For Immediate Release,
May 30, 2012
Contact:
Sean Sarah, Sierra Club, 202 548-4589,
sean.sarah@sierraclub.org
Kari Birdseye, Earthjustice, 415.217.2098, kbirdseye@earthjustice.org
Patty Wallace, 859 986-1277
American Electric Power
Pulls Billion Dollar Big Sandy Request
Kentuckians No Longer Facing 30% Bill Increase to Clean Up
Coal Plant
Louisa, KY – Today, Kentucky Power, a subsidiary
of American Electric Power, notified the Public Service Commission that it will
withdraw its application to install clean air controls on their Big Sandy coal
fired power plant in Louisa, Kentucky. Big Sandy, a major emitter of multiple
forms of air pollution, needs to be retrofit in order to meet critical clean
air safe guards. Until today, American Electric Power was planning to sink over
a billion dollars into new scrubbers on the plant. However, AEP faced strong
criticism from the local community over a 30% increase in rates that would be
required to finance the upgrades. This rate increase would have taken the
average energy bill for a household from around $1,500 per year to over $2,000
a year.
“I went to
the hearing and listened to AEP explain their plan,” said Patty Wallace, an 82
year old resident of Louisa, Kentucky and member of Kentuckians for the Commonwealth. “Their own presentation showed exactly
why the proposal to invest more money in that old coal plant made no sense. On
top of our existing bills, all of us would have to pay a billion dollars in
surcharges. I said, ‘We’d be fossil fools for sure to do that.’ I’m glad to see that they are beginning to
pay attention to what’s going on in the world. It’s time to invest in energy
efficiency and clean energy.”
Modernizing
our energy fleet is a key component to economic recovery. Investments in clean
energy, substantial clean air and water protections and energy efficiency
programs will create jobs and reinvigorate the economy far faster than
retrofitting a coal fired power plant. In fact, a report from 2011 found that,
over the next five years clean air and water safeguards could create more than
1.5 million jobs around the country. The report by Ceres, called “New Jobs –
Cleaner Air” discovered that every dollar spent ensuring clean air protections
are met has led to between $4 and $8 in economic investment.
“Burdening
Kentuckians with a billion dollar retrofit of an outdated coal plant would be a
bad decision, and we are glad that AEP has realized that,” Said Wallace
McMullen, Energy Chair of the Cumberland Chapter of the Sierra Club. “Kentucky
should be a leader in moving forward to a clean energy future through energy
efficiency and renewables. We should not
be anchoring the Commonwealth to the past with dirty energy. We should all be working together to
transition to a cleaner, healthier economy that provides good jobs and a future
for our children. Closing the Big Sandy is a step in the right direction.”
"Whatever
happens now with the Big Sandy plant, it's critical that AEP focus on providing
a fair transition for its workforce and the Louisa community," said Nachy
Kanfer, an organizer for the Sierra Club. "Now that AEP won't be pouring a
billion dollars into this aging coal plant, the company should prioritize job
creation through local clean energy investments."
Big Sandy,
located in eastern Kentucky and owned by American Electric Power, has been in
operation since 1963. In 2009 it was rated one of the top 50 dirtiest plants in
America and its coal ash pond (where the waste from coal burning is stored) is
considered a risk to human life. Because of this, may local citizens have been
working to transition the plant away from coal-fired power.
“We’re glad
to see Kentucky Power acknowledge what is becoming increasingly clear
throughout the country - that raising electric rates by 30% in order to spend
nearly $1 billion on an aging coal plant makes no sense,” said Shannon Fisk,
Attorney with Earthjustice. “We hope that the company will work to replace Big
Sandy with low-cost energy efficiency, renewable energy resources, and other
cleaner options that will create jobs and save money for Kentuckians.”
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