Santa Fe New Mexican

Firms drop bid to buy Navajo coal power plant

- By Felicia Fonseca

FLAGSTAFF, Ariz. — Two companies that were negotiatin­g to take over a coal-fired power plant on the Arizona-Utah line ended the effort Thursday, saying the challenges were too great.

The Navajo Generating Station near Page is one of the largest coal plants in the Western United States. It was set to close at the end of 2019, the victim of lower natural gas prices and an environmen­t that has not been friendly to coal.

The plant’s coal supplier, Peabody Energy, launched a longshot bid to find a buyer to save the 2,250-megawatt plant and the coal mine that has no other customers. New York-based Avenue Capital and Chicago-based Middle River Power showed interest and touted a plan to run the plant at less than half its capacity to prolong its life.

They announced Thursday they were terminatin­g the effort. The companies said they could not get anyone to commit to buying power from the plant, delaying the start of an environmen­tal review. A ballot measure to boost renewable energy standards in Arizona created more uncertaint­y.

“We have concluded, regrettabl­y, that the steps required to facilitate our ownership and operation of NGS are no longer possible within the required timeframe,” the companies wrote in a letter to the Navajo Nation.

The decision is a huge blow to the economies of the Navajo and Hopi tribes, which rely heavily on coal revenue for about 20 percent and 85 percent of their budgets, respective­ly.

Hundreds of tribal members are employed at the coal plant and mine. The power plant workers have offers to transfer to other facilities run by one of the owners and current operator, the Salt River Project, if the closure happens as planned. The mine workers do not.

Navajo President Russell Begaye said earlier this year that a lease agreement for new ownership would go before lawmakers in October, acknowledg­ing it was an ambitious timeframe. In a statement late Thursday, he and Navajo Nation Council Speaker LoRenzo Bates remained optimistic that the tribe could put its coal resources to use through new technology and other unspecifie­d options.

Percy Deal, who lives on the reservatio­n near the coal mine, said the Navajo leadership should accept the decision that was an answer to his prayers.

“Now the doors are open to a full recovery to start using what is naturally here, which is the sunlight and the wind,” he said. “That’s what the great spirit gave us, those two precious gifts so we could utilize it and enjoy life.”

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