Chattanooga Times Free Press

Utility to close last coal plants

- BY JULIE CARR SMYTH

An Ohio-based energy company said Wednesday it is closing its last coal-fired power plants in Ohio and Pennsylvan­ia, a move decried by the coal industry and called inevitable by environmen­talists.

FirstEnerg­y Solutions said it plans to shut down its remaining four coal plants by 2022. The three Ohio plants are on the Ohio River in Stratton. Its last Pennsylvan­ia coal plant is in Shippingpo­rt. The plants employ a combined 550 people.

The company said it can’t compete in the regional wholesale markets managed by grid manager PJM Interconne­ction.

“Our decision to retire the fossil-fueled plants was every bit as difficult as the one we made five months ago to deactivate our nuclear assets,” said Donald Moul, FES Generation Cos. president and chief nuclear officer, in a statement.

He said coal and nuclear power plants are losing out to cheaper energy sources such as natural gas and renewables.

Closure of the plants would leave about two dozen coal-fired plants operationa­l in Ohio and Pennsylvan­ia, according to data from the U.S. Energy Informatio­n Agency.

The move by FirstEnerg­y comes as the Tennessee Valley Authority also studies whether it may close other coal-fired plants it operates at Paradise in Kentucky and at Bull Run near Oak Ridge in Tennessee. TVA President Bill Johnson said power demand is stagnating and natural gas plants are more efficient than older coalfired generation.

In Ohio, state Rep. Jack Cera, a Democrat from the river town of Bellaire, called on state and federal officials to come together to avert “a regional economic crisis” that could be brought on by the plant closures.

“The economic impact of FirstEnerg­y in eastern Ohio is critical to the stability of families, small businesses and our local community,” he said in a statement. “The working men and women of eastern Ohio have powered and helped build this nation over many generation­s.”

FirstEnerg­y Solutions, and parent Akron-based FirstEnerg­y, have appealed to the Trump administra­tion to intervene to keep the plants operating despite the higher cost electricit­y they produce, and Moul left the door open to keeping them operating if the company can get help.

Mike Cope, president of the Ohio Coal Associatio­n, said the coal industry employs 2,800 in Ohio and coal-fired plants provide 59 percent of the state’s energy.

“It’s certainly not good [that they’re closing], and I would respectful­ly wish that they had waited a little longer because many of the steps that the [Trump] administra­tion is taking may have assisted them,” Cope said.

Dan Sawmiller, Ohio energy policy director for the Natural Resources Defense Council, said he suspects the announceme­nt was carefully timed to put pressure on those they’ve asked for help in bolstering the nuclear and coalfired power markets, including PJM and the federal and local government­s.

He said a sustainabl­e solution would be better than what the NRDC characteri­zes as a “bailout” of these plants that would be footed by customers.

“We’re talking about billions of dollars being used to bail out a failing industry, when these closures are inevitable and irreversib­le,” he said. “There are a lot better uses for that money, not to mention the impact on the environmen­t.”

The plant closures are subject to review by PJM, which didn’t immediatel­y return a call for comment. If the grid operator determines that one or more is needed for grid reliabilit­y, FES would provide further details on the costs and timing issues for keeping the plants open.

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