| Coal's future not in Carolinas   Feb 12 - McClatchy-Tribune Regional News - Christopher D. Kirkpatrick The 
    Charlotte Observer, N.C.
 At a global warming conference Monday, Duke Energy chief executive Jim 
    Rogers said he wouldn't build another coal-fired power plant in the 
    Carolinas because of its geology.
 
 Any future plants would have to offer technology that could capture and 
    store carbon dioxide underground. Geography in the Carolinas isn't suitable 
    the way it is in Indiana, where Duke has a new coal-gasification plant under 
    way, he said.
 
 That technology -- which turns coal into a gas rather than burning it 
    directly -- might allow Duke to pump the gas underground for storage, he 
    said.
 
 Duke has researched building pipelines to send the gas for storage to the 
    Midwest. But it's too expensive, he said. So the CEO said Duke's Cliffside 
    power plant project in the Blue Ridge foothills would be the Charlotte 
    utility's last in the Carolinas.
 
 Instead, the CEO envisions boosting major transmission capabilities so Duke 
    could build its future coal plants in its three Midwest states and nuclear 
    power plants in the South and then zap the electricity back and forth, as 
    needed.
 
 Ideas to reduce carbon dioxide emissions floated around the annual Emerging 
    Issues Forum on Monday at the McKimmon Center at N.C. State University in 
    Raleigh.
 
 A lineup of speakers, including New York Times columnist Thomas Friedman, 
    traded ideas and delivered speeches about global warming and green energy. 
    Rogers was on one of the panels Monday afternoon.
 
 Coal-fired power plants are among the largest sources of carbon dioxide, 
    blamed as a cause of global warming. Scientists say the rising temperature 
    is hurting the environment and threatening mankind, including melting polar 
    ice caps that could cause coastal flooding and massive hurricanes.
 
 The forum featured leaders from the energy, governmental and academic 
    worlds, including U.S. Sen. Richard Burr, R-N.C., and Nobel Prize winner 
    Rajendra Pachauri, an N.C. State graduate who runs the U.N. 
    Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.
 
 The annual conference this year is focused on global warming and how the 
    state can or should economically benefit from it. The forum continues today 
    and features Bank of America Corp. chief executive Ken Lewis.
 
 Opponents of the Cliffside project and the use of fossil fuels say energy 
    efficiency and renewable energy, such as wind and solar, should replace 
    old-fashioned power plants.
 
 Rogers told the crowd at the forum that the $2.4 billion Cliffside project 
    was needed to bridge the gap to a noncarbon world. Energy demand requires 
    it, he said.
 
 The morning began with a dozen protesters outside the conference center.
 
 The small group from N.C. WARN held a banner criticizing the 800-megawatt, 
    coal-fired Cliffside project. The protesters said Rogers' commitment to 
    energy efficiency and clean energy is hypocritical.
 
 Friedman, the Monday morning headliner and author of the bestselling "The 
    World is Flat," had his own take on how to reduce carbon dioxide emissions.
 
 He said the country needs a "massive carbon tax" to jolt industry into 
    pushing the green movement beyond the pop culture stage.
 
 Former Duke CEO Paul Anderson has said a tax on carbon emissions, as long as 
    it was economy-wide, would be a good idea.
 
 But Rogers said he supports a different approach called cap-and-trade.
 
 The complicated method involves trading pollution credits. It would give 
    utilities time to meet a national emissions cap that would be slowly lowered 
    over time.
 
 But Rogers on Monday also proposed a national tax on electricity that 
    everyone who used power would have to pay. That money could then be funneled 
    into research and development to find alternative ways to produce clean 
    energy, he said.
 
 Profit, or not, from global warming?
 
 The annual conference this year is focusing on how the state can or should 
    economically benefit from global warming.
 
 Speakers said that the state could benefit from money that would flow to 
    research institutions trying to come up with energy innovations. And new 
    companies might also locate in the state because of those research 
    universities.
 
 A clean energy revolution will also require traditional manufacturing 
    infrastructure.
 
 For example, a study said the Carolinas would benefit economically from a 
    coming wind energy boon because the state has the capability to produce 
    gears, blades and other parts needed to build a windmill.
 
 PPG Industries near Shelby was able to retool some of its operations to 
    manufacture windmill blades. And General Electric also recently moved its 
    windmill turbine manufacturing headquarters to its Greenville, S.C.
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