For Immediate Release:
April 24, 2012
Contact: Jenna Garland,
(404) 607-1262 x 222, (404) 281-6398
Whitney Pearson, (405) 826-0241
Sierra Club Applauds Northeastern Coal Plant
Retirement Announcement
Oklahoma
City, OK - Today Sierra Club joins Governor Fallin, Attorney General Scott
Pruitt, US EPA, and American Electric Power subsidiary Public Service Co. of
Oklahoma (AEP-PSO), in announcing an
agreement in principle in pending federal court litigation over the state's
clean air protections. The agreement sets firm
dates for retiring both units at AEP-PSO’s Northeastern coal-fired power plant
near Oologah, Oklahoma. The plant’s retirement is a major victory for public
health in Oklahoma, as reducing the number of coal-fired power plants will both
reduce harmful emissions and will pave the way for clean energy. The Northeastern Plant is the 107th coal plant to retire since the Beyond Coal campaign began.
“Oklahoma
must move beyond coal, and AEP-PSO is taking a strong first step here,” said
Whitney Pearson with Sierra Club. "Today's announcement paves the way for resolving
long-standing public health concerns about PSO's Northeastern coal plant, and
shines a bright spotlight on the other two coal plants owned by OGE.
Litigation over OGE's two coal plants continues."
Pearson
added, “EPA has done a great job here working with a utility to create a
responsible retirement plan. We commend the EPA and Governor Mary Fallin for
their leadership in this settlement. AEP-PSO has set a good example for
OG&E, which is now the biggest polluter in Oklahoma.”
Under the agreement
between the U.S. EPA and Public Services Company of Oklahoma, the first 473
megawatt coal-burning unit at the Northeastern Plant will be retired by
December 31, 2017. The second unit, also 473 megawatts, will remain online but
will have pollution controls installed by December 31, 2017. Between 2017 and
2026, AEP-PSO will dramatically reduce the amount of coal burned at the unit until
it is decommissioned no later than December 31, 2026.
“This retirement
schedule creates ample opportunity for AEP-PSO to prioritize its workers,” said
Charles Wesner, Chair of the Oklahoma Chapter of the Sierra Club. “Sierra Club
calls on AEP-PSO to keep existing workers employed while decommissioning the
plant and strive to keep as many workers as possible employed in new, clean
energy projects in Oklahoma. With our tremendous wind, solar, and energy
efficiency potential, AEP-PSO should be able to create jobs and keep these
workers employed.”
Currently, Oklahoma has
six coal-fired power plants that collectively emit significant amounts of soot,
smog, and mercury pollution. Coal-fired power plants are a major contributor of
ozone-forming pollution, and 2011 air quality data has shown that Tulsa and
Oklahoma City exceeded federal limits on ozone pollution, threatening
Oklahoma’s most vulnerable citizens, such as children, the elderly, and people
who work or exercise outdoors. Ozone pollution is worsened during periods of
high temperatures, meaning the summer of 2012 may be one of the worst ozone
seasons in Oklahoma history.
Oklahoma has significant
clean energy potential, which could power the state while protecting public
health. Oklahoma’s wind resources rank ninth in the United States, with more
than 50,000 megawatts of wind power potential. Wind power in Oklahoma supports
thousands of jobs, and according to the National Renewable Energy Laboratory,
wind can provide more than 31 times as much electricity as Oklahoma currently
uses. States such as Alabama are already purchasing Oklahoma wind power.
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