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Citizens Against the Mesaba Project has published a critique of the economic impact “studies” provided in Excelsior’s application and offered by Excelsior as evidence in the Power Purchase Agreement for the Mesaba coal gasification project.

Here’s CAMP’s Economic Analysis:

economics-of-the-mep.pdf

Here’s the Camp Press Release, published in BusinessNorth:

CAMP issues Economic Position Paper

11/10/2006

Citizens Against the Mesaba Project has responded to the claims of economic benefits for Itasca County to be expected from the proposed Mesaba Energy Project.

In its recently released position paper, CAMP points out that the two studies relied on by the Itasca Economic Development Corporation in its support for the Project are not reliable indicators of economic benefit.

The studies, commissioned from the UMD Labovitz School of Business by Excelsior Energy and the IEDC, are not cost-benefit analyses, and their authors caution that they should not be used to determine policies or make decisions.

CAMP points out that the qualifications of the developer are questionable. Mesaba I would be the first project for Excelsior Energy and eight of its nine top executives held positions with NRG Energy, Inc., an energy-producing company that grew aggressively in the 1990s and had to file for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in 2003.

CAMPâ??s primary focus is on the flaws of the UMD studies. These include unverified data from Excelsior Energy used as input, and projections of millions of dollars in â??value added spendingâ? that donâ??t take into account that most of these dollars will flow out of the county and the state.

CAMPâ??s concerns are supported by evidence being introduced in the pending proceeding before the Minnesota Public Utilities Commission (MPUC) related to Excelsiorâ??s attempt to force Xcel Energy to purchase the 603 MW of electrical output from Mesaba I. The Minnesota Department of Commerce has concluded that there are financial and business risks and the proposed plant is not likely to be a least-cost resource, as required by Minnesota law. The Minnesota Chamber of Commerce has concluded that the net economic benefits to the state are likely to be negative. Minnesota Power has raised concerns about: the lack of rail and coal contracts; a gasification technolgy that has not been proven to work on such a large scale or using sub-bituminous coal; making unrealistic environmental promises; and using up already scarce and valuable air shed needed to meet permit requirements for other viable northeastern Minnesota projects that would use existing natural resources.

CAMP has concluded that Itasca County should consider the identified financial and operational

risks, as well as the risk of serious detriment to the clean air and water that attracts visitors and residents.

Without a proper cost-benefit analysis that considers the costs to tourism and recreation, decreased land values, public health and the environment, there is no basis for concluding that this Project would benefit Itasca County.

Contact: Charlotte Neigh (218) 245-1844

Moments later, what should appear on the BusinessNorth site? What a coincidence — methinks we got their attention! But look what they’re saying, given bold emphasis below — 6,00MW needed in the STATE, which is utter crap. The 6,000MW figure comes from the Capx2020 Technical Update , found at their site under “About Us” (every time I try to get there, everything freezes up, go figure). You’ll find the boundaries of that “region” on p. 4, and then take a close look at the map on p. 7 that shows all the new generation, all 16,712MW of it. And then, when you compare the CapX2020 load growth estimates, that’s WAAAAAAY different than those of the 1005 NERC Load and Capability report, which states that MAPP has overestimated its growth and the region’s growth had really risen only 0.6% in the prior year. That’s reflected in the Xcel IRP, which shows that the biggest power load in the state, bigger than all others combined, doesn’t need baseload capacity until 2015 and then it needs only 375MW. Here’s Xcel’s Baseload Need Assessment. In short, the 6,000MW “need” for the REGION is exaggerated and is more than met by planned generation. Here’s the MISO queue of planned generation. Shortage? Yeah, right…

Expert testimony on Mesaba Energy Project demonstrates it is the most cost-effective baseload power solution for Minnesota
11/10/2006
Minnetonka – Excelsior Energy announced that it has filed testimony of nationally recognized experts on the subjects at issue in its docket before the Minnesota Public Utilities Commission (MPUC), seeking approval of its proposed power contract with Xcel Energy.

Power would be supplied under the contract from the first unit of the Mesaba Energy Project, an integrated gasification combined-cycle (IGCC or coal gasification) plant under development near Taconite, Minn.

The power contract is presently pending before an administrative law judge who is scheduled to make findings of fact and recommendations to the MPUC in February of 2007. The MPUC is expected to make its decision in the spring of 2007. All material permits and required transmission planning is underway and construction is scheduled to commence on the Mesaba Project in early 2008, with completion scheduled for 2011.

The Mesaba Energy Project will meet a portion of the need for more than 6000 MW of new generating capacity needed in Minnesota by 2020, cited by utilities and the Minnesota Chamber of Commerce as being critical to the Stateâ??s energy security. Nationwide, the North American Electric Reliability Council reports that demand for electricity will increase by 141,000 MW but projected resources will increase by only 57,000 MW in the next decade.

Testimony in the administrative proceeding has been provided by 19 expert witnesses, including Professor Jim Chen from the University of Minnesota Law School, who is a national expert in the field of regulated industries, Andrew Weissman, Senior Managing Director of FTI Consulting Inc. in Washington D.C., Roger Gale, President and CEO of GF Energy LLC in Washington D.C., Edward C. Bodmer of Lisle, Illinois, a senior energy economic analyst with Pace Global Energy Services LLC, Margaret A. Meal, a chartered financial analyst from San Francisco, California, Douglas Cortez from Hensley Energy Consulting LLC in Orange County, California, and Edward N. Steadman, Senior Research Advisor at the Energy and Environmental Research Center at the University of North Dakota.

Julie Jorgensen, co-CEO of Excelsior Energy, said, â??These experts conclude that the Mesaba Energy Project is the best choice for the state to reduce increasing reliance on natural gas as a fuel for power generation, and to meet increasing baseload power demand while minimizing environmental impacts. In addition, the experts confirm that the proposed power purchase agreement will protect Xcelâ??s customers from significant risks that customers would otherwise bear if Xcel builds its own baseload plant.

Finally, the expert analysis demonstrates that the cost of output from the Mesaba Project is comparable to the costs associated with a conventional coal alternative, and provides consumers with a hedge against the costs of complying with tightening emission limits and future limits on greenhouse gas emissions.�

Copies of Excelsiorâ??s testimony may be obtained at http://www.excelsiorenergy.com/public/filings_frame.html.

About Excelsior Energy

Excelsior Energy Inc. is an independent energy company focused on the rapid market penetration of coal gasification technology to meet the nationâ??s increasing demand for electric energy with significantly reduced environmental impacts. In 2001, the Mesaba Energy Project was established to bring an integrated gasification combined cycle (IGCC) plant to Minnesotaâ??s Iron Range. The management team includes industry veterans in the electric utility, independent power, environmental and project development areas. The company website is: www.excelsiorenergy.com.

CONTACT: Will Harrington, 952-847-2372

E-mail: williamharrington@excelsiorenergy.com

AND I TRUST YOU ALL KNOW BY NOW THAT YOU CAN GET ALL THE TESTIMONY IN THE POWER PURCHASE AGREEMENT BY GOING OVER ON THE UPPER RIGHT HERE AND CLICKING ON “MESABA COAL GASIFICATION TESTIMONY!” (everything, not just the testimony Excelsior wants you to see).

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Wrong Peter McDermott … and wrong again!! Well, that’s what he gets for not having a photo

Let’s see… where was I… the IEDC, Itasca Economic Development Corporation, rarely takes positions on anything, but it did take a position on Excelsior Energy’s Mesaba coal gasification plant — BECAUSE OF THE PROJECT’S CONTROVERSIAL STATUS. Oh, really?
Here’s the story in the Grand Rapids Herald Review:

IEDC Board approves support for Mesaba Energy

Than Tibbetts
Herald-Review

Friday, October 27th, 2006 04:01:38 PM

For just the third time in three years, the Itasca Economic Development Corporation has taken a public position on issue in the county.

IEDCâ??s board of directors approved a statement of support for the Mesaba Energy Project, the 600-megawatt, coal-fired power plant proposed to be in Taconite by Excelsior Energy. IEDCâ??s board endorsed the project with the condition that the project passes all of the required environmental regulations.

Peter McDermott, president of IEDC, said the organization took a position because of the projectâ??s controversial status.

McDermott said he respects the point of view of those who do not approve of the Mesaba project. But, he added, he has watched money and jobs leave the Itasca County area for 25 years, especially since the Blandin Paper Company was at its peak with 1,150 employees.

Opponents of the Mesaba Project cite a number of factors from quality of life issues such as pollution to what some say are questionable statistics used by Excelsior Energy to promote the project.

Charlotte Neigh, co-chair of the group Citizens Against the Mesaba Project, or CAMP, said she did not think IEDCâ??s position was well-founded.

â??I get the impression that the IEDC sees its role as (giving) unquestioning support for any economic development that is seriously proposed by developers,â? she said. â??I don’t think they consider it their role to discriminate regarding non-economic factors.â?

Excelsior Energy is currently in the process of seeking a purchase agreement from Xcel Energy to buy the electricity the plant would generate.

The Minnesota Public Utilities Commission will decide whether Xcel Energy will be required to purchase the energy, and documents filed with commission indicate that Xcel officials are concerned that power from the Mesaba plant would be too expensive and require rate hikes for its customers.

Excelsior Energy contends that its electricity will be cost-effective, and that the technology proposed for the plant, known as â??integrated gasification combined cycleâ? or â??IGCC,â? is a necessary step in the development of clean coal technology. (In short, the process involves converting coal into a synthetic gas, removing potential pollutants in the process and burning the gas to power the plantâ??s turbines.)

While few contend that Itasca County would benefit from an influx of higher paying jobs â?? the county currently lags behind the statewide annual average wage rate by $10,000 per year â?? some question whether the jobs will actually go to Itasca County residents and whether a power plant is the right fit for an area known for its woods and waters.

Proponents say the proposed site would occupy an old mining area and would bring relief to a less-than-stellar Iron Range economy.

â??This might not be built here because there are other communities that want it built,â? McDermott said. â??My fear is that it will be built in the Dakotas, so weâ??ll still get the pollution without the economic benefits.â?

Neigh said it is interesting that IEDC feels the need to issue a public position.

â??They are probably feeling concerned about (the projectâ??s) support among residents of the county,â? she said.

The IEDC board has only approved public positions two other times in the past three years, one in support of a county lodging tax and the other to support the approval of a forest certification program.

You may ask why they’re so insecure… but you would know if you’ve been paying attention. This project is a “boondoggle” (and we know what that’s the code word for!). But here’s the rest of the story that you aren’t getting in the paper.

There are a lot of heavies opposing this project, of course there’s Xcel, but there’s also Minnesota Power, and even the Minnesota Chamber of Commerce. Minnesota Power’s VP of Utility Operations fired off this missive when word got out that IEDC might endorse the Mesaba Project:

To the Members of the Itasca Economic Development Council:

I do not support the position being proposed by the Itasca Economic Development Corporation for the Mesaba Energy Project.

As Senior Vice President of Utility Operations for Allete/Minnesota Power I have strong opinions on this project based my personal experience in the power generation industry.

Minnesota Power has publicly shared its analysis of the Mesaba Project in testimony filed on September 5th in the current State proceeding on Excelsiorâ??s petition to make Xcel Energy buy the Projectâ??s output. Minnesota Power feels the business and public policy issues with the Project are significant.

A synopsis of our concerns follows in the paragraphs below for your review and thoughtful consideration.

Thank you,

Warren Candy


The Mesaba Project is a proposal without the necessary fundamentals to ensure an economically successful outcome.

It has no rail or coal contracts (~50% of a plantâ??s operating costs) and as we all know it is very difficult to obtain competitive rail delivery and coal supplies to Northeastern Minnesota.

Mesaba would use technology unproven on its fuel of choice and on a major plant scale up, so operating reliability cannot be taken for granted. Its output would be sold through a forced purchase power agreement, and one that, based on the utilityâ??s filed testimony, inappropriately shifts business risks from its developer to utility ratepayers and adds significant financial risk to the utility itself.

Furthermore, Mesabaâ??s environmental promises are not equal to environmental reality. Its emissions essentially are equal to a modern pulverized coal power plant. It has no realistic plan for CO2 capture and storage. Even if Mesaba had a plan for CO2, it could not be executed without permitting and building a pipeline to North Dakota and spending hundreds of millions of additional dollars.

Located in Northeastern Minnesota, Mesaba is not a project with natural, logical economic advantages to support its success. Mining and timber, as examples, have natural resources for production at hand versus Mesaba importing coal to produce power to be used outside of the region.

Additionally, Mesaba would use up already scarce and economically valuable air shed needed to meet permit requirements for viable NE MN natural resource based projects.

Approval of Mesabaâ??s proposed but unexecuted purchase power agreement would subvert the Stateâ??s energy resource planning process, a process which has led Minnesota historically to have competitive, reliable electric supplies that also meet or exceed air and water quality standards.

Approval of the unexecuted Mesaba agreement would favor a specific and speculative generation project with an unknown ultimate cost. Excelsior is seeking to sell Mesabaâ??s power to a utility with no corresponding need. This would be an improper use of the Stateâ??s energy policy for purported economic development purposes, instead of basing a decision on proven resource planning criteria.

Well, that’s telling it like it is. So of course, Tom Micheletti, Mr. Reactive (he should be in nuclear, not coal gasification) couldn’t let Candy have the last word.

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Tom Micheletti (stolen from MPR)
Here’s Tom’s letter to the IEDC attempting to counter Candy’s concerns:

September 25, 2006

Peter McDermott
Itasca Economic Development Corporation
12 Northwest 3rd Street
Grand Rapids, Minnesota 55744

Dear Peter:

Warren Candy of Minnesota Power recently sent a letter opposing the Itasca Economic Development Corporationâ??s proposed endorsement of the Mesaba Energy Project. I write to correct some factual inaccuracies contained in Mr. Candyâ??s letter and to provide some background as to MPâ??s stance towards the project. Minnesota Power is the only IEDC member that opposed endorsement of the Mesaba Energy Project. Minnesota Powerâ??s now public opposition to the Project is a disappointment to all Northeastern Minnesotans who care about job creation, economic development, a cleaner environment, stable gas and electric prices and national energy security.

Minnesota Power has also intervened in our case seeking approval of our power contract, as contemplated by state law, before the Minnesota Public Utilities Commission. MP is taking the side of Xcel Energy and others who are opposing the implementation of the 2003 legislation enabling the Mesaba Project to proceed. Minnesota Power has no â??dog in that fight,â? but puts the interests of its utility brethren ahead of those of its customers, the Arrowhead Region, and its public service obligations. This is particularly troubling behavior in the context of a project that furthers critical national energy security goals, and has been awarded significant federal benefits to ensure the project comes to fruition.

Even before this public opposition, MP has been working hard behind the scenes to try to kill the project. These efforts have included an extraordinary attempt to prevent the Project from securing Federal clean-coal funding.

This might be understandable behavior if the project somehow threatened MPâ??s existing plants or core business. The truth is that MP forecasts a significant need for new additional power generating capacity in the coming decade, and will need a lot more power to meet the regionâ??s needs when the new industrial projects on the Range come online. Excelsior is not a competitor for MPâ??s retail customers, but rather will supply wholesale power to the utilities in the State. The utilities in the State all have monopoly territories to serve customers. A new source of wholesale supply is not a threat to that monopoly.

On October 10, Excelsior Energy will be formally responding to Minnesota Powerâ??s September 5, 2006 testimony. I will be happy to send you our entire filing once it is available. In the meantime, the rest of this letter sets the record straight on the allegations made by Mr. Candy.

Coal and Rail Transportation

The Mesaba Energy Projectâ??s innovative technology and physical location provide unique opportunities to hedge against high fuel and transportation costs. The Projectâ??s IGCC technology allows the plant to use a variety of fuels, so it will be able to select the cheapest fuel when the appropriate time to form a fuel contract arrives. Similarly, the Project will be able to use different rail carriers, so it will have much more flexibility in arranging transportation. MPâ??s response is that because they have â??friendlyâ? relations with the BN railroad, this can overcome the advantages our technology and site have to use different rail carriers and different coals. Apparently in stating that two rail lines do not offer a competitive benefit to the project, MP also forgot that in 2001 they themselves were threatening to build a new non-BN rail spur into their Boswell site in order to secure this same advantage. MPâ??s position is also contrary to those it has taken in the past when it lobbied in favor of restrictions against monopoly rail carriers.
Thanks to its technology and carefully selected location, the Mesaba Energy Project will have effective hedges against high coal and transportation costs. How can MP object to something that will be so good for consumers?

IGCC Is a Proven Technology on the Planned Fuel

The Mesaba Energy Project plans to utilize sub-bituminous coal from the Powder River Basin. While there are relatively few IGCC power plants in the world, the LGTI facility in Louisiana, which was the initial forerunner of our IGCC power plant, had extensive experience running on Powder River Basin sub-bituminous coal. The simple fact is that the LGTI facility operated effectively on sub-bituminous coal. Additionally, MPâ??s objections to the IGCC technology fly in the face of companies such as General Electric, ConocoPhillips, and Shell, who not only promote IGCC, but also have made significant investments themselves in the technology. MP apparently hasnâ??t done its homework in this area.

The Proposed Power Purchase Agreement (PPA) Provides Risk Protection That Utilities Cannot Match

Ratepayers begin paying for a utility-owned plant at the beginning of the development process, and are charged significant amounts during the construction period, including during any periods of delay in achieving commercial operation. In contrast, under the proposed Mesaba PPA, Xcel and its customers do not pay anything until the plant is in service and delivering power. The risk that the schedule is delayed is entirely borne by the Mesaba Project.

Ratepayers bear the bulk of the risk that construction costs are higher for a utility-owned plant than what the utility has forecasted, even if regulators require some form of sharing of this risk. In contrast, under the PPA, the price of capacity is fixed before construction starts and any cost over-run will be paid for by the Project.

Ratepayers bear the risk of changes in interest rates for the entire life of a utility-owned power plant. In contrast, the price that will be paid for the capacity under the PPA is fixed for the entire 25-year term of the PPA on the date construction starts, and ratepayers are completely insulated from interest rate risk.

These benefits are in addition to avoiding more exposure to natural gas expense to fuel power plants, and avoiding the pollution associated with traditional coal alternatives.

The Mesaba Energy Projectâ??s Environmental Profile Is Superior

Excelsior is always happy to talk about the â??environmental realityâ? that Mr. Candy references because the facts are unambiguously in favor of the Mesaba Project. Here again, it is obvious that Mr. Candy and MP have apparently not done their homework on IGCC and its superior environmental advantages. Leading environmental groups around the country support the deployment of IGCC and totally oppose the old technology that MP wants to build in North Dakota. A quick look at the chart below tells it all. Even after MP spends hundreds of millions of dollars to clean up its Clay Boswell station, it will still not come close to the emissions profile of our plants.

Coal-Fired Power Plant Emissions

(This chart compares a New Conventional Coal Plant; Clay-Boswell (Post-Retrofit); Mesaba IGCC; and Increased Emissions: Conventional Coal vs. Mesaba IGCC)

Sulfur Dioxide 2,500 7,410 695 (90% less than Clay Boswell) 260%
Nitrogen Oxides 2,000 6,660 1,440 (78% less than Clay Boswell) 39%
Carbon Monoxide 3,240 N/A 1,270 155%
Particulate Matter 320 690 250 (64% less than Clay Boswell) 28%
Mercury 100 134 54 (60% less than Clay Boswell) 85%

Mercury figures are in pounds per year; all other figures are in tons per year.
Emissions from non-Mesaba plants reflect a plant equal in size to Mesaba Unit 1, with all plants operating at a 100% capacity factor. The â??New Conventional Coal Plantâ? is a hypothetical new conventional coal plant using the most up-to-date pollution control features available.

Unlike conventional coal plants, IGCC power plants are adaptable to economically capture and sequester carbon dioxide. Therefore, IGCC plants are an important part of any realistic plan to reduce greenhouse gas emission in our nation. Excelsior is co-sponsoring a study that is examining the potential for sequestering carbon dioxide in the region. Further, unlike conventional coal power plants, the Mesaba Energy Project at the very least has an identified strategy of dealing with future carbon regulations. Minnesota Power has not made any real efforts to develop plans to shelter its customers from the rate shock associated with limits on carbon dioxide emissions, even in the face of many in its own industry that are saying that greenhouse gas legislation is only four or five years away. The state of Californiaâ??s action just weeks ago should be a clear warning to everyone. Without a carbon plan, MPâ??s only option will be to simply try to buy credits from others and pass the costs on to its customers.

Northeastern Minnesota Is a Great Place for Electric Power Generation

The Mesaba Energy Project will benefit from the natural features and infrastructure that the region offers. The plant location is:
– Located near ample water supplies (and will help ease pumping expenses from abandoned mine pits that are currently shouldered by taxpayers)
– Located on a rail line that allows access to two carriers
– Located near natural gas and transmission infrastructure

If Mr. Candy is suggesting that the regional economy should rely solely on mining and timber, Excelsior disagrees. While the mining and timber industries have been and will continue to be critical industries in the region, the economy will benefit from new companies that diversify our regionâ??s industrial base while providing 1000 construction jobs and over 100 good-paying permanent jobs. Finally, it is strange that the Senior Vice President of Utility Operations for Minnesota Power, which owns over 1200 MW of coal plants in northeastern Minnesota, is arguing that the region is inappropriate for coal-fired electric generation. At the same time MP criticizes the location and everything else about the Mesaba project, which will be cleaner than any existing coal plant in the world, MP is laying plans to build a dirty coal plant in North Dakota, where it can sell coal from its own mine to benefit its shareholders, pollute the air, avoid Minnesotaâ??s strict environmental laws and regulation, draw dollars and jobs out of our state, and block economic growth in Northeastern Minnesota. All this from a company that was granted a franchise monopoly by the Minnesota legislature â?? in exchange for an agreement to serve the public interest.

The Mesaba Energy Project Is Part of a Thoughtful Energy Policy Set by the Minnesota Legislature

Recognizing the need for environmentally friendly, coal-fired, base load generation in the state, the Minnesota Legislature passed laws in 2003 to encourage the development of the Mesaba Energy Project. Further, the U.S. Department of Energy selected the Mesaba project for funding in a nationwide competitive selection process, in which MP competed. There is nothing speculative about the project: IGCC is a proven technology that will provide electricity at a hedged, predictable cost under a long-term power purchase agreement with Xcel Energy.

Excelsior Energy appreciates the effort that Itasca Economic Development Corporation has put into promoting the Mesaba Energy Project, and we look forward to continuing to work together to make this positive development for the Range economy a reality. We would be honored to have your endorsement.

Sincerely,

Tom Micheletti

Too bad he didn’t send them the Chamber of Commerce testimony in opposition to it… but I guess that’s my job.

Here’s the Minnesota Chamber testimony for those of you who haven’t read it:

Rebuttal Testimony

mcc-blazar-reply-testimony.pdf

and the Surrebuttal, and it’s a BIG file:

(It’s not here, too big!)

It’s going to take a while, I’ve got an inbasket exploding with Surrebuttal Testimony, and tomorrow the P.O. Box will be full, and of course I’m having technical difficulties, but sometime soon…

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At least they Joyce Foundation is being honest about it — finally… sigh… What’s honest? Well, they’re expressly stating the purpose of PROMOTION of coal gasification. Makes me want to puke. Don’t they do they’re homework? Don’t they know that the losses in efficiency and the astronomical increase in plant cost for capture alone make it unworkable?  And that’s before any sequestration pipelines for hundreds of miles and pumping stations and operations and maintenance of sequestration… Haven’t they read “Gas Migration?” (clue: it’s at www.abebooks.com)
FYI, the numbers are off. As if $500k isn’t enough, Clean Wisconsin got not $500k but $750k. $750k. Who knows, they all probably get shares in their CO2 market too! (will fill in a bunch of links manana) Oh, here’s the link for Chicago Climate Exchange.
Here’s the Joyce Foundation press release:

For immediate release
August 17, 2006

For information contact:

Mary Oâ??Connell
312 782 2464
773 425 0341 cell

Push to Get Climate-Friendly Technology for Midwest Power Plants

$3 Million in Joyce Grants to Boost Clean Coal

Chicago) â?¦ The Joyce Foundation is awarding grants totaling over $3 million to promote cleaner, climate-friendly ways of generating power from coal. The grants are part of an overall $7 million initiative, announced last year, to persuade developers of the next generation of Midwest power plants to shun older coal-burning technology in favor of new, cleaner technologies.

Major grants for promoting clean coal technologies among industry and regulators go to:


Clean Air Task Force, $787,500; Great Plains Institute, $437,500; and Natural Resources Defense Council, $437,500. The three groups will work with coal and utility executives, regulators, environmental and other groups to promote such technologies as coal gasification and capture and storage of carbon emissions, addressing technical, financial and regulatory barriers to progress.

In addition, the Foundation is awarding $500,000 to Clean Wisconsin to oppose conventional coal plants proposed for Wisconsin and promote alternatives, including coal gasification. An earlier grant of $300,000 to the Izaak Walton League, announced in April, supports groups that are fighting the expansion of the Big Stone plant in South Dakota. Several smaller grants will support other work with individual states in the Midwest and with targeted audiences, such as utility shareholders, union leaders, consumer groups and others, in making the case for clean coal. [A complete list of grants is below.]

â??We know the technology exists to use our regionâ??s abundant coal to generate the power we need, without risking further damage to our environment,â? said Joyce President Ellen S. Alberding. â??These grants will support those in industry, the public sector, and citizens groups who have had the vision to push for the cleanest possible coal technologies, and, we hope, help to prevent construction decisions that would trap us with another generation of harmful emissions.â?

An estimated thirty-six coal plants are under various stages of consideration for the Great Lakes region. Burning coal emits carbon, which contributes significantly to global warming; in addition, coal-burning plants have been major polluters of air and water in the Midwest and nationally. Coal gasification technology offers the possibility of reducing overall emissions as well as potentially capturing and storing carbon. The Joyce Foundation announced last year its intention to fund efforts to make sure that new Midwest power plants opt for the cleaner technology. The current grants, voted by the Foundationâ??s board on July 20, 2006, were chosen as a result of a request for proposals issued to selected groups earlier this year.

Grants to Promote Cleaner Coal for the Midwestâ??s Energy Future

Announced August 2006

Clean Air Task Force, Inc.
Boston, MA $787,500
To promote Integrated Gasification Combined Cycle in the upper Midwest. (21 mos.)

Clean Wisconsin, Inc.
Madison, WI $500,000
For a coordinated administrative intervention and public information campaign aimed at promoting coal gasification with sequestration as an alternative to conventional coal plants proposed for Wisconsin. The Wisconsin Citizens Utility Board would also be a partner in the intervention and campaign. (1 yr.)

Energy Foundation
San Francisco, CA $100,000
To support smaller-scale efforts to contest the licensing of conventional coal plants in the Midwest. (1 yr.)

Great Plains Institute for Sustainable Development
Minneapolis, MN $437,500
To support the efforts of its Coal Gasification Working Group. (21 mos.)

Michigan Environmental Council
Lansing, MI $87,500
To persuade regulators, utilities, and power plant developers in Michigan that any new coal plants should be able to use the latest technologies for capturing and storing carbon emissions. (21 mos.)

National Wildlife Federation
Reston, VA $122,700
To build support in Indiana and Michigan for coal gasification as an alternative to conventional coal-burning power plants. National Wildlife Federation affiliates Indiana Wildlife Federation and Michigan United Conservation Clubs would be partners in this effort. (21 mos.)

Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc.
New York, NY $437,500
For its efforts to oppose the construction of new conventional coal plants and promote alternative plants using coal gasification with carbon sequestration. (21 mos.)

Ohio Environmental Council
Columbus, OH $113,750
To support its ongoing efforts to promote IGCC in Ohio and to oppose the permitting of a conventional coal plant proposed by AMP-Ohio, a municipal utility consortium. (21 mos.)

Resources for the Future, Inc.
Washington, DC $75,000
To conduct a quantitative assessment of the risks to shareholders and electric utility ratepayers of investing in various coal combustion technologies. (1 yr.)

Rockefeller Family Fund
New York, NY $50,000
To support ongoing coal advocacy activities of the Renewable Energy Alignment Mapping Project. (1 yr.)

University of Wisconsin-Madison Center on Wisconsin Strategy
Madison, WI $175,000
To build support among labor leaders in Wisconsin and other Midwest states for coal gasification as an alternative to conventional coal power plants. (21 mos.)

Announced May 2006
Izaak Walton League of America, Inc.
St. Paul, MN $300,000
To support intervention in the licensing hearings for the Big Stone II power plant in South Dakota and Minnesota. (1 yr.)

Coal Fact Sheet

All data are for the Midwest region (Minnesota, Wisconsin, Illinois, Michigan, Indiana, Ohio)

Significance of coal in the Midwest:
â?¢ 70 percent of the regionâ??s electricity is produced from coal
â?¢ The region consumes 25 percent of the nationâ??s coal (with 17 percent of the population)

Significance of coal boom:
36 new coal plants have been proposed throughout the region. These plants would increase the megawatts of coal produced by 25 percent

Source: U.S. Department of Energy, “Tracking New Coal-Fired Power Plants”

The coal plants in the Midwest produce:
â?¢ 20 percent of our nationâ??s utility-caused carbon dioxide emissions
â?¢ 20 percent of our nationâ??s utility-caused sulfur dioxide emissions
â?¢ 24 percent of our nationâ??s utility-caused nitrogen oxide emissions
â?¢ 26 percent of our nationâ??s utility-caused mercury emissions
Source: U.S. EPA Data

What is conventional coal?
Conventional coal technologies include pulverized coal and fluidized bed plants. These plants have higher levels of sulfur dioxide and mercury emissions than IGCC and cannot cost-effectively control carbon dioxide emissions.

What is IGCC?
A June 2006 EPA report defined IGCC (Integrated Gasification Combined Cycle) as:
â??a power generation process that uses a gasifier to transform coal (and other fuels) to a synthetic gas (syngas), consisting mainly of carbon monoxide and hydrogen. The high temperature and pressure process within an IGCC creates a controlled chemical reaction to produce the syngas, which is used to fuel a combined cycle power block to generate electricity. Combined-cycle power applications are one of the most efficient means of generating electricity because the exhaust gases from the syngas-fired turbine are used to create steam, using a heat recovery steam generator (HRSG), which is then used by a steam turbine to produce additional electricity.
For traditional pollutants such as nitrogen oxides (NOx), sulfur dioxide (SO2), particulate matter (PM) and mercury (Hg), IGCC is inherently lower polluting than the current generation of traditional coal-fired power plants. IGCC also has multi-media benefits, as it uses less water than PC facilities. IGCC also produces a solid waste stream that can be a useful byproduct for producing roofing tiles and as filler for new roadbed construction. IGCC also has the potential to reduce solid waste by using as fuel a combination of coal and renewable biomass products.”

Half of the currently proposed coal plants in the Midwest would use IGCC.

What is carbon sequestration?
Carbon dioxide is captured from power plant flue gases and injected into appropriate geological formations for long-term storage. We have extensive experience using carbon dioxide for enhanced oil recovery, where it is injected into oil fields that are partially depleted. The carbon dioxide forces more oil out of the ground and is then stored in the rock formation.
Environmental savings of IGCC compared to state-of-the-art conventional coal plants

â?¢ 80 percent less sulfur dioxide emissions
â?¢ 35 percent less nitrogen oxide emissions
â?¢ 40 percent less water used
â?¢ 30 percent less solid waste
â?¢ 90 percent less mercury

Sources: U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, “Environmental Footprints and Costs of Coal-Based Integrated Gasification Combined Cycle and Pulverized Coal Technologies”.
http://www.epa.gov/airmarkets/articles/control.html

Public Subsidies for IGCC
The Energy Policy Act of 2005 includes an investment tax credit of 20 percent on the gasification portion of a project, limited to $800 million total (support for about six plants). It also includes loan guarantees and several authorizations for specific IGCC demonstration projects.


It’s scary the way coal gasification proposals are flying around — methinks they are all vying for a chance at a limited pot of federal funding, clawing their way toward the prize. I heard today from someone fighting the American Electric Power IGCC proposal in Ohio, and it sounds too familiar. When I searched for images of the project, here’s what I get, maybe what Santa’s giving to them? naaaaaaa:

Last year they started front-end engineering on the AEP project. Here’s their blurb on that. And here’s a promotional article:
The new clean fuel: Coal producer goes green

Really, that’s the headline! And funny, the link for AEP in the above article provides a “corporate snapshot” and stock prices… Links for more info on the coal gasification proposal? Not in that article!

Here’s where the Ohio PUC started down that familiar trail of altering “business as usual” to “business as unusual” by authorization of recovery of preconstruction costs in the rates. Here’s their blurb on that.

Remember that coal comes from somewhere — how and where? As Andy David said Tuesday in Grand Rapids, “Remember from chemistry class that elements cannot be destroyed.” If it’s not coming out the stack in as great quantities, it’s going somewhere else.

For a refresher about the story of coal, see Mountaintop Removal. It’s all connected.