The
state Public Service Commission is gearing up for a big vote later this
week. It's on Georgia Power’s 20-year plan for providing energy to
customers.Used construction machinery The
utility wants to shutter 16 coal- and oil-fired units, but it is
drawing criticism for not including more solar energy and other
renewables in the mix.Banner Pen (Photo Courtesy of turbojoe via Flickr.)
The state Public Service Commission is gearing up for a big vote later this week.skf bearing It's
on Georgia Power’s 20-year plan for providing energy to customers. The
utility wants to shutter 16 coal- and oil-fired units, but it is drawing
criticism for not including more solar energy and other renewables in
the mix. (Photo Courtesy of turbojoe via Flickr.)
Georgia’s
utility regulators will vote Thursday on Georgia Power’s long-range
plan to provide energy for 2.4 million customers and whether to require
the company to incorporate more solar power.Vacuum bottleGeorgia
Power wants to shut down 16 coal- and oil-fired power plants because
it’s too expensive to make them comply with new federal air-pollution
rules. Environmentalists and watchdog groups praise the move. But
they’re critical of the decision not to include more solar power over
the next two decades.Public Service Commissioner Lauren “Bubba” McDonald
has said he wants to require the utility to include more solar in its
plans. Commissioners Tim Echols and Doug Everett favor more solar, too.
But
Georgia Power and Commissioner Stan Wise say the company already has
double the extra capacity required by law.At a hearing on the proposal
in June, Wise asked Georgia Power’s Kyle Leach what would happen if the
PSC ordered the utility to add more solar.“If the company was forced to
buy power and generation in a time when we, say, have 25 percent [extra
capacity], wouldn’t there be significant cost associated with that and
putting upward pressure on rates, regardless of the source of the
generation?” Wise asked.“The potential certainly exists,” responded
Leach, Georgia Power’s director of resource policy and planning.Georgia
Power is adding solar power under a plan announced late last year but
included no more in its 20-year proposal.Advocates like Georgia Watch
say solar is getting cheaper all the time, and the company could reduce
its extra capacity by retiring four more coal units.“We definitely want
to see more renewables in the portfolio. And while we’re pleased to see
the reduction in the use of fossil fuels in the mix, we think there’s
plenty of room for increased wind and solar,Used komatsu” said Liz Coyle, director of Georgia Watch’s consumer energy program.
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