Chattanooga Times Free Press

TVA may shutter 2 more coal plants

Study recommends closing Paradise, Bull Run coal plants by 2020 despite opposition from Trump, McConnell

- BY DAVE FLESSNER STAFF WRITER

The Tennessee Valley Authority is proposing to close two more of its coal-fired power plants due to stagnant or declining power demand in its seven-state region.

Despite opposition to the plant closings from President Trump and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell on Monday night, TVA’s final environmen­tal assessment­s released Monday concluded TVA should shut down both the Bull Run Fossil Plant in Oak Ridge and the Unit 3 generator at the Paradise coal plant in Kentucky by 2023. Read the final environmen­tal assessment­s at www. timesfreep­ress.com.

The assessment­s prepared by TVA’s staff over the past year said Paradise and Bull Run are among the coal-fired units with “relatively high projected future maintenanc­e costs and environmen­tal compliance expenditur­es, a high forced outage rate and poor generation fit” for TVA’s future power demands.

The TVA board, which meets Thursday in Chattanoog­a, is scheduled to discuss the future of the two aging coal plants and could vote to phase out the fossil units over the next four years. TVA has already shut down 32 of the 59 coal-fired units it once operated and has been considerin­g since last August shutting down Bull Run by 2023 and shuttering the final coal unit at Paradise by 2020.

The potential of shutting down more of TVA’s coal generated electricit­y provoked responses Monday night from both President Trump and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, the Kentucky Republican who represents the state where Paradise has operated for the past half century.

“Time and again, the people of Kentucky have loudly spoken in support of coal,” McConnell said in a video statement to the TVA board. “I’m proud to join them in opposing the closing of Paradise Unit 3.”

President Trump, who promised during his 2016 campaign to work to revive America’s coal industry, voiced similar concerns about TVA making further cuts in its coal-fired generation.

“Coal is an important part of our electricit­y generation mix and…TVA should give serious considerat­ion to all factors before voting to close viable power plants, like Paradise #3 in Kentucky,” Trump tweeted.

TVA spokesman Jim Hopson responded to Trump’s tweet in a statement Monday night.

“Mr. President, coal is an important part of TVA’s power generation mix and we will give

serious considerat­ion to all factors as we make this decision,” he said.

But the assessment done by TVA staff concluded that the Paradise and Bull Run plants do “not fit current and likely future portfolio needs” since natural gas remains relatively cheap, energy efficient appliances and furnaces are reducing electricit­y demand and more customers are generating their own power with solar panels or windmills. TVA also added a second unit to its Watts Bar Nuclear Plant in Tennessee two years ago and is expanding its generating capacity at its oldest nuclear plant, the three-reactor Browns Ferry Nuclear Plant in Alabama.

Paradise Unit 3 “does not provide the level of flexibilit­y

needed to balance hourly, daily and seasonal changes in energy consumptio­n,” the TVA final environmen­tal assessment concludes. “In addition, cycling the unit off and on results in more wear and tear and higher operation and maintenanc­e costs.”

TVA has already shuttered the two other coal units at Paradise and replaced that generation with a combined cycle natural gas-fired facility.

From its peak in the 1980s when coal generation once supplied more than two thirds of TVA’s electricit­y, the share of TVA’s power generated from burning coal has shrunk to only about 20 percent of TVA’s total electricit­y sales.

But shuttering Bull Run and Paradise has drawn opposition from elected officials in Tennessee and Kentucky.

Tennessee State Sen. Ken Yager, a Kingston Republican and member of Senate Energy, Agricultur­e and Natural Resources Committee, said the White House is easing carbon emission standards for coal plants to help revive the coal industry so the costs of complying with clean air standards is going down for most coal plants.

“Bull Run has provided baseload capacity to the electrical grid — providing stability; ongoing energy security through a steady electricit­y supply; and other important transmissi­on system attributes,” Yager said in a letter to TVA last year. “Additional maintenanc­e and prudent operationa­l practices could improve the unit operation so that the capacity continues to serve as a critical asset, available to provide exceptiona­l reliable, base-load power necessary for the efficient operation of the electrical system.”

The Bull Run Fossil Plant, located on the Bull Run Creek near Oak Ridge, is the only singlegene­rator coal-fired power plant in the TVA system and went into operation in 1967. The plant has a capacity of generating 881 megawatts of power, or enough to supply about 400,000 homes.

The first two units at the Paradise Fossil plant in western Kentucky went online in 1963 but were retired in 2017. The / Unit 3 coal generator at Paradise became operationa­l in 1970 with a capacity of 1,150 megawatts, or enough power to supply about 950,000 homes.

Kentucky Gov. Matthew Bevin appealed to TVA last month to not close Paradise, calling the proposed shutdown of the coal plant “a huge mistake.”

“The impact on our economy and our region’s long-term energy grid reliabilit­y would be devastatin­g,” Bevin said in a letter to TVA President Bill Johnson. “In Kentucky, we respect and value our coal-fired power plants and we strongly oppose any efforts to prematurel­y retire any of our fleet.”

The TVA board will consider the future of the Paradise and Bull Run plants at its quarterly meeting at 9:30 a.m. Thursday in the Missionary Ridge auditorium in TVA’s Chattanoog­a Office Complex at 1101 Market Street in downtown Chattanoog­a.

 ?? STAFF FILE PHOTO ?? The Paradise Fossil Plant is near Drakesboro, Ky.
STAFF FILE PHOTO The Paradise Fossil Plant is near Drakesboro, Ky.

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