Coal-fired power plants are opposed: 7 proposed
or being considered in Michigan Nov 28 - McClatchy-Tribune
Regional News - Tina Lam Detroit Free Press
While Gov. Jennifer Granholm is in California hawking Michigan's
capabilities as a center of new energy technology, seven new coal-fueled
power plants are formally proposed or under serious discussion in Michigan.
A coalition of environmental groups said Tuesday that's too many and the
state needs to halt what they say is dirty, old-fashioned fossil-fuel
technology.
"These will keep Michigan locked in the energy dark ages and saddle our
state with outmoded technology and high costs," said Anne Woiwode, director
of the Michigan chapter of the Sierra Club.
Michigan already has 19 coal plants. No coal plants have been built in the
state in nearly 20 years, and in that time, many manufacturing plants have
closed and the state has lost population.
"The question is whether we even have a need for these plants," Woiwode
said.
The Public Service Commission said last year that by 2012, Michigan will
need at most two new 500-megawatt plants, which could be coal, nuclear or
some other type. However, Michigan economist David Littmann has said more
recent forecasts mean that over the next five years, the state's energy
needs could decline, not grow.
Four of the proposed plants would produce a combined 2,160 megawatts.
DTE Energy has said it wants to build a second large nuclear plant near its
existing Fermi plant.
Nationwide, there is a rush to build coal-fired plants, with companies
trying to win approval for new plants before expected federal rules kick in
that restrict carbon dioxide emissions, said Abby Rubley, field director of
Environment Michigan.
At least 150 coal-fired plants are proposed nationwide.
Clean Energy Now, made up of several statewide groups, said it plans an
aggressive campaign to stop the onslaught of new plants.
The group will ask residents to contact legislators to put a moratorium on
new coal plants and to pass legislation requiring more renewable energy and
more energy efficiency. That alone could meet increased needs for
electricity, Woiwode said.
Renewable energy sources -- such as wind, water and solar power -- supply
only 3% of the state's electricity needs.
Various groups are pushing for a 20% renewable energy standard for
electricity companies by 2020 and for more stringent energy efficiency
requirements.
Coal provides about 60% of the state's electricity needs, according to a
2006 U.S. Department of Energy report. Most of the rest comes from nuclear
power and natural gas.
Michigan's coal plants use pulverized coal, which is burned in a combustion
chamber at utility plants.
Private companies, rather than utilities, proposing to build coal plants is
new, Rubley said.
Under state laws, only utility-owned plants have to get approval for new
coal plants from the PSC. The privately owned plants, which sell the
electricity they generate, need only air-quality and, in some cases, water
permits from the state.
Some of the companies proposing plants say they would used coal
gasification, which doesn't directly burn the coal, instead breaking down
the coal molecules. It is cleaner than traditional coal-burning plants, but
that doesn't make it clean, Rubley said.
Contact TINA LAM at 313-222-6421 or tlam@freepress.com. |