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Coal Power Plant Debate

Nevada Power reached a settlement with the Environmental Protection Department on pollution from its Reid-Gardner coal-fired plant, shown in 2007, near Moapa.

Photo by Sam Morris / Las Vegas Sun

Nevada Power reached a settlement with the Environmental Protection Department on pollution from its Reid-Gardner coal-fired plant, shown in 2007, near Moapa.

Nevada is shaping up as the battle ground for a decision on the future of electric generation in the United States. But it’s not nuclear power and Yucca Mountain being debated this time. Instead Nevada is at the center of the debate over coal-fired power plants, which provide about half the nation’s electricity.

Are EPA coal emission standards strict enough?

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Three new plants are proposed for the Silver State, and environmental groups say their effects would be deadly to both the environment and to human health. They also say the tide is turning against coal, as evidenced by the 59 coal plant plans canceled, abandoned, or put on hold last year - despite a resurgence in coal plant proposals earlier this decade. They also point to Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid’s outspoken opposition to new coal plants as an advantage.

But utilities and power plant developers say coal will be necessary to keep neon lights bright and air conditioners whirring in rapidly-growing Las Vegas as well as other parts of the desert Southwest. They say coal is an important part of their plan to provide cheap, reliable power.

Environmentalists, on the other hand, say new demands for power can be met with renewable energy, including Nevada’s rich solar and geothermal resources, and with energy conservation. They also question whether coal will really provide low-cost power, as the price tags for new plants rise and Congress debates potentially costly carbon caps and taxes.

Meanwhile, proposals for the three plants in Nevada march on. Two 1,500 megawatt plants are proposed outside Ely, in White Pine County, and another 750 megawatt plant is proposed near Mesquite in Clark County. The plants all face several regulatory hurdles – including approval by Nevada’s Environmental Protection Division and the federal Bureau of Land Management – before construction on a new generation of coal power can begin.

Together, they could power about 2.8 million average single-family homes and would produce more than 30 million tons per year of the greenhouse gas carbon dioxide.

Phoebe Sweet

Archive highlights

No small worry

Fri, Mar 7, 2008

Opponents of the coal-fired power plants proposed for Nevada say one of the public’s biggest concerns should be the tiny particles that will come out of the plants’ smokestacks. The ...

We all need power, but in Mesquite, priority is clean air

Thu, Feb 7, 2008

Hundreds of people are expected to rally tonight at Mesquite City Hall in opposition to construction of a coal-fired power plant in nearby Lincoln County, in the latest showdown over ...

More help urged for ‘green’ energy

Mon, Jan 28, 2008

Almost lost in the public debate over coal-fired power versus renewable energy is how to get both kinds of power from the plants where it’s produced to the cities where ...

Coal plant debate intensifies

Wed, Jan 23, 2008

More than 200 people turned out for a public meeting in Ely this month to alternately laud and condemn the construction of a coal-fired power plant, which was proposed by ...

All stories

Another foe of coal

Thu, Jan 17, 2008

The superintendent of the Great Basin National Park has joined those who are opposing a large coal-fired power plant project proposed near Ely.

Utilities push to grow but know little about how to keep air clean

Tue, Dec 18, 2007

As debate over solutions to global warming rages here and in Congress, carbon jargon has started to fly.

Editorial: Protect a great park

Wed, Dec 12, 2007

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid is pushing to insert a provision into Congress' spending bill that would increase federal protection of Great Basin National Park's air quality and, as a ...

PROGRESS (AT A PRICE)

Fri, Dec 7, 2007

As debate over construction of coal-fired power plants in Nevada rages on and new costs pile up, it remains unclear to regulators, environmentalists and even utility executives how expensive new ...

Letter: Cleaner air leads to cleaner bill of health

Mon, Nov 5, 2007

As a parent I find this ridiculous, but I am also concerned that we are failing to focus our attention on keeping our children healthy so they don't need treatment ...

Lack of emissions rules didn't stop Kansas from acting

Sat, Nov 3, 2007

Environmentalists call it a watershed moment.

CO2 rules still in the air

Sat, Nov 3, 2007

Conspicuously absent from a draft air permit Nevada's Environmental Protection Division approved this week were two words: carbon dioxide.

Jon Ralston on the latest twist in Nevada's coal debate

Fri, Oct 26, 2007

"Keep Nevada's Lights on with Clean Coal," declares the newspaper ad that ran north, south and in rural Nevada last weekend. The copy contains fun facts about coal - it ...

Industry's new push: Rethink and embrace coal

Wed, Oct 10, 2007

Click here for a printable graphic.

REID'S WILY POWER PLAY

Sat, Oct 6, 2007

From utility executives to environmentalists to politicians, everyone agrees that renewable energy will play a major role in Nevada's future.

Jon Ralston on why Sierra Power's head honcho is taking on Reid over renewables

Wed, Sep 26, 2007

So when the man in the black hat, Michael Yackira, the chief executive of Nevada Power's parent, Sierra Pacific Resources, said he would come on "Face to Face" to answer ...

Editorial: Clouding the issue

Wed, Sep 12, 2007

Editorial: Clouding the issue

Gibbons stokes coal-fired plants

Tue, Sep 11, 2007

The state's Environmental Protection Division has the authority to regulate greenhouse gas emissions, but environmentalists say pressure from Gov. Jim Gibbons to permit three coal-fired power plants before year-end will ...

Somebody should watchdog, but who?

Wed, Sep 5, 2007

Government, that great creator of process, a champion of dotting its i's and crossing its t's, can appear awkward when trying to follow its own rules.

'Clean' coal sounds prettier than it smells

Sat, Aug 25, 2007

When does something dirty become clean?

Videos

Face to Face: Are Nevada Power and Sierra Pacific doing enough?
Face to Face: Are Nevada Power and Sierra Pacific doing enough?
Why is Nevada Power's parent company determined to build coal-fired power plants in Nevada when ...
Face to Face: Coal-hearted
Face to Face: Coal-hearted
Is coal the best option for affordable energy in Nevada? Jon talks with a prponent ...