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AES plans multiple coal plant retirements

  • Market: Coal, Electricity, Emissions
  • 14/05/13

Washington, 14 May (Argus) — Two midwest subsidiaries of AES plan to retire nearly 1,200MW of fossil fuel-fired capacity by 2015-2016 instead of installing emissions controls to meet upcoming environmental regulations.

Indiana Power & Light (IPL) will retire 617MW of coal- and oil-fired capacity by April 2016 and Dayton Power & Light (DPL) will retire 365MW of coal-fired capacity by June 2015, AES said in quarterly earnings filings submitted last week to federal regulators.

IPL plans to retire all six units at its 335MW Eagle Valley Station and will either retire or refuel four units totaling 282MW at its Harding Street Station. The 10 units, which came into service between 1941-1961, represent 18pc of IPL's total generation capacity and will be replaced by a 650MW natural gas-fired combined cycle plan near Martinsville, Indiana.

IPL estimates the new gas-fired plant will reduce SO2, NOx and particulate matter emissions by up to 98pc below current levels. The 10 IPL units emitted 24,237 short tons of SO2 and 2,128st of NOx last year, according to preliminary data from the Environmental Protection Agency.

Plans for the new gas-fired power plant were submitted to the Indiana Utility Regulatory Commission on 1 May. IPL has not yet heard back from the commission on whether its plans to convert Harding Street Units 5 and 6 from burning coal to natural gas will be approved. Coal made up 86pc of IPL's total capacity in 2007, but the company said natural gas, wind and solar could rise to 44pc of its generation portfolio by 2017.

The total estimated cost of IPL's new gas-fired power plant and Harding Street projects is $667mn. If approved, the new gas-fired plant is slated to begin commercial operations in April 2017 and the Harding Street refueling projects would be completed in April 2016. If Harding Street units 5 and 6 are not refueled they will “likely” need to be retired because it is not economical to install new pollution controls to comply with EPA's Mercury and Air Toxics Standards.

DPL has notified grid operator PJM that it will retire the six coal-fired units at its Hutchings Station. Hutchings unit 4 is out of service with damage to its turbine and will be retired next month. The five other units will be shuttered in June 2015. Converting the units to burn natural gas was found to be cost-prohibitive.

DPL owns 207MW of a 414MW coal-fired unit at Duke Energy's Beckjord power plant in New Richmond, Ohio, that will also be retired by 1 June 2015. The retiring DPL units emitted a combined 43,410st of SO2 and 4,370st of NOx last year with the vast majority coming from Beckjord unit 6.

DPL does not plan to replace the retiring units.

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