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Feds Suspend Loan Program For New Coal Plants
BILLINGS, MT (AP) - The federal government is suspending a major loan program
for coal-fired power plants in rural communities, saying the uncertainties of
climate change and rising construction costs make the loans too risky.
After issuing $1.3 billion in loans for new plant construction since 2001,
none will be issued this year and likely none in 2009, James Newby, assistant
administrator
for the Rural Utilities Service, a branch of the Department of Agriculture,
said.
The program’s suspension marks a dramatic reversal of a once-reliable
source of new coal plant financing. It follows the announcement that several
major banks
will require plant developers to factor in climate change when seeking private
funding.
“
This is a big decision. It says new coal plants can’t go to the federal
government for money at least for the next couple years, and these are critical
times for companies to get these plants built,” said Abigail Dillen with
the environmental law group Earthjustice. The group filed a federal lawsuit
last year seeking to block the loan program.
At the time of the suspension, at least four utilities had been lined up
for loans totaling $1.3 billion - for projects in Kentucky, Illinois, Arkansas
and Missouri. A project in Montana was denied funding last month. Two more
were recently
withdrawn: last October in Wyoming and earlier in Missouri.
Newby said material and labor costs for new coal plants have been rising
30 percent a year, even as utilities struggle to pinpoint future costs of controlling
greenhouse
gas emissions. The 2 billion tons of those gases produced annually by coal-fired
plants in the United States exceed the emissions of any other source.
Newby said those uncertainties prompted the White House’s Office of
Management and Budget to ask that new loans be put on hold until risks can
be better quantified.
Rural utilities provide power to about 40 million customers across the nation.
More than 60 percent of that electricity comes from coal.
Whether the plants that were awaiting federal loans can find alternative
financing remains to be seen.
Associated Electric Cooperative Inc. announced it was “delaying indefinitely” its
proposed plant in Norborne, MO, after receiving word of the loan program suspension.
At least one developer, the East Kentucky Power Cooperative, is hoping to
wait out the suspension of the loan program rather than seek more expensive
loans
on the open market, spokesman Nick Comer said.
Two more projects - Southern Montana Electric’s Highwood Generating Station
and Basin Electric Power Cooperative’s Dry Fork plant in Wyoming - already
are seeking private funding.
A representative of the East Texas Power Cooperative, which has proposed
a plant in Plum Point, AR, also said his utility would seek private financing
if the
loans are not resumed.
“
We’ll have to look elsewhere for funding, which will increase the interest
expense, which will increase the electric bill for the consumers at the end of
the line,” said the cooperative’s Ryan Thomas.
Newby, with the Rural Utilities Service, said his agency is considering imposing
upfront fees on coal plant developers as a way to mitigate taxpayer exposure
through the loan program. Initial discussions have centered on a 0.2 percent
fee - equivalent to $2 million on every $1 billion in loans.
Newby added he was confident the government would work through the concerns
over risk and resume issuing loans possibly as soon as 2010.
Glenn English, chief executive of the National Rural Electric Cooperative
Association, said the program’s suspension was a sign of “nervousness” among
lenders anxious over the potential ramifications of climate change legislation
now before Congress.
Depending on what policies are adopted, retail electricity prices could increase
sharply once the costs of reducing greenhouse gases are factored in, he said.
Utilities that drop coal-fire power power proposals will be forced to shop
for more expensive electricty on the open market.
“
What you’re seeing (with the Rural Utilities Service) is a general reflection
of the attitude we find in the financial community, mainly this apprehension
about what the future holds and what can be expected out of government,” English
said.
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