Canadian Manufacturing

Montana coal-fired power plant to shut down

by Matthew Brown, The Associated Press   

Canadian Manufacturing
Human Resources Operations Sustainability Infrastructure Oil & Gas


Owner cites high cost of meeting new emissions regulations; Recent spate of closings has forced down coal prices

BILLINGS, Mont.—The J.E. Corette coal-fired power plant in Billings will shut down in August, its owner said, making it the latest casualty in a wave of closures across the country that have left the coal industry reeling.

The 153-megawatt plant owned by PPL Montana has operated since 1968 along the Yellowstone River. It burns coal from Wyoming’s Powder River Basin.

PPL had announced plans in 2012 to mothball the 30-worker plant this spring and restart it if market conditions improved.

But PPL spokesman David Hoffman said a recent re-analysis showed a temporary shutdown no longer made economic sense.

Advertisement

The projected cost to resume power generation at Corette had increased to more than $40 million, he said, as weak electricity markets in the Pacific Northwest were keeping down profits.

The cost of a re-start stemmed primarily from the expense of new pollution controls needed to meet federal restrictions on emissions of mercury and other toxins produced by burning coal.

By the end of decade, the mercury restrictions and competition from cheap natural gas are expected to bring the retirement of coal plants across the country that generate more than 60,000 megawatts of power, according to the Energy Information Administration. That’s the equivalent of roughly 390 Corette-sized plants.

A megawatt provides power for roughly 600 to 1,000 houses, depending on how much electricity the dwellings use.

The plant closures are further dampening demand for coal from U.S. mines. About 966 million tons of coal will be mined in the U.S. this year, the lowest volume since 1993, according to projections and historical records.

Hoffman declined to reveal what mine serves Corette, saying it was proprietary information.

It was uncertain how many of Corette’s workers will be out of a job. Some have already been transferred to new positions within the company, Hoffman said. Others could retire early.

The pollution restrictions cited by PPL, known as the Mercury and Air Toxics Standards, predate Obama’s presidency and have been in the works since 1994, when the EPA first agreed to consider new restrictions on certain pollutants from power plants.

After Corette closes, it will be demolished and its grounds remediated over the next two years, Hoffman said. No toxic coal ash was stored on the site, which will make any cleanup easier, he said.

It was uncertain what would happen to the ownership of the site.

Advertisement

Stories continue below

Print this page

Related Stories