The Denver Post

Operator: 2 units of coal plant to close this year

- By Matt Volz and Matthew Brown

HELENA, MONT. The company that operates a coalfired power plant in eastern Montana said Tuesday it will close two of the plant’s four units about 30 months ahead of schedule because of the high cost of running them and the unwillingn­ess of its coal supplier to lower prices.

Talen Montana said in a statement the older units of the Colstrip Steam Electric Station, whose combined 614- megawatt capacity is co- owned by Talen and Puget Sound Energy, will be permanentl­y retired on Dec. 31. The newer Colstrip units, which generate the bulk of the 2,100- megawatt plant’s output and are owned by six companies, will continue operating although those whose livelihood­s depend on the plant worry it also may be shuttered early.

The partial closure would be the latest among coalfired plants going offline across the nation. Demand for coal is dropping as utilities turn to cheap natural gas and renewable energy, while pollution rules increase coal power costs and some states worried about climate change seek to divest from coal.

The older units had been slated for closure by mid2022 as part of a settlement of a lawsuit.

“Fuel constitute­s the bulk of our operating cost, and our repeated efforts to negotiate lower fuel prices with Westmorela­nd Rosebud Mining, the plant’s sole and only historical­ly permitted fuel supplier, have been rebuffed,” Talen Montana president Dale Lebsack said in the statement.

The adjacent Rosebud mine is owned by a subsidiary of Westmorela­nd Coal Co., which emerged from bankruptcy this spring as a private company owned by former creditors. A message left at the company’s headquarte­rs in Englewood was not immediatel­y returned on Tuesday.

Colstrip is the one of the largest coal plants west of the Mississipp­i River, and the small town of 2,300 where it’s located is dependent upon the plant for a large part of its economy. It has about 320 workers, according to Talen, and mining the coal provides more jobs.

Colstrip Mayor John Williams said, “We’ve been working hard to encourage other entities to come to Colstrip, to diversify our economy, but at this point in time we haven’t been successful.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States