Indiana Utility Regulators Approve Duke Energy
Clean Coal Power Plant PLAINFIELD, Ind., Nov 20, 2007 /PRNewswire-FirstCall
The Indiana Utility Regulatory Commission granted Duke Energy (NYSE: DUK)
permission today to construct a technologically advanced clean coal power
plant in Edwardsport, Ind.
If the project proceeds, it will be the first commercial-scale coal
gasification power plant built in the United States in the last 10 years.
The approximately 630-megawatt plant will use advanced integrated
gasification combined cycle (IGCC) technology.
"In the Midwest, coal is plentiful and low-cost, and finding ways to burn it
cleanly is fundamental to meeting our customers' demand for power," said
Duke Energy Indiana President Jim Stanley. "The Edwardsport facility could
very well be the cleanest coal-fired power plant in the world once it's
completed. It fits Indiana's energy plan to turn homegrown natural resources
into an economic engine and be self-reliant for power. It's part of our
overall plan to meet growing customer needs with cleaner coal technology,
energy efficiency, and renewables."
An air permit is still necessary from the Indiana Department of
Environmental Management. If that permit is approved, Duke Energy could
begin construction early next year and start producing power from the site
by early 2012.
The company has selected its existing power plant site in Edwardsport, Ind.,
as the location for the new plant. Upon completion of the project, the
existing plant -- with coal and oil units built between 1944 and 1951 --
will be retired. The new plant will be able to produce nearly four times as
much power as the existing plant at Edwardsport, with much less
environmental impact, including 45 percent less carbon dioxide emissions per
net-megawatt hour.
The plant will cost approximately $2 billion to construct. That cost will be
offset by more than $460 million in local, state and federal tax incentives.
The plant will result in an average electric rate increase of approximately
16 percent phased in from 2008 through 2012.
An average of 800 to 900 construction workers over a three-year period, with
a peak work force of 2,000, will be needed. Ongoing plant operations would
employ approximately 100 people.
"We've received tremendous support for the project," Stanley said. "Knox
County residents unified to embrace this project and move it forward. The
federal, state and local tax incentives help close the gap between the
higher costs of building a cleaner coal gasification plant compared to
traditional technology."
Integrated gasification combined cycle technology uses a coal gasification
system to convert coal into a synthesis gas (syngas). The syngas is
processed to remove sulfur, mercury and ash before being sent to a
traditional combined cycle power plant, using two combustion turbines and a
steam turbine to efficiently produce electricity.
The technology could also remove the carbon dioxide from coal during the
syngas conversion process to enable it to be stored or sequestered in
underground geologic formations. Indiana utility regulators also were
supportive of Duke Energy studying capture and sequestration of a portion of
the plant's carbon emissions. If the study is successful, carbon dioxide
capture and sequestration equipment could be added to the plant.
"Coal gasification technology holds tremendous promise to reduce carbon
dioxide emissions to address increasing concerns and evidence of global
climate change," Stanley said.
Duke Energy Indiana's Wabash River Station is the site of the 260-megawatt
Wabash River Coal Gasification project, which was one of the first
demonstrations of using coal gasification to produce electricity.
Duke Energy's Indiana operations provide approximately 7,300 megawatts of
safe, reliable and competitively priced electricity to more than 770,000
electric customers, making it the state's largest electric supplier.
Duke Energy, one of the largest electric power companies in the United
States, supplies and delivers energy to approximately 4 million U.S.
customers. The company has approximately 36,000 megawatts of electric
generating capacity in the Midwest and the Carolinas, and natural gas
distribution services in Ohio and Kentucky. In addition, Duke Energy has
more than 4,000 megawatts of electric generation in Latin America, and is a
joint- venture partner in a U.S. real estate company.
Headquartered in Charlotte, N.C., Duke Energy is a Fortune 500 company
traded on the New York Stock Exchange under the symbol DUK. More information
about the company is available on the Internet at: www.duke-energy.com.
SOURCE Duke Energy
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