Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Law sets end dates for fossil-fuel power plants

Illinois coal mining remains a huge contributo­r to climate-changing pollution

- By Michael Hawthorne

“Illinois is going through a remarkable transforma­tion from a coal-driven state to one powered by prairie winds and long sunny days. But the list of unfinished business includes phasing out and cleaning up the last remaining coal mines.” — Bruce Nilles, executive director of the nonprofit Climate Imperative project

Gov. J.B. Pritzker vows Illinois will help stop — and even reverse — climate change with a new state law that outlaws coaland gas-fired electricit­y by 2045.

But the law fails to address the state’s biggest source of climate-changing pollution: coal mining.

During 2020 alone, mostly out-of-state companies that burned Illinois coal released more than 57 million tons of heat-trapping carbon dioxide into the atmosphere, according to a Chicago Tribune analysis based on a formula developed by the U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency.

By contrast, the state’s coal and gas plants emitted 46 million tons of CO2 during the year.

The difference reflects how Illinois remains a major coal supplier, even as the state and the nation as a whole shift away from burning the fossil fuel to generate electricit­y.

Pritzker and state lawmakers stopped short of confrontin­g the state’s coal industry — at least directly — because it provides jobs and pays taxes, albeit with a small fraction of the workers it once employed in a region of Illinois closer to Tupelo, Mississipp­i, than Chicago.

“It’s one thing to stop importing coal into your state,” said

Barry Rabe, a professor of public policy at the University of Michigan who studies energy issues. “It’s another thing altogether to stop mining it within your own borders.”

Illinois trailed just three states — Wyoming, West Virginia and Pennsylvan­ia — in the amount of coal dug out of the ground last year, according to federal records. More than half of the 32

million tons mined in Illinois came from Foresight Energy, a bankrupt St. Louisbased company that bought the rights to dormant coal reserves in four southern Illinois counties during the mid-2000s.

Nearly all of the coal mined by Foresight is shipped to other states and countries. The company cuts costs by relying on longwall mining, a process that uses robotic equipment rather than people to excavate coal. Automation enabled the state’s coal industry to produce about the same amount of coal last year as it did in 2003 with twice as many workers.

The climate impact of burning coal was well understood decades before Foresight announced its arrival with more than $3 million in campaign contributi­ons spread among Illinois politician­s, including some who also worked at state agencies overseeing the industry.

“Illinois is going through a remarkable transforma­tion from a coal-driven state to one powered by prairie winds and long sunny days,” said Bruce Nilles, executive director of the nonprofit Climate Imperative project. “But the list of unfinished business includes phasing out and cleaning up the last remaining coal mines.”

For now the only thing stopping Foresight’s biggest mine from adding more climate pollution to the atmosphere is an undergroun­d fire that idled production last month.

Federal and state officials are still investigat­ing the cause of the fire, which forced an Aug. 14 evacuation of the Sugar Camp mine, 270 miles southwest of Chicago in Franklin County. Company officials did not respond to requests for comment.

It marked at least the second time fire shut down one of Foresight’s mines. The company’s Deer Run complex in Montgomery County began smoldering in 2014 and did not resume operating until 2019, when federal authoritie­s approved a new undergroun­d shaft to an untouched section of the coal seam.

Foresight also owns a now-idled mine in

Macoupin County and another in Williamson County.

All four mines routinely violate federal workplace safety and clean water regulation­s, records show. Five of the 16 Illinois miners killed on the job since 2008 worked at Sugar Camp, where the injury rate exceeded the national average at times during the past decade.

“Illinois citizens should be alarmed and demand action from the agencies that are supposed to enforce regulation­s,” said Joyce Blumenshin­e, a downstate Sierra Club activist who noted the state recently approved an expansion of Deer Run that could enable the mine to continue operating for another three decades.

Burning Foresight’s coal in power plants and factories released more carbon dioxide last year than the heat-trapping emissions from all 4.6 million automobile­s registered in Illinois.

Yet coal mining didn’t came up Wednesday when Pritzker said government­s need to act quickly to counter the fast-accelerati­ng impacts of climate change.

During a bill-signing ceremony outside the Shedd Aquarium, the governor said the new energy law makes Illinois “a force for good” and promises “an environmen­tal future we can be proud of.”

“We can’t outrun or hide from climate change — not to the north where the boundary waters burn, not to the south where (Hurricane) Ida swallows lives and livelihood­s in the blink of an eye,” said Pritzker, echoing President Joe Biden, who is pushing a climate-friendly overhaul of the entire U.S. electric grid and automotive fleet. “We’ve seen the effects of climate change right here in Illinois repeatedly in the last 2 ½ years alone: a polar vortex, devastatin­g floods,

microburst­s that destroy buildings.”

Among other things, the state law intends to reduce climate pollution by offering subsidies and other incentives for electric cars, wind power and solar energy. It charges ratepayers another $700 million to support Chicago-based Exelon, which had threatened to close two nuclear power plants unless Pritzker and lawmakers approved the bailout.

Thousands of union workers will keep their jobs as a result. From a health and climate perspectiv­e, continuing to operate the carbon-free plants should help block new gas-fired generation and stabilize the grid as more wind and solar power comes online.

Coal-fired power plants targeted by Pritzker and lawmakers already are on the way out. All but three of the 11 operating in Illinois are scheduled to close by 2027 at the latest.

Those that will remain are the only ones that burn Illinois coal. During the early 1990s, most of the state’s utilities decided it was less expensive to comply with the federal Clean Air Act by switching to low-sulfur Wyoming coal instead of installing pollution-control equipment to scrub high-sulfur Illinois coal.

The most conspicuou­s outlier is the Prairie State Generating Station southeast of St. Louis, the largest industrial source of carbon dioxide built in the U.S. in a quarter century.

During the mid-2000s, as private investors abandoned dozens of similar projects, scared off by skyrocketi­ng constructi­on costs and the likelihood climate pollution eventually would be regulated, five Chicago suburbs and hundreds of other Midwestern communitie­s agreed to collective­ly take on more than $5 billion in debt to finance Prairie State.

Municipal investors, including Batavia, Geneva, Naperville, St. Charles and Winnetka, lobbied to block Pritzker’s initial proposal to close the coal plant by 2030. After months of delays, backers of the energy legislatio­n agreed to extend the deadline, giving Prairie State and a municipall­y owned coal plant in Springfiel­d until 2035 to cut CO2 emissions by 45% and another decade after that to eliminate climate pollution or shut down.

Prairie State gets its coal from a mine next to the power plant in Washington County — a deal promoted by Peabody Energy, another St. Louis-based coal company that later sold its 5% stake in the project at a steep loss. Illinois municipali­ties are expected to have paid off their share of the debt by the state’s 2045 deadline for carbon-free electricit­y.

In an email response to questions, Pritzker spokespers­on Jordan Abudayyeh said the move to clean energy will prevent up to 62 early deaths across the state every year.

“The state set aggressive decarboniz­ation targets that will eliminate the state’s reliance on dirty power,” Abudayyeh said. “It is myopic to insinuate that celebratin­g a historic step forward in the fight against climate change means there is not more work to do in the years ahead.”

One of the environmen­tal advocates involved in the energy bill negotiatio­ns cited federal data showing coal production is declining nationwide.

J.C. Kibbey, a clean-energy advocate for the nonprofit Natural Resources Defense Council, noted the mines that supply Prairie State and the Dallman plant in Springfiel­d produced about a fifth of the state’s coal last year.

“Although this law does not directly impact the mining sector, the current buyers for these two mines ... now have retirement dates on the books,” Kibbey said in an email. “I strongly suspect that the reason Peabody created the (Prairie State) mine in the first place is because they could not find buyers for the coal elsewhere ... and the market has only gotten worse since then for coal.”

“The state set aggressive decarboniz­ation targets that will eliminate the state’s reliance on dirty power. It is myopic to insinuate that celebratin­g a historic step forward in the fight against climate change means there is not more work to do in the years ahead.”

— Jordan Abudayyeh, spokesman for Gov. J.B. Pritzker

 ?? E. JASON WAMBSGANS/CHICAGO TRIBUNE ?? Sugar Camp coal mine near Benton in southern Illinois on Thursday.
E. JASON WAMBSGANS/CHICAGO TRIBUNE Sugar Camp coal mine near Benton in southern Illinois on Thursday.
 ?? E. JASON WAMBSGANS/CHICAGO TRIBUNE ?? More than half of the 32 million tons of coal mined in Illinois came from Foresight Energy, which owns Sugar Camp coal mine near Benton in southern Illinois on Thursday.
E. JASON WAMBSGANS/CHICAGO TRIBUNE More than half of the 32 million tons of coal mined in Illinois came from Foresight Energy, which owns Sugar Camp coal mine near Benton in southern Illinois on Thursday.

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