Judge sends dispute over permit to trial

STANLY COUNTY, NORTH CAROLINA - A dispute that Alcoa Inc. needs resolved before it can get a new license to operate a series of hydropower dams in the state is headed to trial after a judge rejected requests for a quick decision.

State Administrative Law Judge Joe Webster said he'll need a trial later this month before he can decide the dispute over a certificate issued last year by the Division of Water Quality.

The division certified that if conditions it set were followed, Alcoa's wholly owned subsidiary, Alcoa Power Generating Inc., can operate the dams while protecting nearly 40 miles of the river and its reservoirs.

"Based upon the evidence presented it appears that multiple material and factual issues are in dispute," Webster wrote in his ruling on a request for summary judgment in the case.

Pittsburgh-based Alcoa is fighting to renew an expired license to operate Yadkin River dams built decades ago to supply electricity to an aluminum smelting plant. The Stanly County plant once employed hundreds but is now shuttered.

The fight centers on whether Alcoa can keep selling electricity to high-paying commercial customers. The company estimated in 2006 that the dams generated almost $44 million a year in revenues from hydroelectric power generation, a figure that could multiply as demand for clean power booms.

Gov. Beverly Perdue, her predecessor Mike Easley and Stanly County officials have opposed the company's re-licensing bid. They hope to encourage local job growth attracted by dam-generated electricity and greater freedom to draw river water.

Once the fight over the state certification is settled, the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission could consider renewing the company's license for up to 50 more years.

Related News

Electricity is civilization": Winter looms over Ukraine battlefront

KYIV - On the freshly liberated battlefields of northeast Ukraine, a pile of smashed glass windows outside one Soviet-era block of apartments attests to the violence of six months of Russian occupation, and of Ukraine’s sweeping recent military advances.

Indoors, in cramped apartments, residents lived in the dark for weeks on end.

Now, with a hard winter looming, they marvel at the speed and urgency with which Ukrainian officials have restored another key ingredient to their survival: electric power.\

Among those things governments strive to provide are security, opportunity, and minimal comfort. With winter approaching, and Russia targeting Ukraine’s infrastructure,…

READ MORE
U.S. Ends Support for Ukraine’s Energy Grid Restoration

U.S. Ends Support for Ukraine’s Energy Grid Restoration

READ MORE

berlin pv industry

Berlin urged to remove barriers to PV

READ MORE

hydro one building

Hydro One shares jump 5.7 per cent after U.S. regulators reject $6.7B takeover

READ MORE

new jersey powerlines

New Jersey, New York suspending utility shut-offs amid coronavirus pandemic

READ MORE