July 8, 2009

Everyone must sacrifice on coal plant...

Check out this Op-ed put out from The State paper. Do you agree or disagree with several of the points listed? Do you think it's the best approach to Santee Cooper's coal?

The State
Opinion
Everyone must sacrifice on coal plant
July 8, 2009

ENVIRONMENTALISTS rightly complain that a new coal-powered electricity-generating plant in the Pee Dee would spew too many poisons into the air and contribute to global climate change, and they make a strong case when they argue that a proposed federal law to regulate greenhouse emissions would significantly impact the financial assumptions behind the Santee Cooper proposal.

Clearly, we would be better off if we could avoid building yet another coal-powered electricity generating plant, in the Pee Dee or anywhere else.

But our overpowering addiction to power leaves us struggling to strike a balance between providing needed energy and protecting the environment. With power relatively cheap in South Carolina, there’s too little incentive to cut back. We love the comfort and convenience of air conditioning in the summer and heat in the winter. And perhaps in part because of Santee Cooper’s status as a largely unregulated state-owned utility, the company — and our state — is in a box:

We might be able to generate enough power — through a combination of recession-induced consumption cut-backs, increased energy efficiency and conservation measures, more aggressive alternative energy programs and perhaps even purchasing energy from other companies — to supply the needs of our still-growing state until a new nuclear plant that Santee Cooper and SCE&G hope to build can come online.

The problem is that “might” isn’t a responsible plan for something as crucial as energy, which our state has an outsized appetite for, or as dicey as building energy plants on schedule. The long lead time required to get any sort of large-scale energy-generation facility up and running means that work must go forward now to ensure that we don’t run short on power in a few years. So we simply cannot say “no” to the coal plant.

But that is not the end of the conversation. The fact is that while we have to have energy, and energy has to come from somewhere, we must find ways to reduce the environmental and health problems caused by our most reliable energy-production means. (We also have to come up with ways to reduce our dependence on foreign oil — which poses slightly different hurdles but can be addressed by similar types of responses.)

In the long term, whether this plant is ever built or not, we as a state must develop a multi-pronged approach to energy that includes conservation as well as traditional and new energy sources. And in the short term, we are convinced that the responsible way through the problem that Santee Cooper says our state is facing will require that all of us make — or at least be willing to make — some sacrifices:

1. Santee Cooper should continue work on its coal plant, but it should be prepared and willing to delay or even abandon its plans if the growth in energy demand slows enough that it can be met until a nuclear plant can come online — and state officials should find a way to ensure follow-through. This means the company could end up throwing money down a rat hole, but that cost would be insignificant compared to the cost ratepayers would face if indeed the financial legs are knocked out from under the plant — not to mention the health and environmental cost of a coal plant that could have been avoided.

2. Everybody who opposes the coal plant needs to throw their support behind the nuclear plant, in order to avoid delays and speed up approval and construction. That doesn’t mean simply giving up their opposition — which in itself would be a huge step forward for many environmental groups and individuals. It means actively and aggressively supporting the rapid approval and start-up of the plant before regulatory bodies and lawmakers. People who don’t like nuclear are going to have to come to terms with the fact that it’s the only option capable of significantly reducing our reliance on coal in the foreseeable future; you can’t say no to both.

3. Santee Cooper — and all of its competitors, for that matter — needs to work more aggressively to promote energy conservation, and the groups and individuals who oppose the coal plant need to do the same, leading by example. The same is true for the development and use of alternative energy. The reason we’re not seeing the growth we need in either conservation or alternative energy is that both come at a high price (at least initially), in terms of inconvenience and/or start-up costs. People who oppose the development of other big-ticket energy sources have an even greater obligation than we all have to put their money where their mouths are.

Meantime, state lawmakers need to consider whether we’d be in a better situation if Santee Cooper had to go through the same vetting process for its plans as SCE&G, Duke Energy and Progress Energy. The theory is that Santee Cooper doesn’t need to be regulated by the Public Service Commission because they both are part of the same state government. It’s a theory that might make sense in a normal government — one that works together as a whole, under the leadership of the governor. We do not have such a government. The PSC is independent. Santee Cooper is even more independent. And unlike municipal utilities that don’t have to answer to the PSC, Santee Cooper is not even indirectly accountable to the public, since the Legislature passed a law forbidding the governor to remove his own appointees to the board.

That examination — along with the larger discussion about creating an “all-of-the-above” energy plan for our state — is the only way to avoid a repeat of what is essentially an energy version of “too big to fail.”

To read this article, click here

Some exciting news!

The Letter To the Editor I spoke of earlier in June, previously published in the Florence Morning News (SCNow), has now been published in The State paper. Also to come are other op-eds and letters. We have received good media coverage!

Who really controls DHEC?

I want to preface Sammy Fretwell's article, "S.C. lawmakers not shy about contacting DHEC," with a timeline of Santee Cooper's involvement with the South Carolina Department of Health and Environmental Control (DHEC). Let's throw all the cards out on the table to get the best image possible. Here's the Santee Cooper's permit timeline thus far in 2009:
  • Department of Natural Resources sends letter to DHEC Board opposing the coal plant
  • Governor Sanford holds press conference announcing his opposition to the coal plant
  • DHEC Board reviews Santee Cooper air permit, votes 4-2 to uphold staff decision.
  • Majority of board members publicly state their opposition to the coal plant, but state they
    feel constrained by law to uphold permit
    .
  • Ron Calcaterra, CEO of Central Electric Cooperative publishes proposal to avoid construction of the coal plant, highlighting: nuclear power, energy efficiency, and statewide resource planning.
  • Southern Environmental Law Center appeals DHEC air permit on behalf of League and four other organizations.
  • Coastal Conservation League releases An Assessment of Santee Cooper’s 2008 Resource Planning, a study done by Synapse Energy Economics. The study concludes: “Santee Cooper’s plan to build two large coal plants encompasses significant financial risks for ratepayers, emerges from a flawed planning process, and is not a necessary course of action.”
  • Santee Cooper issues $366,195,000 bond offering.
  • Santee Cooper announces rate hikes to meet revenue obligations stemming part from plans to build coal plant. Holds public hearings on new rates.
  • Santee Cooper Board meeting to consider public comments on rate increase.

The bullet points are some of this year's largest and most important decisions affecting the permits for Santee Cooper's coal plant. Certainly Santee Cooper has had its way with DHEC to an extent, for even evidence shows the permit DHEC issued in February, the air quality permit, essentially approves Santee Cooper's coal pollution, particularly mercury. On our 2009 summer stretch -- Santee Cooper has not made its Environmental Impact Statement, although the utility received an air quality permit, and the League's appeal of the air quality permit is now at the state Administrative Law Court.

In the following article, Sammy Fretwell conveys the pressures that our state's Representatives put upon DHEC. He does a job well done. The article includes both sides of the argument - one showing that legislators are in fact influencing DHEC's decisions and the other portraying the vice. So what do you think? The article, however, due to its length, has been cut to particular pieces. Please check out the article in full by clicking on the link at the bottom of this post.

The State
S.C. lawmakers not shy about contacting DHEC
Sammy Fretwell

July 6, 2009

[Some] think legislators are sure to influence DHEC decisions in a state where the General Assembly wields more power than legislatures in many other states.

"You get a powerful state senator ... and you are a bureaucrat at DHEC, you are going to be very reluctant to cross swords with that guy," said John Crangle, state director of the government watchdog group Common Cause. "He has a lot of ways he can make your life miserable and a lot of ways he can make your life easier."

Jimmy Chandler, an environmental attorney who has had a successful career challenging DHEC permit decisions, said the agency is particularly susceptible to political influence because it has been run by former agency lobbyists for two decades.

"When you are a lobbyist, you want to make legislators happy," Chandlersaid.

And, some say because of the size of DHEC, there is potentially a lot of constituent service for lawmakers to perform.

DHEC, South Carolina's fifth-largest agency, touches more lives than most other state agencies.

The department, with about 4,000 employees, is responsible for more than 150 health and environmental programs. That includes regulating tattoo parlors, issuing birth certificates, approving water and air pollution permits and overseeing hospital expansions.

-------

When asked, lawmakers say they never pressure DHEC to issue permits or make other decisions.

More often than not, legislators say, they're getting information from DHEC to pass on to constituents or they're putting constituents in touch with the agency. It's no different than with other state agencies, they say.

"I sort of see that as our role, to be a liaison between our constituents and agencies," Sen. Brad Hutto, D-Orangeburg, said.

Legislative influence on DHEC surfaced last year in a series of stories by The State newspaper over missteps at the agency. Legislators, for instance, like Hunter so much that in the 2007-08 state budget they included a proviso making it harder for the DHEC governing board to oust him, the newspaper found.

A federal lawsuit filed in November also raised questions about lawmakers' influence on agency decisions. Former agency investigator Chris Phillips claimed a state elected official interfered in a criminal probe of illegal dumping. Sen. Jake Knotts, R Lexington, denied interfering, but said he contacted DHEC to complain about the investigator's conduct.

Despite Gov. Mark Sanford's recent personal troubles and unpopularity with lawmakers, environmentalist Dana Beach said putting DHEC in agovernor's Cabinet would make the agency more accountable and less susceptible to lawmakers' influence. The agency is overseen by a part-time, seven-member board the governor appoints but has no power to control.

Concerns about DHEC's effectiveness prompted Sens. Phil Leventis,D-Sumter, and John Courson, R-Richland, to introduce a bill putting the governor in charge. Hearings are expected to be held this fall.

--------

State law generally does not bar a legislator from calling agency staffers or the board about a pending permit. There are restrictions, however, on an elected official who is acting as an individual's personal representative or an elected official who stands to gain himself.

In Ford's case, the meeting he tried to arrange between Hunter and developer Bobby Ginn never materialized because of scheduling conflicts. Ginn never built the project, slated for the site of an old landfill in downtown Charleston. The State newspaper's attempts to reach Ginn were unsuccessful.

Although Hunter said he rarely feels pressure from lawmakers, the Ford request for a dinner meeting made the commissioner uncomfortable.

"He would just prefer to meet them either in his office or some where else, rather than combining it with some kind of social event," agency spokesman Thom Berry said.

DHEC officials insist they base decisions on the facts in a case, but an e-mail last year shows political connections aren't ignored.

--------

It would be wrong to think that legislators in other states or the federal level don't contact agencies about similar matters, legal experts say.

But agencies in South Carolina are prone to feel more pressure to please lawmakers because the state has a weak governor and strong legislature, Crangle, many environmentalists and some legal scholars say.

State law, for instance, allows the Legislature to block from becoming law regulations DHEC says are important to protect health and the environment. Only 16 other states have that same kind of authority.

Kim Diana Connolly, a professor at the University of South Carolina law school, said South Carolina's system isn't practical.

"What on paper looks like a good system ends up hampering the ability of experts," she said.

Environmentalist Dana Beach said Hunter shouldn't be fielding lawmakers' calls on specific cases. Those calls could be routed through an agency spokesman who's not involved in the decision-making process but who could pass concerns along to employees, Beach said.

Even in South Carolina, some agencies have more protection from legislative influence, some say.

Unlike DHEC, agencies such as the Department of Corrections are run by a Cabinet secretary the governor appoints. DHEC is controlled by a board the governor chooses, but has no direct authority over once members are seated.

Jon Ozmint, director at the state Department of Corrections, said legislators sometimes tell him to interview constituents for jobs. Being a Cabinet agency head makes him better able to withstand those legislative pressures, he said.

If he weren't a Cabinet agency head, Ozmint said, "I do believe the pressure would be much greater to go along and get along."

To read the full article, click here

July 7, 2009

Become a renewable energy and energy-efficiency sensei

Mother Jones
The Green-Belt Movement
Gary Moskowitz May/June 2008 Issue

White belt: No-brainers: Switch to CFL bulbs. Turn off lights when you leave the room. Set the thermostat to 68° in winter, 78° in summer. Turn down the water heater to 120°. Wash clothes in cold water and air or line dry them. Use rechargeable batteries. Recycle. Compost. Take mass transit. Ride your bike. Carpool. Drive 55. Walk to the store. Set your fridge to 37°. Set your freezer to 5° and keep it full (use containers filled with water). Turn off the dry cycle on your dishwasher. If it's yellow, let it mellow. Unplug "energy vampires" like TVs, DVD players, and iPod chargers when not in use.

Yellow belt: (Some assembly required): Install motion-activated light switches. Use low-flow showerheads. Use a power-consumption meter to track down energy vampires. Choose a power supplier that uses renewable energy. Support renewable power by paying a premium on your electric bills ("green pricing"). Insulate your home. Eat local. Use a laptop. Learn to drive stick.

Green belt: Kill a watt: Convert your fridge to run on propane. Switch your home energy source from electric to gas. Use a solar oven. Buy only Energy Star-rated appliances. Get a front-loading washing machine. Install an on-demand water heater. Install double-glazed windows, or retrofit old ones. Apply for a "green mortgage" and get lower interest rates for your energy-efficient home.

Brown belt: Technical knockouts: Install a gray-water system...or two-stage flush toilets...or composting toilets. Use "daylighting" products such as solar tubes, and a parabolic reflector. Install photovoltaic panels on your roof. Install a condensing boiler for central heat. Get motorized combustion air dampers. Replace your fireplace with a high-efficiency woodstove. Power your fridge with cold air from outside with a Freeaire system. Replace your furnace and AC with a geothermal heat pump—and
upgrade it to heat your water.

Black belt: You have the power: Convert your hybrid to a plug-in. Use your solar array to sell power back to the grid on sunny days. Produce your own energy from biogas. Get yourself a wind turbine.

To read this article, click here

July 6, 2009

Santee Cooper Needs to Catch-Up

So where is Santee Cooper in the renewable and sustainable energy arena? What's your status Santee Cooper? Duke Energy is boosting itself into the renewable market. The utility will have 7 wind-farm projects by next week while Santee Cooper intends to build another coal plant that will further suppress South Carolina's natural resources and extend our dependency on coal. Santee Cooper has the ability to build coal plants, but Santee Cooper cannot rebuild our rivers, creeks, sky, marshland, wildlife, and human lives. Can the utility rebuild your Pee Dee River? Currently, the only construction Santee Cooper has in mind is the coal plant and nothing else. The utility, yes has begun investing in alternatives...gradually. For instance, only testing our Carolina's winds, not using them as alternatives. Get this, with Santee Cooper's recent mini-bond sale, the utility projects to build at least 2 coal plants by 2017, which Santee Cooper stated in its "Resource Plan/Mini Bond Information" publication on October 8th 2008. Why can't Santee Cooper lead like Duke? The utility is misleading the public, claiming on its website, "Our company's mission is to be the state's leading resource for improving the quality of life for the people of South Carolina. One of the chief ways we do that is by protecting our environment. Our environmental efforts are core to our company's vision and beliefs" (Santee Cooper). Yet Santee Cooper is allocating its mini-bonds to at least two coal plants by 2017? Duke Energy is clearly ahead in the game and we have a lot of catch-up and I'm not talking about tomato sauce.
Next week, Duke Energy Generation Services will announce its seventh wind-farm construction project in less than two years.
By year end, the Duke Energy Corp. subsidiary will have gone from no wind assets in 2006 to being among the nation’s top 10 wind-power producers.
And next week’s announcement keeps DEGS on pace to add at least 250 megawatts of capacity in 2010, says President Wouter van Kempen.
“We will have 700 to 800 megawatts of capacity by the end of this year,” he says.
“We have about $1.25 billion by now in wind assets. We will easily have $5 billion within a few years.”
DEGS is the heart of Duke’s commercial line of business. The unregulated commercial unit sells power to large users and other utilities. It isn’t connected with
Duke Energy’s traditional utilities in the Carolinas and the Midwest. That means it can look nationally for opportunities, van Kempen says.
He says his preference is to build generation capacity rather than buy it. DEGS has bought two wind developers — Tierra Energy and Catamount Energy. Neither had completed construction of any facilities when DEGS bought them. But they had more than 5,000 megawatts of potential projects in the pipeline, and DEGS has been building those out.
By contrast, Duke has bought only one already-built project, the 70-megawatt North Allegheny project in Pennsylvania.
But to reach 800 megawatts, DEGS will likely have to make another acquisition.
Duke has 522 megawatts of wind capacity producing power on windmill farms in Texas and Wyoming. Lynn Good, Duke Energy’s new chief financial officer, says two projects in Wyoming and the Pennsylvania purchase will add 211 megawatts. That will total 733 megawatts. And no new construction project announced this late in the year could be finished by January.
Speaking to analysts in Boston last week, Good said changes in the industry favor large, well-capitalized companies over traditional wind developers in consolidating the industry.
“We are looking at various opportunities to capitalize on the current business environment,” she said. “We will also pursue joint-venture and partnership structures to accelerate growth and balance capital requirements as we go forward.”
Van Kempen says Duke’s ability to take advantage of either production tax credits or new investment tax credits — temporarily available from the Obama administration’s stimulus package — gives it an upper hand over undercapitalized developers.
But he says acquisitions will be opportunistic. The Pennsylvania purchase is a good example. The developer, Gamesa Energy USA, had built the project to sell to an Australian company. But that company went under, and Gamesa did not want to operate the wind facilities.
“We got that project at a very attractive price,” van Kempen says.
A key for DEGS was that the project already has long-term customers. Duke found itself burned in the 1990s when its Duke Energy North America built commercial gas-powered plants on speculation. The bottom fell out of that market and caused much of the company’s financial woes in the late 1990s and the start of this decade.
DEGS has contracts for the sale of the power from all its wind projects. It won’t proceed with a new venture until a long-term contract is in hand. Next week’s announcement — for a midsized development likely in the 30- to 50-megawatt range — will include such a contract.
Even having 800 megawatts of capacity would leave Duke well behind the industry leader, NextEra Energy Resources. That subsidiary of Florida’s FPL Group has 6,290 megawatts of wind capacity in operation.
But van Kempen says DEGS should easily be able to grow at a pace of at least 250 megawatts per year for the foreseeable future. And he is looking beyond wind for renewable energy. DEGS’ initiatives include the Adage partnership with Areva SA of France to produce commercial biomass energy. Van Kempen thinks he can build that into a $2 billion business within five years.
To read the article, click here

July 2, 2009

Interview with Michael Hendryx

On the radio show Living On Earth: "Calculating Coal's Toll," Steve Curwood interviews Michael Hendryx, professor and researcher from WVU, who recently published a study showing how coal's costs outweigh its benefits. Ken Ward Jr. reported Hendryx study in the Charleston Gazette, "Coal's costs outweigh benefits, WVU study finds," which I posted to the blog "Proven: Coal's costs exceeds its benefits" a week ago. The blog on Ken Ward Jr.'s article threads into a second blog, "Reassure 'em while they're young," which describes coal organizations preaching coal's "Reassuring Lie" to elementary students while coal's "Inconvenient Truth" sits in front of our faces. Hendryx's study of course brought about controversy within the coal community. The West Virginia Coal Association (WVCA) criticizes Hendryx and his data, saying "It would be admirable if...the researcher would present the facts, if they really have facts, as opposed to presenting personally motivated conclusions" (WVcoal). WVCA asserts that Hendryx's data is not conclusive and is personally driven. Wrong. Hendryx data does present the facts and whether or not it is personally motivated is irrelevant. Hendryx determines his data according to the value of a statistical life, or the cost of a human life within coal country, to a ratio of the coal economy's benefits. He finds that the cost of human life is almost 7 times more than the coal economy's benefits. In the interview below, Hendrix thoroughly explains his data and how coal mining is costing the Appalachia.
Living On Earth
Calculating Coal's Toll
Steve Curwood, Michael Hendryx
June 26, 2009

CURWOOD: Michael Hendryx, a researcher in community medicine at West Virginia University has just published a study finding that coal costs a lot more in human terms than it provides in jobs and income.

HENDRYX: We did an analysis that showed that the areas in Appalachia where coal mining takes place actually have the weakest economic circumstances. They have the highest poverty levels, the highest unemployment levels, the lowest income levels. So we followed up that analysis by trying to come up with an estimate of both the cost and the benefits of mining for the Appalachian region and concluded that the costs outweigh the benefits by several factors.

CURWOOD: Professor Hendryx, now as I understand it to calculate this you didn't actually look at the costs they spent on health care or lost opportunities but rather you used something that's known as the value of a statistical life, this particular standard. Tell me about that.

HENDRYX: The way that the value of statistical life or VSL is estimated is through I think a pretty ingenious type of a study design where you ask people, "suppose there was an illness that had a one in 10,000 chance of killing you. How much would you be willing to spend yourself to eliminate that risk?" And let's say that people on average in a given study say $600, which a type of a reasonable or typical estimate that people will give. Then ten thousand people together will spend six million to save one life. So it's a way to estimate what society itself values. And we used a range of those estimates and then looked at the number of excess deaths that occur every year in coal mining areas of Appalachia versus non-mining area.

CURWOOD: 10,000 excess deaths.

HENDRYX: That's right. The years 1997 through 2005, translate to over 10,000 excess deaths every year, and we attribute that difference to higher poverty rates in mining area, and also to differences probably in environmental exposures and pollution from activities in the mining industry.

CURWOOD: And if you translate that into money, how much are you talking about?

HENDRYX: One of the estimates that I think is probably most reasonable to use translates into over $42 billion dollars as the human cost of coal mining in Appalachia. Some of the estimates are as high as over $80 billion dollars.

CURWOOD: And how much in the same period of time was the coal economy itself?

HENDRYX: The benefits of the coal economy measured by not only the direct jobs that it creates but the indirect jobs that ripple through the economy as well as the severance taxes that are paid by coal companies came to a little bit over $8 billion dollars a year, much lower than the estimated costs.

CURWOOD: Can you describe a couple of these communities? Paint a picture for us.

HENDRYX: Well, the first image that comes to mind maybe is a town called Whitesville in Boone County. If you drive through the downtown of Whitesville, you'll see that there will be coal dust on the buildings themselves, on the outdoor furniture, on the vehicles. You'll notice a lot of empty storefronts and empty streets and not a lot of business or economic activity taking place. I don't want to pick on one town, but that's the one that comes to mind. I don't want to pick on the people that live there because they're wonderful.

CURWOOD: Now, this isn't a comfortable question to ask, but some would say – look, these communities are very poor, those people might not pay $600 to avoid a one in 10,000 of dying. They don't have any money, they might not pay anything. And the bottom line being, well, human life is maybe worth a lot less in Appalachia in these poor areas.

HENDRYX: Well, I would disagree with that on ethical and moral grounds. But, some people who live there view that their lives are valued less than people who live somewhere else, and that in a way its hard to argue with that. It seems like coal-mining areas in Appalachia are—to us a phrase that's been used "America's Sacrifice Zone" That their lives are expendable so other people somewhere else can have cheap electricity. I find that appalling.

CURWOOD: The federal government's gonna put a lot of money into carbon capture and sequestration from coal fired power plants. How advisable do you think that program is in light of your research?

HENDRYX: I think its one of the dumbest things that they've ever attempted to do. I don't think the evidence is very good that we can implement a scalable carbon capture and storage system that can really be a serious way to deal with CO2 emissions. But even if we could, that addresses only how coal is burned. It doesn't say anything about how it's extracted, processed or transported prior to burning. And carbon capture and storage systems will do nothing to change the conditions in coal mining areas of Appalachia. We have to realize as well that the estimates that come out from the U.S. Geological Survey are that West Virginia will peak in a its coal production in probably less than twenty years. So we really don't have any choice. We can sit around and do nothing and wait for that to happen, or we can begin now to plan and implement serious economic diversification programs. I think that should be a top priority for the state and the nation and even the local community leaders.

CURWOOD: Michael Hendryx is Associate Professor in the Department of Community Medicine at West Virgina University. Thank you so much, Sir.

HENDRYX: Thank you.

To hear this interview or read it, click here

July 1, 2009

A reminder

Elizabeth Weems, chairwoman of the League of Women Voters of Horry County, wrote a great opinion editorial for The Sun News almost two weeks ago. Lately so many of the blog posts have concerned various coal issues from around the country, not that they aren't important, but we need to remember what we are standing against: Santee Cooper's efforts to construct a coal plant in the Pee Dee region. The new coal plant will bring higher rates. South Carolinians will essentially pay more to pollute. Why pay more? And why pay to pollute in the first place? Weems' op-ed explains why Santee Cooper will hike its rates and why doing so is not needed.

The Sun News
Santee Cooper rate hike isn't necessary
Elizabeth Weems
June 20, 2009

Santee Cooper has announced that it intends to raise residential electricity rates 15 percent over the next two years, with the increase in effect through 2012. Santee Cooper says the rate increase is needed because revenue requirements exceed revenue. After 13 years of no increases it is not surprising that they need to raise rates, or is it?

Santee Cooper plans to build a $2 billion coal plant that will use approximately 12,000 tons of coal daily. The cost of coal has increased significantly over the last several years, and coming federal legislation will put a price on carbon emissions produced from burning coal. All of this adds up to continuous rate increases for years to come.

Santee Cooper does have alternatives to a new coal plant. They can increase their investment in efficiency programs. They say they will invest $110 million through 2020 in efficiency. That's less than 1 percent of the cost of the coal plant.

Efficiency is the cheapest and fastest way to decrease energy demand. Broad-based efficiency programs, which include retrofitting substandard homes with increased insulation, better seals and energy efficient appliances, will decrease energy demand and increase local jobs.

Increased energy efficiency will give the state-owned utility time to bring on line alternative fuel sources like offshore wind, solar and small
natural gas plants.


Implementation of greater energy efficiency across Santee Cooper's entire customer base may not stop today's proposed rate increase, but it will decrease tomorrow's risks by decreasing the utility's dependence on coal and its short and long-term costs. A decision against coal is a decision in favor of Santee Cooper's customers, the health of the state's citizens and the environment. It's time for ratepayers to say no to coal.

I live in Horry County and pay for my electricity from Horry Electric Company. The League of Women Voters has called for a moratorium on coal-fired power plants because, currently, there is no technology to prevent mercury and carbon emissions into the air. These toxic emissions contribute to global warming and public health safety.

To read the article, click here