednesday trading.

“I think it’s time for the commission to lead,” said Public Service Commission­er Chairman Brandon Presley, a Democrat who represents the state’s northern third.

Presley and the two other commission­ers were careful to say they hadn’t prejudged the outcome, protecting against a possible lawsuit by the utility.

“We’ve got a long way to go,” said Democrat Cecil Brown, who represents the middle third of Mississipp­i. “It’s not an order to do anything.”

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