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Coal Country: EPA Plan Is Short Term Boost, No Solution For Industry Decline

The Dry Fork Station coal-fired power plant in Gillette, Wyo., supplies electricity across the West.
Matthew Brown
/
AP
The Dry Fork Station coal-fired power plant in Gillette, Wyo., supplies electricity across the West.

The Trump's administration's proposal to relax regulations on carbon emissions is welcome news in coal producing states like Wyoming, even as people in the industry acknowledge its impact would be limited.

"Coal fired power plants are a necessity to keep the... electricity grid stable in America," says Tom Stalcup, plant manager at the Dry Fork Station coal-fired power plant in Gillette. Large open-pit mines dot the plant's perimeter, and the light-blue building rumbles as electricity flows to states across the West.

Like many here — where the coal industry produces nearly aquarter of the state's income — Stalcup worried the Obama-era Clean Power Plan would have forced plants to close. It set targets for states to reduce carbon emissions, and aimed to remake the power grid with a large-scale shift away from coal to renewable power like wind and solar. Two dozen states, including Wyoming, challenged the Clean Power Plan as exceeding the Environmental Protection Agency's authority, and a court held up the rule before it could take effect.

The Trump administration's newproposal, called the Affordable Clean Energy rule, would give states more power to regulate carbon emissions. It doesn't set any cap for emissions, but simply suggests ways that individual plants could become more efficient. In Wyoming, that's providing new hope that some coal plants might stay open longer.

"It'll keep some of the plants on," manager Stalcup says. "I don't know as if it will keep all of them on."

One technical tweak that could make a difference is a change in what's called New Source Review. It was meant to make sure that as coal plants expand or retrofit, they also install the latest, most effective pollution controls. But that can cost hundreds of millions of dollars.

The Trump administration wants to relax this, allowing plants to make minor emissions control changes without having to do a full, bank-breaking environmental upgrade.

"It maybe creates a little bit more of an incentive to invest in some coal-fired power plants, to keep them open a little longer than they might have been otherwise," says Rob Godby, of the University of Wyoming Center for Energy Economics and Public Policy.

Environmental groups point out this would be bad for public health, as it would increase air pollution from coal plants. In fact, those plants most likely to benefit from the change are some of the country's oldest, and dirtiest. The E.P.A.'s own projection finds that its new proposal would mean up to 1,400 more premature deaths every year, 48,000 new cases of "exacerbated asthma," and at least 21,000 more missed days of school.

The economic reality of coal's decline

But energy analyst Godby says it would only make sense to extend the life of "a very small number" of plants, because coal's real problem is economic.

"Coal fired power plants have to compete directly with [cheaper] natural gas plants and renewables, where they're already losing," he says. "This plan really isn't going to affect that."

Over the past decade, coal's share of the country's energy mix has dropped from just over half to about a third. According toS & P Global Market Intelligence, utilities plan to close about three dozen more coal units by 2020, and many say they don't expect that to change despite the new proposal.

Cloud Peak Energy, the country's third largest coal producer, welcomes the regulatory rollback. But Rick Curtsinger, director of public affairs, says more could still be done to protect the coal industry. He says the company would even like to see Congress step in, with legislation "that gives long-term certainty to utilities to make the 20 and 30 year investments necessary."

It's not clear what, exactly, that would mean. But the Trump administration has repeatedly raised theidea of subsidizing struggling coal and nuclear plants.

The administration's Affordable Clean Energy proposal is open for public comment. If it takes effect, environmental groups and some states are threatening a legal challenge.

Gillette Mayor Louise Carter-King says the plan would really be just a short-term boost. What's more, she says, regulation of carbon emissions could be stepped up again after the next presidential election.

"It's that uncertainty that's tough on people and the industry," she says.

Utilities are also mindful of that uncertainty, another reason President Trump's latest lifeline to the coal industry may not change much.

Copyright 2018 Wyoming Public Radio

Cooper McKim has reported for NPR stations in Connecticut, Massachusetts, South Carolina, and now Wyoming. In South Carolina, he covered recovery efforts from a devastating flood in 2015. Throughout his time, he produced breaking news segments and short features for national NPR. Cooper recently graduated from Tufts University with degrees in Environmental Policy and Music. He's an avid jazz piano player, backpacker, and podcast listener.
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