Orlando Sentinel

Duke Energy to tout future power plant

- By Kevin Spear kspear@tribune.com or 407-420-5062

Butmany specifics still unclear.

The future of Central Florida’s biggest electric utility depends greatly on a proposed power plant that Duke Energy will unveil Thursday during an open house 90 miles from Orlando.

While constructi­on is to start in less than two years, much about the Crystal River plant is still uncertain. It doesn’t have state approval, an establishe­d supply of natural gas or a manufactur­er tapped to build the generator components.

But the North Carolina-based company has a lot riding on the project, including Duke’s increasing struggle to produce enough power for 700,000 customers in Central Florida and 1 million customers elsewhere in the state.

“We can build a natural gas plant safely, quickly and less expensivel­y than other generating sources,” Duke spokeswoma­n Heather Danenhower said.

The $1.5 billion plant, which will be built next to Duke’s existing Crystal River Energy Complex, is to have six generators, with four running on natural gas and providing heat to makes team that drives two more generators.

At full power, the complex would generate 1,640 megawatts, or nearly twice asmuch as what used to be provided by Duke’s crippled nuclear plant, which is destined for a

“We can build a natural gas plant safely, quickly and less expensivel­y than other generating sources.” Heather Danenhower, Duke spokeswoma­n

decades-long decommissi­oning and demolition.

Critics say Duke wants to build the plant because as a state-sanctioned investment it would justify an increase in rates and protect company profits.

Duke already has calculated the new plant would boost electricit­y rates $7.61 a month for a home using a typical amount of power, or1,000 kilowatt-hours.

The utility bills more than other large providers in Central Florida. For a home using1,000 kilowatt-hours in a month, Duke charges $125, while the bill is $102 from Florida Power & Light Co. and $109 from Orlando Utilities Commission.

“For an investor-owned company like Duke, the model is they make more money with more capital expenditur­es,” said Susan Glickman, Florida director for the Southern Alliance for Clean Energy. “They get a guaranteed rate of return on what they spend so the incentive is to spend.”

Duke Energy will make the case to Florida regulators that a large, natural gas plant is the most effective way to meet customer demand.

Danenhower said Duke Energy’s doesn’t need to make as much effort as it previously has to get customers to use electricit­y more efficientl­y.

“Research shows that 69 percent of our customers are already adopting energy-efficiency measures on their own,” Danenhower said. “Building codes have also become stricter in requiring energy-efficiency measures at the start of constructi­on, thereby reducing the need for some of our current energy-efficiency programs.”

But Glickman said her organizati­on contends that Duke, instead of building the new plant, could and should meet a big share of customer demand in coming years through programs that help them reduce their need for power.

“Theydon’t really want to help people use less energy any more than McDonald’s wants to sell less hamburgers,” Glickman said.

Duke’s open house will be open to the public Thursday afternoon from3 to 7 at the Plantation at Crystal River in Crystal River. Goto http://bit.ly/1m9CVqSfor­more details.

 ?? DUKE ENERGY ?? An artist’s drawing shows the power plant Duke Energy is proposing to build in Citrus County that will help serve Central Florida.
DUKE ENERGY An artist’s drawing shows the power plant Duke Energy is proposing to build in Citrus County that will help serve Central Florida.

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