Duke retires four coal plants, builds two gas plants

Subscribe to Electricity Today magazine for digital issues, expert content, training courses, and live forums delivered straight to your inbox!

State regulators approved Duke Energy Corp. plans to build two new natural gas plants - operations the utility says it needs to meet growing power demand in the Carolinas.

The plants, which could produce a combined 1,240 megawatts, would be located at the Dan River coal-fired plant in Rockingham and the Buck coal-fired site in Rowan County.

Duke would retire four aging coal-fired units, two at each site, after the new gas units are up-and-running, according to the ruling today from the N.C. Utilities Commission. Duke currently uses coal and nuclear to meet about 98 percent of its power needs in the Carolinas.

With approval for new nuclear plants in doubt and the widespread unpopularity of new coal-fired projects, the Charlotte-based utility has turned to natural gas to help it meet intermediate demand.

Duke says natural gas adds more diversity to its fleet and that it would need the plants regardless of nuclear and coal options. The once-popular option has fallen into its own disfavor because of its unpredictable price, which can spike because of hurricanes and other supply issues.

Duke says the plants would serve a specific need. But the plants can be built in just a few years, compared to decade or longer for other plants. They are also cheaper to build and emit far less carbon dioxide than coal-fired plants.

The gas is blamed as a cause of global warming.

Related News

bill quinlan

Groups clash over NH hydropower project

BANGOR, MAINE - Groups supporting and opposing the Northern Pass hydropower project in New Hampshire filed statements Friday in advance of a state committee’s meeting next week on whether it should rehear the project.

The Site Evaluation Committee rejected Eversource’s project last month over concerns about potential negative impacts. It is scheduled to deliberate Monday on Eversource’s request for a rehearing.

The $1.6 billion project would deliver hydropower from Canada to customers in southern New England through a 192-mile transmission line in New Hampshire.

If the Northern Pass project fails to ultimately win New Hampshire approval, the Massachusetts Department of Energy Resources has…

READ MORE
us power grid

Russian hackers accessed US electric utilities' control rooms

READ MORE

Ontario utilities team up to warn customers about ongoing scams

READ MORE

texas snow storm

"It's freakishly cold": Deep freeze slams American energy sector

READ MORE

wind power jobs

Leading Offshore Wind Conference to Launch National Job Fair

READ MORE