US's largest public utility ignores warnings in moving forward with new natural gas plant

us's largest public utility ignores warnings in moving forward with new natural gas plant

TVA-Gas

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — The nation’s largest public utility is moving ahead with a plan for a new natural gas plant in Tennessee despite warnings that its environmental review of the project doesn’t comply with federal law. The Tennessee Valley Authority announced in April that it would replace the aging coal-burning Kingston Fossil Plant with gas amid growing calls for the agency’s new board of directors to invest in renewables.

The board, with six of nine members appointed by President Biden, is expected to meet on Thursday in Nashville, a day after a planned protest by a coalition of environmental groups demanding Tennessee Valley stop investing in fossil fuels.

Decommissioning the Kingston plant, site of a massive 2008 coal ash spill, is part of Tennessee Valley’s overall plan to reduce its reliance on coal. In analyzing alternatives to replace the plant, the corporation considered either a new 1,500 megawatt gas plant or 1,500 megawatts of solar combined with 2,200 megawatts of battery storage. Tennessee Valley concluded that a 2027 deadline for retiring the current plant does not give it enough time to develop the renewables alternative.

The Environmental Protection Agency asked Tennessee Valley in a March 25 letter to redo several aspects of its analysis, citing “numerous” concerns with the plan to install new gas turbines. Among other things, the EPA accused the utility of defining the Kingston project so narrowly that only its predetermined choice of a new gas plant would meet the parameters, making the corporation’s evaluation process a “foreordained formality.” EPA said the utility did not adequately explain the need for the 2027 closure or look at possible alternatives.

The EPA said that Tennessee Valley’s environmental review does not adhere to the requirements of the National Environmental Policy Act, which requires federal agencies like Tennessee Valley to assess the environmental impact of proposed actions before making a decision.

Tennessee Valley, which is an independent federal agency, declined to follow EPA’s suggestion for a do-over. It decided in April to forge ahead with gas — continuing to follow a plan of action that the EPA says fails to take into account recent changes in the energy sector, including falling prices for renewables, billions of federal dollars for clean energy projects, and ever stricter environmental regulations. The corporation remains off track to meet the Biden administration’s goal of eliminating carbon pollution from power plants by 2035.

Tennessee Valley said in a statement that “we met with EPA following the letter and addressed their concerns.” EPA, meanwhile, maintained in an email to The Associated Press that its request that Tennessee Valley revise its environmental impact statement still stands.

Dennis Wamsted, an energy analyst at the Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis, said even with Tennessee Valley’s 2027 deadline, “They could build twice the amount of solar that they say they need and twice the amount of battery storage they say they need.”

Other utilities are taking advantage of price drops, technical improvements and government incentives to build out solar, including in Texas and Florida.

By 2030, Florida Power and Light expects solar to account for close to 40% of its generation, Wamsted said.

“This is a big utility with, you know, the same daily responsibilities as TVA,” he said. “And they are building out solar as fast as they can.”

Tennessee Valley provides power to 10 million people across seven Southern states. Florida Power and Light serves over 12 million people in that state.

Even if solar doesn’t produce power 24 hours per day, the amount of energy it does produce is knowable and can be planned for, Wamsted said. It can also be paired with batteries that store excess energy during the day to release back to the grid at night. That is already happening on a large scale in California where batteries are providing more than 20% of the power in the system on many evenings, he said.

In Wamsted’s view, many utilities resist the transition to renewables primarily because they are unfamiliar.

He points to an area called the Southwest Power Pool that runs from Oklahoma to Canada and now sees days where 60% or 70% of the system is wind-powered. In the late 2000s, he spoke to grid operators there who were afraid to go above 5% or 10% because they had never done it before, he said.

Tennessee Valley’s Kingston project is not its first clash with the EPA over gas. The environmental regulator made many of the same criticisms a year ago when the corporation decided to build a new 1,450-megawatt natural gas plant at its coal-burning Cumberland Fossil Plant. The Sierra Club and other groups are suing over that decision as well as an earlier one to install gas turbines at a retired coal plant in New Johnsonville. Both lawsuits claim that Tennessee Valley’s environmental reviews are perfunctory, in violation of the law — similar to the EPA’s criticism of the Kingston plant.

Democratic Sen. Ed Markey, of Massachusetts, a frequent Tennessee Valley critic, said in a statement to The Associated Press that the corporation should listen to the EPA.

“The National Environmental Policy Act isn’t optional — it’s the bedrock of our environmental protection and community engagement laws,” he said.

Although Tennessee Valley has not embraced renewables, the utility still says a majority of its energy is carbon-free because 42% comes from nuclear and another 9% is from hydropower. Purchased wind and solar make up another 4% of its energy portfolio. The corporation currently produces 1 megawatt of its own solar and has 20 megawatts of battery storage. It estimates that the new gas plant will produce 1.68 million tons of greenhouse gases a year, noting that that is a steep decline from Kingston’s current emissions.

Nationally, coal provided about 16% of U.S. electricity last year, down from about 45% in 2010. Natural gas provides about 43% of U.S. electricity, with the remainder from nuclear energy and renewables such as wind, solar and hydropower.

The Tennessee Valley Authority has said it intends to build 10,000 megawatts of solar by 2035. Wamsted contends that is too far in the future.

“It should be, ‘We’re going to build as much solar as we possibly can now,’ because it’s now that we really need to worry about,” he said. “We don’t need to worry about 10 years from now or 15 years from now.”

___

Associated Press writer Jonathan Mattise contributed to this report.

OTHER NEWS

15 minutes ago

DAILY MAIL COMMENT: Health chiefs have blood on their hands

15 minutes ago

Fears over the future of second-class Royal Mail deliveries are growing amid a proposed £3.5 billion takeover of the postal service

15 minutes ago

'Dangerous and misguided' plan could see up to 23,000 criminals dodging jail under Government proposal to axe short prison sentences - which would see some burglars and drug dealers 'punished in the community' instead

15 minutes ago

Healey's goal in 2nd period gives Boston 4-3 win in first game of PWHL championship series

15 minutes ago

'BJP Tried to Derail Free Education by Arresting Me'; CM Arvind Kejriwal | AAP News | News18

15 minutes ago

Google all in on AI and Gemini: How it will affect your Google searches

16 minutes ago

Metaverse: The Future of the Internet?

16 minutes ago

Ty Gibbs, Bubba Wallace advance to All-Star Race

16 minutes ago

'Definitely': Sharks star backed for surprise Origin debut

16 minutes ago

Tyrese Haliburton hit the Knicks with one of the coldest trolls ever after Pacers’ series win

16 minutes ago

"I was just dumbfounded at how much he had improved" - Ex-UNC varsity manager on Michael Jordan's crazy improvement at UNC

20 minutes ago

Pregnancy app used by the NHS accused of 'imposing gender ideology' - because it asks expectant women if they are male goes here

20 minutes ago

Key evidence in the 'burking' murder trial was 'hidden' from defence lawyers - as supporters for man who spent 35 years in jail say he was at 'significant disadvantage'

20 minutes ago

ANDREW NEIL: Our university bosses will rue the day they failed to stand up to the posh pro-Hamas student protestors wallowing in their own stupidity

20 minutes ago

CHRISTOPHER STEVENS reviews this weekend's TV: Violent, drunken, disloyal . . . this cop is so nasty he's all but unwatchable

20 minutes ago

Moonlighting firefighters who have as many as four different jobs are potentially putting the public at risk, watchdog warns

20 minutes ago

Arrest Lord Mountbatten's self-confessed 'killer', IRA victims demand

20 minutes ago

What to EAT to get your sex life sizzling again: From sensual salads and the summer fruit that's nature's Viagra to the orgasm booster that everyone has in their fridge…

20 minutes ago

JAN MOIR: Hollywood heartthrob Tom Holland doth bring a madman passion to the thousands now clamouring to see him play Romeo in a hoodie... does the audience appreciate it? Verily!

20 minutes ago

New 50p coin marking the 80th anniversary of the D-Day landings has been unveiled by the Royal Mint

20 minutes ago

Labour 'will make changing gender easier' in new plans to 'simplify' the process by allowing a single family doctor to sign off on the decision to approve granting key legal document

20 minutes ago

Investigation into whether Angela Rayner broke the law in the 'two homes' row will be done 'fairly and impartially', says chief constable of force leading probe

20 minutes ago

Max Pemberton: How did we allow maternity care to become so broken that the miracle of birth is now fraught with danger and fear?

20 minutes ago

Almost eight in ten Jewish students experienced 'casual' anti-Semitism - stereotyping or offensive comments dressed up as 'banter' - at university, poll reveals

20 minutes ago

Prison set up a 'rage room' for inmates to 'let off steam' by smashing old wooden pallets - with the remains used to make furniture for charity

20 minutes ago

Hundreds of tearful mourners attend the funeral of Israeli hostage Shani Louk, 22, who was murdered by Hamas - as her emotional father says 'I failed to protect you, forgive me'

21 minutes ago

Chris Pratt is supported by wife Katherine Schwarzenegger as they share a giggle while leading star parade at The Garfield Movie premiere in Hollywood

21 minutes ago

Denise Austin's model daughter Katie Austin works up a sweat with pals at Sports Illustrated Swimsuit event celebrating the 2024 issue release

21 minutes ago

Emma Stone and Yorgos Lanthimos will reunite for upcoming conspiracy film Bugonia... after she won an Oscar for starring in his 2023 film Poor Things

22 minutes ago

Anderson Silva to face Chael Sonnen in boxing match on June 15

22 minutes ago

Mets demote Edwin Díaz from closer role amid former All-Star's struggles

22 minutes ago

Saudi Banks in the spotlight, Money Supply rises 8% to an astounding $753 Billion

22 minutes ago

Raiders Preseason Finalized

22 minutes ago

‘Not out of the woods’: Labor government focused on ‘taming inflation’

22 minutes ago

Manoah Was Great, Jays Beat Rays

22 minutes ago

‘Ready to fly’: Race to pull Aussies in riot zone

22 minutes ago

Arsenal fans remain hopeful they might reclaim title next season

22 minutes ago

Maccas introduces ‘hottest-ever’ items

22 minutes ago

Taiwan preparing to inaugurate new president

24 minutes ago

The Best Nicola Coughlan Movies And TV Shows, Ranked

Kênh khám phá trải nghiệm của giới trẻ, thế giới du lịch