The Wall Street Journal just won't leave Kemper alone. The Journal published another story about the project today:
Mississippi Power Co.'s Kemper County plant here, meant to showcase technology for generating clean electricity from low-quality coal, ranks as one of the most-expensive U.S. fossil-fuel projects ever—at $4.7 billion and rising. Mississippi Power's 186,000 customers, who live in one of the poorest regions of the country, are reeling at double-digit rate increases. And even Mississippi Power's parent, Atlanta-based Southern Co. SO -1.30% , has said Kemper shouldn't be used as a nationwide model.
Meanwhile, the plant hasn't generated a single kilowatt for customers, and it's anyone's guess how well the complex operation will work. The company this month said it would forfeit $133 million in federal tax credits because it won't finish the project by its May deadline.
One of just three clean-coal plants moving ahead in the U.S., Kemper has been such a calamity for Southern that the power industry and Wall Street analysts say other utilities aren't likely to take on similar projects, even though the federal government plans to offer financial incentives.
Southern recently took $990 million in charges for cost overruns approaching $2 billion. The company's stock has been battered in the past year, and the company's market value has dropped $6.4 billion since April, to $35.8 billion. Mississippi Power's credit rating has dropped to three notches above junk.
Kemper "is scaring people away," says Michael Haggarty , an analyst for Moody's Investors Service in New York.
And clean coal's costs have looked even worse recently in comparison with a new inexpensive alternative: plants fueled by the natural gas unleashed by a U.S. drilling boom. Southern last year decided against purchasing a 10-year-old gas-fired plant in Jackson, Miss., that would have generated about as much electricity as Kemper. Another company bought it for $206 million, billions less than Kemper will cost.
Rising on what was once farmland here, the 582-megawatt Kemper plant is designed to convert a low grade of coal, lignite, into clean-burning syngas, which is similar to natural gas. As part of that process, the plant will strip out and capture 65% of the carbon dioxide, a greenhouse gas, that would have been released into the atmosphere by burning coal. Turning coal to gas before burning it, or gasification, has proved necessary for capturing CO2 because efforts to cull it from plants that burn coal haven't been practical......
Ed Holland , chief executive of Mississippi Power, says the federal plan to limit greenhouse-gas emissions "bodes well for this technology." While expensive, he says, it is "one of the few alternatives available allowing us to continue to use coal."
But Southern last month said Kemper "cannot be consistently replicated on a national level" and therefore "should not serve as a primary basis for new emissions standards."
Federal officials say it isn't unusual for new technology to be expensive at first and that clean coal's costs should come down over time.....
Mississippi officials welcomed Kemper two years later, however. Republican Haley Barbour , governor at the time, was happy to see Mississippi Power use large deposits of lignite that had "virtually no value," he says today. He still supports the project, and his lobbying firm does work for Southern. "This is cutting-edge technology," he says.
The Mississippi Public Service Commission approved Kemper, fearing that the price of the natural gas that powers many plants in the state would increase, says Leonard Bentz , who was a commissioner until August.
Mississippi Power told the commission in 2009 that natural gas could hit $20 per million British thermal units and would drop no lower than $7.38 between 2014 and 2054. The forecast was filed confidentially, so wasn't subject to public review. The Journal obtained a redacted copy from the utility after filing a request under public-records law.
Its forecast was made even after energy companies had discovered a way to pull gas from previously inaccessible shale-rock formations. The resulting glut means that natural-gas prices haven't topped $6 per million BTUs since January 2009. Today, they are around $3.75.
Jeff Burleson , vice president of system planning for Southern, says the projections look flawed today because the industry was "in transition from conventional gas to shale gas" in 2009.
The company in June 2010 won state approval to go ahead with the project and by that December had broken ground on a 3,000-acre tract.
Kemper's cost, previously projected at around $2.9 billion, soon began to soar. Southern recently estimated the price tag at $4.7 billion. The utility says it underestimated labor costs and the amount of steel pipe, concrete and other materials it would need for so big a plant.
Because the state Legislature allowed Southern to charge customers for the plant's costs before it began generating power, customer rates began to rise, jumping 15% this year. A 3% increase is scheduled for next year, though the company is seeking 7%.
Criticism has been growing from environmental groups, tea-party activists and some business leaders, who fear that rising electricity rates will make Mississippi less competitive.....
Regulators and Southern agreed in January to cap costs that customers would cover at $2.88 billion, far below the $4.7 billion projected cost. But Southern recently won approval from the Legislature to sell up to $1 billion in bonds to help cover about half the difference; customers will repay the bonds through a surcharge on bills.
"Cost overruns are not something we wanted, but we believe we've done right by customers" by splitting the cost between customers and shareholders, says company spokeswoman Christy Ihrig. Rest of article
11 comments:
No, Christy. The company's incompetent management has screwed both the customers and shareholders... and the taxpayers.
Could we have the list of who didn't get screwed, KF? Who got paid?
Thank you for sharing Kingfish.
"Another company bought it for $206 million, billions less than Kemper will cost."
Of course.
The purpose of Kemper was to cost a fortune and pass it on to consumers.
This was Haley and Eddie Briggs that brought us this disaster. And with Phil's appointment, he owns it too.
The incompetent leadership at Southern Co/Ms.Power still can not tell us when this experiment will be operational or how much the total costs will be. I am betting close to 6 Billion when it is all said and done in 2016 which will be 25 times more than what a comparable size natural gas powered plant would have costs. This boondoggle rests squarely on the shoulders of Haley Barbour-R,the Super Lobbyist who sold out the people he was elected to represent.
Shame on Haley. No excuses for taking realatively little $ to sell out thousnds who work hard to get by. In the end your fees will be very costly to you.
Bash Haley all you want over this, he certainly desrves it for being a fake-conservative and a corporate-socialist uber lobbyist whose principles are "for sale" to the highest bidder. But I can tell you that I personally attended a PSC Commission meeting and public hearing in Jackson about Kemper and that Phil Bryant spoke around 15 minutes after i did in strong and favorable support for Kemper to be built. He, along with most state elected republicans, and many Democrats, all the scorn possible for this fiasco.
Looks like they may be trying to do a clean coal project in Alabama as soon as the get everybody in place on the Alabama PSC. Read the attached article.http://yallpolitics.com/index.php/yp/post/36119/
As a coincidence you have Gov.Phildo and others defending this ratepayer nightmare called Kemper at an energy conference on the Coast today. You have to read the attached ,it will make you wonder if they even believe what they are saying.http://www.sunherald.com/2013/10/14/5029949/conference-speakers-insist-you.html Watch the video.
http://www.wlox.com/story/23688795/conference-in-biloxi-explores-future-of-southern-energy. More video on the Energy Conference of Clowns trying to sell all of the good Kemper is bringing to the Ms.Power customers. I do not know why these links are not clickable. Help KF!
Phil is drinking a Clean Coal Martini in this news clip. If the Kemper Plant is the future we are all going broke. What a bunch of back slapping goobers at this event. Redonkulous on stage.
I predict in the southern part of the state the increased power bill created by Kemper will be a huge election issue and not bode well for Republicans. Politicians like Phil Bryant will continue to put a positive spin on this giant costly mistake allowed by them along with the PSC and Southern Company.
You'd like to get another liberal in there wouldn't you Hayes?
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