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An aging coal power plant slated to shutter will run through the summer at the order of Energy Sec. Chris Wright, a decision that could cost Midwest energy customers tens of millions of dollars.
The Jänschwalde plant is slated to be converted to cleaner natural gas, a transition its operator fears the heritage ...
U.S. power sector emissions are already at their highest levels in three years, but will likely climb further during the peak summer months as greater use of air conditioning systems drives higher ...
A 63-year-old coal-fired power plant was scheduled to permanently close its doors in Michigan on June 1. So was an oil- and gas-powered plant that was built in the 1960s in Pennsylvania.
The claim: Coal plant construction shows CO2 doesn't cause climate change. A Dec. 14 Facebook post (direct link, archive link) lists the purported number of "coal power stations" 10 different ...
Coal-fired power plants, long an increasingly money-losing proposition in the U.S., are becoming more valuable now that the suddenly strong demand for electricity to run Big Tech’s cloud ...
However, the agreements for selling power from the 1,800-MW coal plant were scheduled to terminate in 2027. In 2015, ...
The smokestacks on the aging Sherco coal power plant tower over gleaming solar panels that stretch across thousands of acres of farmland. The polluting coal plant is on its way out, scheduled for ...
The coal power plant was first commissioned in 1967 and received its last coal delivery in June. The 2,000-megawatt-capacity plant can produce enough electricity for some 2 million homes, ...
Above the deck on the fourth floor of Unit 3 inside Consumer Energy’s J.H. Campbell power plant, a sign proclaims the electricity flowing from the coal-fired beast is a “KEY to Michigan’s ...
A polluting, coal-fired power plant found the key to solving America’s biggest clean energy challenge By Ella Nilsen and CNN Chief Climate Correspondent Bill Weir. 5 minute read ...
An aging coal power plant slated to shutter will run through the summer at the order of Energy Sec. Chris Wright, a decision that could cost Midwest energy customers tens of millions of dollars.