Oregon forces pollution cuts at PGE's coal-fired plant

subscribe

Oregon's Environmental Quality Commission today approved new rules requiring Portland General Electric to spend $470 million over the next nine years to clean up pollution at its Boardman coal plant.

The unanimous vote ended a multi-year process to reduce haze pollution in scenic and wildlife areas, as required by federal law.

New filters and scrubbers at the Boardman power plant will reduce both acid rain and the haze clouding the Columbia River Gorge, Mount Hood and Hells Canyon.

Combined with plans to reduce mercury emissions, spending on pollution controls will increase rates by 3 percent, PGE predicts.

The National Park Service and a coalition of environmental groups that includes the Sierra Club say the proposal doesn't make PGE go far enough or fast enough.

The Boardman plant, 150 miles east of Portland, is the largest stationary source of sulfur dioxide and nitrogen oxides in Oregon. It also generates a fifth of PGE's power.

It's responsible for more than half of the haze in the eastern gorge at certain times in the winter, a study concluded in 2008. The pollution also contributes to acid rain in the gorge, on Mount Hood and Mount Adams, and increases haze in 10 national parks and wilderness areas, from Hells Canyon to Mount Rainier.

The new plan requires PGE, by 2014, to install updated burners and new scrubbers that will reduce emissions of sulfur dioxide by 80 percent and nitrogen oxides by 46 percent, at a cost of $280 million. That part of the plan is similar to what PGE proposed in 2007.

By 2018, the company will have to install a more advanced catalytic reduction system that would chop nitrogen oxide emissions by 84 percent at a cost of $191 million. That goes beyond PGE's proposal.

The coalition of environmental groups, which is suing PGE to try to force more pollution control, said regulators should set earlier deadlines with all controls installed by 2014. PGE should also be held to pollution reductions of 90 percent or more, the group said.

Related News

towers

Alberta Introduces New Electricity Rules

EDMONTON - The Alberta government is overhauling its electricity regulations, a move aimed at reducing spikes in electricity prices for consumers and businesses. The new rules, set to be introduced this spring, are intended to stabilize the default electricity rate paid by many Albertans.


Background on the Rate of Last Resort

Albertans currently have the option to sign up for competitive contracts with electricity providers. These contracts can sometimes offer lower rates than the default electricity rate, officially known as the Regulated Rate Option (RRO).  However, these competitive rates can fluctuate significantly. Currently, those unable to secure these…

READ MORE
andrew cuomo

New York State Moratorium on Utility Disconnections During Emergencies

READ MORE

Two-thirds of the U.S. is at risk of power outages this summer

READ MORE

houston substation

Electric Cooperatives, The Lone Shining Utility Star Of The Texas 2021 Winter Storm

READ MORE

Cape Town settlement

Does Providing Electricity To The Poor Reduce Poverty? Maybe Not

READ MORE