Power rates could go up 33 per cent

JACKSON, MISSISSIPPI - Mississippi Power Company revealed a glimpse of how building a $2.8-billion Kemper County lignite coal power plant would affect power bills in the state, including the Coast.

After meeting with the state Public Service Commission for an entire week, answering questions about the mounds of data the company has compiled to make its case for building the plant, company officials said rates would increase about 33 percent over the next 10 years.

They also said that building or buying an alternate way to generate the additional power it will need in the coming years would have required the same size increase.

Company spokeswoman Cindy Duvall has said throughout the week that the Kemper County IGCC plant is very much the companyÂ’s first choice.

After four days of panel discussions between the PSC and Mississippi Power, the PSC is now listening to public comment.

The Coast Sierra Club is sending a bus to the public hearing and leaders of that group have said their biggest concerns relating to the Coast are the rate hike and mining about 18 square miles of Kemper County, which is in the watershed area of the Pascagoula River basin.

Duvall said in a written statement that the rate increase would pay for the cost of generating new power and meeting more stringent environmental standards.

“However, with the Kemper project, rates will begin to stabilize” after 10 years, she said, “because of significant fuel savings.”

She said the company estimated those savings at $200 to $400 million a year. The alternate, a natural gas powered plant, she said would subject the company to the more volatile cost of natural gas.

“In just the last four months,” she said, “the price of natural gas has increased 131 percent.”

She said Mississippi Power told the PSC, “the Kemper County project, using Mississippi lignite, provides the greatest value at the lowest risk for more than 40 years.”

Lignite is a soft coal that would be mined at a depth of about 80 feet in close proximity to the power plant in Kemper County.

The Legislature has cleared the way for Mississippi Power to increase rates before the plant is built in order to help pay for the construction. After the hearings, the PSC has until May 1 to make a decision.

The PSC ruled in the fall that Mississippi Power needs to generate more power by 2014.

Related News

powerlines

Quebec authorizes nearly 1,000 megawatts of electricity for 11 industrial projects

MONTREAL - The Quebec government has unveiled the list of 11 companies whose projects were given the go-ahead for large-scale power connections of 5 megawatts or more, for a total of 956 MW.

Five of the selected projects relate to the battery sector, and two to the bioenergy sector.

TES Canada's plan to build a green hydrogen production plant in Shawinigan, announced on Friday, is on the list.

Hydro-Québec will also supply 5 MW or more to the future Northvolt plant at its facilities in Saint-Basile-le-Grand and McMasterville.

Other industrial projects selected are those of Air Liquide Canada, Ford-Ecopro CAM Canada S.E.C, Nouveau monde…

READ MORE
wind solar record

Wind and Solar Double Global Share of Electricity in Five Years

READ MORE

lightning bolts

Big prizes awarded to European electricity prediction specialists

READ MORE

LNG powered with electricity could be boon for B.C.'s independent power producers

READ MORE

solar power graph

Solar Becomes #3 Renewable Electricity Source In USA

READ MORE