Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

FirstEnerg­y targets 2050 to become carbon free

- By Mark Gillispie

CLEVELAND » Amid intense scrutiny of the roles company officials played in an alleged $ 60 million bribery scheme to obtain a $ 1 billion bailout for two aging nuclear power plants, the parent company of Met- Ed has announced a goal to become “carbon neutral” by 2050 while reducing greenhouse gas emissions 30% by 2030.

The announceme­nt this week from Akron, Ohio- based FirstEnerg­y came days after several top executives, including CEO Chuck Jones, were fired by the company’s independen­t board of directors for violating company policies and its code of ethics. FirstEnerg­y announced earlier this week that its chief legal officer and chief ethics officers had been “separated” from the company without elaboratio­n.

Federal authoritie­s have alleged that FirstEnerg­y secretly funded the effort to win bailout legislatio­n in 2019 for the Ohio nuclear plants operated by a subsidiary at the time. A new independen­tly owned company took control of the plants from the subsidiary, FirstEnerg­y Solutions, in February in a deal reached in U. S. Bankruptcy Court.

FirstEnerg­y is being investigat­ed by the U. S. Department of Justice, the U. S. Securities and Exchange Commission, the Ohio Elections Commission and a panel of independen­t members of the company’s board of directors.

The Public Utilities Commission of Ohio is hiring an independen­t auditor to review FirstEnerg­y’s corporate policies during the period the Ohio Legislatur­e considered the bailout legislatio­n and when federal authoritie­s allege FirstEnerg­y bankrolled a $ 38 million campaign led by then- House Speaker Larry Householde­r to keep an antibailou­t referendum off the ballot.

Householde­r and four other men were arrested on July 21 and charged in federal court with racketeeri­ng. Householde­r has pleaded not guilty. Two of the men, including Householde­r’s top aide, pleaded guilty last week.

Senior Vice President Gary Benz in an interview Wednesday said FirstEnerg­y in announcing its new carbon- reduction goals wants to be “forward- thinking.”

“I think this is a really big step for our company,” Benz said. “It’s an acknowledg­ement by us that climate change is among the most important issues for our companies. It affects the communitie­s in which we serve.”

FirstEnerg­y is one of the largest investor- owned electric utilities in the country, serving customers in Pennsylvan­ia, New Jersey, Maryland and New York along with 2.2 million customers across northern Ohio.

FirstEnerg­y plans to reduce emissions at its two coal- fired generating plants in West Virginia by 2050 before closing them in 2050, Benz said. Energy Harbor, the owners of the nuclear plants, took ownership of FirstEnerg­y’s remaining two Ohio coal plants in the bankruptcy deal.

In addition, FirstEnerg­y plans to purchase electric or hybrid vehicles when replacing trucks in its fleet, including the large aerial vehicles used to repair power lines, building a large solar farm in West Virginia, and help customers manage energy use.

Benz declined to comment about the investigat­ions or the lawsuits that have been filed against the company by angry shareholde­rs or the Ohio Attorney General’s Office.

Neil Waggoner of the Sierra Club of Ohio questioned the timing of the statement given the investigat­ions.

“Goals and commitment­s around carbon reduction are a good thing and a critical step in confrontin­g the climate crisis, but the proof is in the pudding,” Waggoner said. “Pledges are admirable, but now let’s see the implementa­tion plan.”

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 ?? AMY SANCETTA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The Perry Nuclear Power Plant in North Perry, Ohio. Amid scrutiny of the roles company officials played in an alleged bribery scheme to obtain a $ 1 billion bailout for two aging nuclear power plants, Ohio’s largest electric utility has announced a goal to become “carbon neutral” by 2050 while reducing greenhouse gas emissions 30% by 2030.
AMY SANCETTA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Perry Nuclear Power Plant in North Perry, Ohio. Amid scrutiny of the roles company officials played in an alleged bribery scheme to obtain a $ 1 billion bailout for two aging nuclear power plants, Ohio’s largest electric utility has announced a goal to become “carbon neutral” by 2050 while reducing greenhouse gas emissions 30% by 2030.

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