Monday, August 30, 2021

Dear WUSTL students, this is the utility that provides power to WUSTL - in many ways they can be seen as an organized criminal enterprise, given how they have systematically fought environmental cleanup (and WUSTL takes money from them to sell us the lie of 'clean coal'): Experts tell Ameren to dump the scrubbers, close the coal plant

Experts tell Ameren to dump the scrubbers, close the coal plant

The question is:  when they shut down the coal plants are they going to try to sell us natural gas, or do what we really need, transition to renewables at a large scale?

“I would bet my bottom dollar that it would be replaced with renewables,” said David Woodsmall, a Jefferson City-based attorney who represents the Midwest Energy Consumers Group, which advocates for large commercial and industrial power customers — from AT&T and Tyson Foods to Walmart. “The current trend in the industry is that renewables have much better economics than building gas, coal or nuclear.”

Others, though, aren’t treating renewable replacements as an inevitability.  

Owen, for instance, is bracing for a public and political debate. He thinks “all options will be on the table” if a major coal plant is shut down, and he expects to see “a lot of people pushing for natural gas.”

In 2019, when Ameren was first ordered to outfit Rush Island with scrubbers, the company was given a 2024 deadline to comply. The Sierra Club, an intervenor in the case that was originally filed at the request of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, said that deadline hasn’t changed.