Los Angeles Times

Tennessee coal plants to close

- Mufson writes for the Washington Post. By Steven Mufson

The Tennessee Valley Authority board of directors voted to shut down two aging coal-fired power plants, defying a tweet from President Trump on Monday urging the agency to keep one of them open.

The TVA directors voted overwhelmi­ngly to close the Paradise 3 and Bull Run plants. Three of the four people appointed by Trump to the board joined the majority voting to close down the coal units.

“It is not about coal. This decision is about economics,” TVA Chief Executive Bill Johnson said. “It’s about keeping rates as low as feasible.”

The lone vote in favor of propping up the plants was Trump appointee Kenneth Allen, who earlier had been the chief operating officer at Armstrong Coal and president of Bluegrass Coal, both coal mining companies.

TVA is a federally owned corporatio­n. Though its directors are appointed by the president, it functions as an independen­t agency. Two of its nine seats are vacant.

Trump, who vowed during his campaign to help the coal industry, set up a clash with the TVA with his call to keep open the Paradise 3 unit, which buys much of its coal from a mining company chaired by Robert E. Murray, one of the president’s donors and supporters.

In a tweet Monday night, Trump said: “Coal is an important part of our electricit­y generation mix and @TVAnews should give serious considerat­ion to all factors before voting to close viable power plants, like Paradise #3 in Kentucky!”

But the board decided that it would be too costly to prop up the 49-year-old plant, which operated only intermitte­ntly last year because it was no longer needed to supply uninterrup­ted power known as baseload. The plant will close by December 2020.

At one time, coal mines in Muhlenberg County were among the nation’s biggest and they prompted the singer John Prine to write a 1971 song called “Paradise.”

The board also voted to close a 52-year-old coal unit at Bull Run near Oak Ridge, Tenn., by December 2023.

John Thomas, the TVA’s chief financial officer, said closing the two plants would save ratepayers $320 million without affecting the reliabilit­y and resilience of the agency’s fleet. He said the coal plants weren’t designed to be turned on and off and that the TVA had been “running them at times when they are not economical.” Moreover, both plants would require about $1.3 billion in capital investment­s.

Thomas said that even after closing the plants, coal would account for 17% of TVA’s power generation in 2028.

But the coal industry has suffered from cheap natural gas and renewable energy. Two other coal units, Paradise 1 and 2, on the same site in Muhlenberg County in western Kentucky, were replaced with natural gas generation in the spring of 2017. Paradise Unit 3 employs about 140 people.

Murray, founder of Murray Energy and a leading donor to Trump’s 2016 presidenti­al campaign, has been pressing the president to help prop up coal-fired plants since the beginning of the administra­tion. In Energy Secretary Rick Perry’s first month in office, Murray presented a four-page “action plan” to rescue the coal industry. The plan said that commission­ers at three independen­t regulatory agencies “must be replaced,” Environmen­tal Protection Agency staff slashed, and safety and pollution rules “overturn[ed].”

As recently as 2013, Murray Energy was delivering nearly 100,000 tons of coal a month to the Paradise coal plant.

But competitiv­e pressures have hurt coal mining. Since November 2013 and including Thursday’s decision, the TVA board has now approved the retirement of 18 coal-fired electric power units at five plants, according to its filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

Thomas said closing the plants was “the most economical decision.”

‘It is not about coal. This decision is about economics. It’s about keeping rates as low as feasible.’ — Bill Johnson, Tennessee Valley Authority chief executive

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