Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Trump lobbies for coal-fired plant

Tennessee Valley Authority board to consider closing 2 sites

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President Donald Trump set up a new clash with an independen­t agency Monday with his call for the Tennessee Valley Authority to keep open an aging coal-fired plant that buys much of its coal from a company chaired by Robert Murray, one of the president’s supporters.

The TVA board will meet Thursday to consider whether to close the 49-year-old plant in Paradise, Ky., which ran only intermitte­ntly last year because it was no longer needed to supply steady uninterrup­ted power known as base load. The board also is considerin­g shutting down a 52-year-old coal-fired unit at Bull Run near Oak Ridge, Tenn.

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

But the TVA is leaning toward the closure of the Paradise and Bull Run plants precisely because they are not viable.

The agency has already said that closing the Paradise coal-fired plant would have no significan­t effect. The unit “does not provide the level of flexibilit­y needed to balance hourly, daily and seasonal changes in energy consumptio­n,” the agency said in a proposal. “In addition, cycling the unit off and on results in more wear and tear and higher operation and maintenanc­e costs.”

“With less need for base load resources, assets that have relatively high projected future maintenanc­e cost and environmen­tal compliance expenditur­es, high forced outage rates and poor generation portfolio fit are now the focus of more detailed study for potential retirement,” the agency said on its website. “The Tennessee Valley Authority’s Paradise Fossil Plant (PAF) Unit 3 falls into this category of assets.”

As recently as 2013, Murray Energy had delivered 700,000 tons of coal to the Paradise coal plant. But two other coal units on the same site in Muhlenberg County in western Kentucky were replaced with natural gas generation in the spring of 2017. The Paradise unit 3 employs about 140 people.

Robert Murray, founder of Murray Energy and a major Trump supporter, has been pressing the president to help boost coal-fired power 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].”

Since November 2013, the TVA board has approved the retirement of 16 coal-fired electric power units at five plants, according to its Securities and Exchange Commission filing. Coal has dropped to 17 percent of TVA’s power supply.

“We have a situation where in order to maintain reliable power and keep prices as low as feasible, we have to assess the generation fleet and make some difficult but necessary decisions,” TVA spokesman Jim Hopson said.

The closure of coalfired plants was part of a 2011 agreement the authority made with the EPA, four state government­s and three environmen­tal advocacy groups, the Securities and Exchange Commission filing said. More recently, the state of Maryland and seven environmen­tal advocacy groups have filed complaints against the EPA because of excessive nitrogen oxide emissions from TVA plants, including Paradise unit 3.

Trump’s call to keep the plant open “flies in face of what we see happening in U.S. energy markets,” said Jason Bordoff, director of the Columbia University Center on Global Energy Policy. “Coal can’t compete with cheap gas and renewables. TVA’s own analysis justifies reducing the use of coal in its power mix.”

The Energy Department under Trump urged the independen­t Federal Energy Regulatory Commission to order subsidies for coal and nuclear plants in the name of the reliabilit­y of the electrical grid, but the commission rejected the call, citing other factors as more important in ensuring reliabilit­y. Four of the five members of that panel were appointed by Trump, but the vote against the Energy Department plan was unanimous.

The president later urged the Energy Department to declare a national emergency to keep aging coal and nuclear plants open, but the department has not done so.

“We’ve not had reliabilit­y problems,” Hopson said. “We have been 99.99 percent reliable for 19 consecutiv­e years. We are very proud of our reliabilit­y.”

The Tennessee Valley Authority was establishe­d during the Great Depression in 1933, and it built dams and harnessed hydropower to help the impoverish­ed region. Today, the TVA serves 10 million customers in seven states. It also provides flood control and helps manage navigation on the Tennessee River.

The TVA has a ninemember board, but there are two vacancies. Trump has appointed four of the seven active members. The agency receives no taxpayer money.

“Arguments that we need to support coal for national security reasons are not supported by any objective analysis,” Bordoff said. “There is no basis for supporting the president’s call.”

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