FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
February 29, 2012
|
CONTACT: Press Office
|
More Power Plants Fall Victim to Administration’s War on Coal
EPA’s Regulatory Agenda Continues to Destroy Jobs and Threaten Affordable Electricity
WASHINGTON, DC – Continuing a troubling recent trend
of power plant closures, leading power producer GenOn announced today
it would shutter 13 percent of its generating capacity by 2015 due to
new environmental regulations. The company stated it would close eight
coal-fired power plants located in Ohio, Pennsylvania, and New Jersey,
“because forecasted returns on investments necessary to comply with
environmental regulations are insufficient.”
GenOn’s
announcement comes on the same day as the city of Chicago reached a
deal with environmental groups agreeing to close two of the city’s
coal-fired plants—making good on a campaign promise by Chicago Mayor and
former White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel.
These
retirements demonstrate the real-life impacts of EPA’s destructive
regulations. Plant closures translate to lost jobs and higher
electricity prices for American families. Coal-fired generation provides
affordable power for communities and businesses, and studies show
retirements pose a serious risk to electric reliability.
President
Obama’s Environmental Protection Agency continues to churn out major
regulations, and America’s power sector is struggling to keep up. The
uncertainty is only growing as EPA refuses to properly account for
the cost and consequences of new regulations like the Utility MACT
rule, posing a serious threat to American jobs and affordable
electricity.
In
a hearing yesterday with EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson, Energy and
Power Subcommittee Chairman Ed Whitfield (R-KY), expressed his
frustration over EPA’s overreaching anti-coal agenda, stating, “Let me
be clear, I am all for reasonable EPA regulations to control emissions
from coal-fired power plants as spelled out in the Clean Air Act. But
what we have seen in the last few years goes well beyond what EPA is
supposed to be doing, and constitutes an effort to force this nation
away from coal by imposing an avalanche of regulations that are
technologically and economically impossible to meet. These regulations
will most certainly drive up electricity rates and cause massive
unemployment.”
In Case You Missed It
Bloomberg
By Jim Polson - Feb 29, 2012
GenOn
Energy Inc. (GEN), the third-largest U.S. independent power producer by
market value, expects to shut about 13 percent of its generating
capacity by May 2015 because of environmental regulations.
Shutdowns
will begin in June at the units, which don’t generate enough profit to
cover the costs of complying with the rules, Houston-based GenOn said
today in a statement. The plants, located at eight sites in
Pennsylvania, Ohio and New Jersey, generate 3,140 megawatts in the
wholesale market overseen by PJM Interconnection. Except for one unit,
all of the plants burn coal, according to GenOn’s website.
GenOn
joins other power-plant owners, including FirstEnergy Corp. (FE) and
American Electric Power Co., that have announced closures because of
environmental rules. A U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
air-pollution rule to reduce power-plant emissions that cross state
lines was halted by a federal court last year. Separate regulations to
cut mercury pollution are scheduled to go into effect in 2015…
###
|
No comments:
Post a Comment