Santa Fe New Mexican

Regulators chart course for closure of PNM coal plant

- By Susan Montoya Bryan

ALBUQUERQU­E — New Mexico regulators on Wednesday decided on a course for how they will handle a major utility case that marks the beginning of the end for coal-fired electricit­y generation in the state.

The state’s largest utility, Public Service Company of New Mexico, recently submitted its applicatio­n for closing the San Juan Generating Station. The filing includes a mechanism for financing the closure and providing benefits and training to the workers who will be displaced. It also outlines options for replacing the lost power. All the elements hinge on the state’s new energy transition law.

The Public Regulation Commission during its meeting voted to split the proceeding into two parts: one for the closure and financing and the other for the replacemen­t power.

Commission­ers and staff said they expect numerous legal issues to be raised as the effects of any decision will be felt for decades by the state and the utility’s customers.

They opted for extending the timelines for considerin­g the proposals. It could take about

nine months before a final ruling is issued related to the closure and financing and several months more to settle on which mix of solar, natural gas or battery storage will be tapped for generation going forward.

“Since the issues are critical to New Mexico’s future and since the replacemen­t resources will be long lasting, perhaps 20 or 30 years, and since the costs are going to be significan­t, I think it’s imperative for the commission to have as complete and comprehens­ive an understand­ing as possible,” Commission­er Valerie Espinoza said.

The commission opted to consider PNM’s applicatio­n as part of an ongoing case that involved abandonmen­t of the power plant, raising questions as to whether the new Energy Transition Act would be applied to the decision-making process since it took effect after that case began.

Environmen­talists say tens of millions of dollars in severance pay and job training funds for power plant and mine workers could be compromise­d if the energy law is ignored.

Utility spokesman Ray Sandoval said PNM is confident that the provisions of the new law apply to the filing.

In addition to establishi­ng ambitious new renewable energy goals for investor-owned utilities and rural electric cooperativ­es, the law allows Public Service Company of New Mexico and other owners of the San Juan plant to recover investment­s and decommissi­oning costs by selling bonds that are later paid off by utility customers.

PNM plans to shutter the plant in 2022 as part of its plans to drop coal-fired generation. As regulatory and market pressures have pushed many utilities across the U.S. to move away from fossil fuels, PNM also has set a goal of being emissionsf­ree by 2040.

Commission Chairwoman Theresa Becenti-Aguilar, whose district includes the power plant and parts of the Navajo Nation, pushed for the utility to do more outreach. She said Navajo communitie­s will be hit hard by the closure.

The utility is planning a series of public meetings this month in Farmington, Albuquerqu­e and on the Navajo Nation. It also has reached out to the tribe to set up chapter meetings and a briefing for tribal officials.

 ?? SUSAN MONTOYA BRYAN/ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? The coal-fired San Juan Generating Station near Farmington. New Mexico regulators on Wednesday began planning how they will handle Public Service Company of New Mexico’s applicatio­n to shutter the power plant.
SUSAN MONTOYA BRYAN/ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO The coal-fired San Juan Generating Station near Farmington. New Mexico regulators on Wednesday began planning how they will handle Public Service Company of New Mexico’s applicatio­n to shutter the power plant.
 ??  ?? AMOS and TIM RIVERA
AMOS and TIM RIVERA

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