Scrubbers in the works for power
station
By Bob Niedbala, Staff writer, Observer-Reporter,
Washington, PA
November 9, 2005
Allegheny Energy Inc. is developing plans to
install scrubbers at its
Hatfield's Ferry Power Station and if everything
goes as planned, the
company could have the equipment in place by
2010.
In a presentation to investors Tuesday, Paul J. Evanson, chairman,
president and chief executive officer of the company, said the utility
has talked to contractors about starting permitting requirements for
scrubbers at the Monongahela Township plant.
The company expects to
make a formal announcement regarding the project
during the first quarter of
the year, Evanson said.
The company in recent years has come under fire
for emissions from
Hatfield's Ferry. Citizens for Pennsylvania's Future
filed suit against
the company in January claiming the company failed to
address Clean Air
Act violations at the plant.
The plant also was
targeted in June 2004 by Greenpeace activists who
climbed one of the plant's
two smoke stacks and unfurled a 2,500
square-foot banner.
Scrubbers
help remove sulfur dioxide and other contaminants from power
plant
emissions. The equipment is expensive, estimated to cost about
$400 million
at Hatfield's Ferry, Evanson said in an Internet broadcast
to
investors.
The company had attempted to obtain financial assistance from
the state
and federal governments to help offset the costs of the scrubbers.
"But
it's been an uphill battle and to no avail," Evanson said. The most the
company can expect is tax-exempt financing for the project, he
said.
"The good news is, because of the financial condition we're in, we
believe we have more than enough cash flow and capacity to do these on
our own," Evanson said.
The company suffered losses in 2003 and 2004
but began experiencing a
turnaround this year. If everything goes as
planned, Evanson said,
scrubbers could be in place at Hatfield's Ferry by
2010 if not 2009.
The company also is moving ahead with plans to install
scrubbers at its
Fort Martin Power Station in Monongalia County,
W.Va.
The West Virginia legislature approved a bill in the spring
allowing
the company to surcharge customers to help cover the costs. The
electric industry remains regulated in West Virginia, which offered the
opportunity for the utility to seek money for the project from rate
payers through a surcharge.
The same could probably not be done in
Pennsylvania, where the electric
industry is
deregulated.