Arizona / WestFacing criticism, power firm drops plan to burn coal at proposed plant
the associated Press
Tucson, Arizona | Published: 09.03.2007
The developers of a proposed coal-fired power plant in southeastern
Arizona that has drawn criticism from neighbors have decided the facility
will instead burn natural gas.
Southwestern Power Group announced the decision for its Bowie Power
Station in a news release sent late Friday. Company officials weren't
available Saturday.
The announcement brought a swift reaction from Cochise County Supervisor
Paul Newman, who held a Town Hall meeting Aug. 17 that brought together
company officials, plant supporters and a host of opponents.
"That's a huge environmental victory for Cochise County and the state of
Arizona," Newman, a former state legislator, said Saturday. "I've been in
a state of disbelief about it since yesterday afternoon when I was
informed."
The Bowie facility was approved by the Arizona Corporation Commission in
2002 as a natural gas-fired plant with two 500-megawatt generators. After
the first unit was built, the private plant would have been required to
also build some solar power units, and pay into a fund to compensate
nearby growers if they are harmed by the increase in groundwater pumping
the plant requires.
But soaring gas prices and questionable supplies forced the company to
change the power source to coal.
Southwestern then proposed a 600-megawatt plant using coal gasification, a
new technology that cuts emissions from coal plants by a considerable
amount, although not to the levels of a modern natural gas-fired plant. A
600-megawatt plant would produce enough electricity for about 600,000
homes.
The company also proposed an experimental project to sequester some of the
plant's carbon dioxide emissions, a byproduct of combustion considered
responsible for global warming.
The coal proposal drew complaints from Bowie and Willcox residents worried
about pollution, noise, water use and lifestyle changes the plant will
bring to the area.
Coal gasification is an expensive new technology, and proposed coal plants
of all types are facing an increasingly uncertain future as the debate
over their greenhouse-gas emissions heats up.
All that was apparently too much for Southwestern Power.
"We're making this decision for (a) combination of reasons," the Phoenix
company's general manager, David Getts, said in a statement. "Market
economics, regulatory uncertainty, and public understanding are all
factors that helped us come to this decision."
The Cochise County Planning and Zoning Commission approved the coal-plant
site two miles outside Bowie in March after a sometimes-heated public
meeting, but county supervisors had yet to give final approval.
The plant did have many supporters, some citing the job creation and taxes
it would bring to the county.
But many people in Cochise County weren't buying it, said Newman, who
noted that he had not yet decided if he would have voted to approve the
coal plant.
"I do think that the energy industry in the West should take notice,"
Newman said. "The citizens don't want power plants that add to this
greenhouse effect. We've reached a tipping point.
"This is a natural-resources area, and we understand that," Newman said.
"But in this day and age we don't see why we need to bring dirty coal down
from Montana and Wyoming to southwestern Arizona and ruin our beautiful
vistas."
Southwestern officials said the gas-fired plant has the best chance of
being permitted and built in a reasonable time.
The gas plant has the required air permits and Corporation Commission and
county approval, the company said. It expects the remaining permits to be
granted by early next year and said construction will begin as soon as
possible.
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