Article
published Aug 2, 2007
Nevada governor back coal-fired power
Gov.
Jim Gibbons isnÕt joining U.S. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid in condemning
three proposed coal-fired power plants in rural Nevada that would supply
electricity to Las Vegas.
Although
coal plants long have been criticized for the pollutants they spew into the
air, the Republican governor said new technology Òminimizes the production of
carbon dioxide or greenhouse gas emission.Ó
Reid,
D-Nev., said he opposes the coal-fired plants in White Pine and Lincoln
counties because they would produce millions of tons of pollution. As an
alternative, he wants the state to consider renewable forms of energy and
improved energy efficiency.
ÒIÕm
anxious to see the alternatives proposed by Sen. Reid for the coal plants,Ó
Gibbons said. ÒIÕve been proposing all along that we look at developing
geothermal, solar and wind energy.Ó
Both Sierra Pacific Resources
and LS Power of New Jersey want to build coal-fired power plants near Ely, in
White Pine County, while Sithe Global Power LLC of New York is planning a plant
near Mesquite, in Lincoln County. All three would ship power to Southern
Nevada.
Sierra Pacific Resources, which owns Nevada Power Co. in
Las Vegas and Sierra Pacific Power Co. in Reno, asked the state Public
Utilities Commission for permission to move forward on developing a plant near
Ely.
In January, the PUC approved Sierra Pacific spending $300
million for development, but said the utility could spend only slightly more
than half that amount until it receives an air quality permit from the state.
The commission found that Sierra Pacific was Òactively engagedÓ
in assessing new pollution control technology. The coal plant, the agency
added, for now is the Òbest option to provide an adequate supply of electricity
at a predictable price with acceptable environmental impacts.Ó
Reid has suggested the money, rather than being spent on new coal
plants, could be used to install solar energy units on hundreds of thousands of
homes in Nevada.
His opposition to the coal plants drew praise
from environmental groups while representatives of the companies planning the
projects defended them as necessary given the explosive growth in the
Southwest, especially in Las Vegas, and scheduled shutdowns of older
plants.
A decision on LS PowerÕs application, filed in December
2005, could be made by the end of this year. Decisions on Sierra Pacific and
Sithe Global, whose applications were received in February, wonÕt come until
2008.