Iowa and coal

Introduction
Iowa is 16th in the nation in coal power generation, with 72 operating coal-fired power units at 28 locations totaling 6,492 megawatts (MW).

As of March 2010, three proposed coal plants in Iowa faced opposition and were canceled: Dairyland Chickasaw/Mitchell Plant, the LS Power Elk Run Energy Station, and the Sutherland Generating Station Unit 4.

In 2003, MidAmerican completed construction of a fourth 790-MW coal-fired unit at its existing 820-MW Council Bluffs Energy Center in Council Bluffs, Iowa. The new plant is the largest source of new air pollution and global warming pollution in Iowa.

Hearings on the Sutherland Station
Hearings on Sutherland Generating Station Unit 4, a 600 megawatt (660 megawatt gross) power plant proposed for Marshalltown, Iowa, by Interstate Power and Light, a subsidiary of Alliant Energy, took place in October and November of 2007.


 * Petition to Intervene
 * (drafted by Plains Justice on behalf of Coalition partners Community Energy Solutions, Iowa Chapter of Physicians for Social Responsibility, Iowa Farmers Union, Iowa Environmental Council, and Iowa Renewable Energy Association) (PDF file)


 * Testimony of Dr. James Hansen,
 * Director of NASA's Goddard Institute for Space Studies (PDF file)
 * Topic: global warming


 * Testimony of Dr. Neil Harl.
 * Professor Emeritus of Agriculture and Economics at Iowa State University (PDF file)
 * Topic: the potential power demand from biofuels


 * Testimony of Thomas Sanzillo.
 * Senior Associate of TR Rose Associates, and Former First Deputy Comptroller for the State of New York (PDF file).
 * Topic: disputing Alliant's modelling of future electricity demand


 * Testimony of Dr. Kristin Welker-Hood
 * Director of Environment and Health Programs, Physicians for Social Responsibility (PDF file)
 * Topic: public health effects of the plant


 * Additional testimony in the case can be found at Filings for Marshalltown, Iowa Coal Plant Proposal.

On March 5, 2009 Interstate Power and Light Company announced that it was canceling the Sutherland plant. The company said the decision was based on a combination of factors, including the financial climate and concerns about the possibility of future regulation of greenhouse gas emissions.

Coal Ash
The University of Iowa Power Plant, Iowa State University Power Plant, and the University of Northern Iowa Power Plant are among the state’s biggest producers of coal ash, a toxic byproduct of coal combustion. All three schools dispose of their ash in an unlined, unmonitored former quarry in Waterloo that received a waiver from the state in 2002, allowing it to use the ash as fill in its reclamation process.

In July 2009, the University of Iowa and Iowa State vowed to look into their dumping procedures to ensure they did not pose a threat to public health, due to heavy metals and toxins in coal like arsenic, mercury, and boron, which can poison groundwater supplies. EPA reports note elevated cancer risks for those living near coal dump sites.

In August 2009, assistant director of utilities at Iowa State Jeffrey Witt said the three universities spoke with the owner of the Waterloo quarry, BMC Aggregates (formerly Basic Materials Corp.) and determined that their coal ash disposal methods were safe.

The EPA had announced in May 2009 that the agency was preparing regulations on how to handle ash from coal-fired power plants. Matt Hale, the EPA official, said coal ash may be reclassified as hazardous waste. This would require federal monitoring standards for coal ash disposal sites like the Waterloo quarry.

In September 2009, the universities announced they would begin a voluntary groundwater-monitoring program at their Waterloo quarry.

Renewable Energy Policy
In 2007, Iowa created the Iowa Office of Energy Independence (IOEI), charged with "creating an Iowa Energy Plan every year to establish Iowa's path toward a reliance on energy that does not depend on outside sources of fuel and electricity and to distribute $25 million a year for four years in grants and loans that will go towards projects to help the state reach its goal towards independence."

In 2007, the Iowa State Legislature created the Iowa Climate Change Advisory Council (ICCAC), which consists of 23 governor-appointed members from various stakeholder groups, and four non-voting, ex-officio members from the General Assembly. The ICCAC is charged with "creating a proposal that addresses policies, cost-effective strategies, and multiple scenarios designed to reduce statewide greenhouse gas emissions." Among I-Renew's guiding principles is 1.) include renewable energy equipment in utility’s energy efficiency rebate programs, 2.) create Community Based Energy Development in Iowa, such as through Feed-In-Tariffs for new Renewable Energy Systems, and 3.) institute a fossil fuel carbon tax, and/or cap and trade or cap and dividend program.

Study questions coal-fired power plant job numbers
A 2011 Ochs Center for Metropolitan Studies report, "A Fraction of the Jobs" found that coal-fired power plants underestimate jobs by more than half. The analysis looked at the six largest new coal-fired power plants to come online between 2005 and 2009, and combed through each project’s initial proposals and job projection data, including public statements, published documents and other material. They then compared hat data to actual employment — before, during and after construction — in the areas where the projects were built, relying chiefly on the Bureau of Labor Statistics’ Quarterly Census of Employment and Wages.

At the six coal plant locations -- in Iowa, Texas, Nebraska, South Carolina and Wisconsin -- analyses of employment data and labor retention rates showed that only the plant in Iowa had an increase in construction employment that matched the predicted level. The others were about a quarter to half the number of jobs predicted. In four of the six counties, the projects delivered on just over a quarter of the jobs projected.

Iowa and air quality standards
In February 2011, the EPA declared Iowa's pollution-fighting plans "substantially inadequate" for maintaining fine particulate matter standards in Muscatine, Iowa, an industrial town of 22,700 on the Mississippi River. The state has 18 months to craft new plans for EPA approval, and then local industry will have another two years to install equipment or decrease production and reduce emissions. Not meeting pollution standards can lead to withheld federal funding and, eventually, a federal implementation plan that comes directly from the EPA instead of the state.

The EPA's action came just a few months after the agency voided almost two years of Muscatine's sulfur dioxide data due to faulty equipment, which may postpone a ruling on the status for those emissions standards. The agency requires three years of data to determine whether standards are being met. Results from air modeling software could be submitted to the EPA, but some state officials are resistant to the idea. Computer air modeling is similar to weather forecasting, and much of the software relies on information from the National Weather Service. Using these computer modeling techniques to determine whether Muscatine meets federal pollution standards is opposed by Roger Lande, director of the Iowa Department of Natural Resources, and also former chairman of the Iowa Association of Business and Industry (ABI), a group that has called for "streamlined" processes for air quality permits to reduce "unnecessary burden on industry."

Active

 * Council Bluffs Energy Center Unit 4

Cancelled

 * Dairyland Chickasaw/Mitchell Plant
 * LS Power Elk Run Energy Station
 * Sutherland Generating Station Unit 4

Citizen groups

 * Community Energy Solutions
 * Iowa City Sierra Club
 * Plains Justice
 * Sierra Club Iowa Chapter
 * Iowa Physicians for Social Responsibility

Power companies

 * MidAmerican Energy, a division of Berkshire Hathaway
 * Headquarters in Des Moines, IA
 * 27th biggest coal energy producer in U.S., if it was an independent company
 * Controls 10 coal-fired generating stations with 3421 MW capacity
 * Active proposals: Council Bluffs Energy Center Unit 4
 * Archer Daniels Midland
 * Central Iowa Power Cooperative
 * Interstate Power and Light, a division of Alliant Energy

Existing coal plants
Iowa is 16th in the nation in coal power generation, with 72 operating coal-fired power units at 28 locations totaling 6,492 megawatts (MW).

18 of these units are larger than 50MW.
 * Archer Daniels Midland Cedar Rapids - 260MW - 1988, 1995, 2000
 * Burlington - 212MW - 1968
 * Council Bluffs - 856MW - 1954, 1958, 1978
 * George Neal North - 1046MW - 1964, 1972, 1975
 * George Neal South - 640MW - 1979
 * Lansing - 339MW - 1948, 1949, 1957, 1977
 * Louisa - 738MW - 1983
 * Muscatine - 294MW - 1958, 1969, 1983, 2000
 * Ottumwa - 726MW - 1981
 * Prairie Creek - 245MW - 1951, 1958, 1967, 1997
 * Riverside - 141MW - 1949, 1961
 * Sutherland - 157MW - 1955, 1961

For a map of existing coal plants in the state, see the bottom of this page.

Coal Ash Waste and Water Contamination
In August 2010 a study released by the Environmental Integrity Project, the Sierra Club and Earthjustice reported that Iowa, along with 34 states, had significant groundwater contamination from coal ash that was not recognized by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). The report, in an attempt to pressure the EPA to regulate coal ash, noted that most states do not monitor drinking water contamination levels near waste disposal sites. The report mentioned Iowa's George Neal Station South and George Neal Station North were two sites that have groundwater contamination due to coal ash waste.

Major coal mines
As of March 2010, there are no major coal mines in Iowa. Historically, coal has been mined in 34 of Iowa's southern and central counties since the 1840s; an estimated 5,500 underground mines have operated in the state, and continue to effect the environment.

Related SourceWatch articles

 * Gregory E. Abel
 * Existing U.S. Coal Plants
 * Existing U.S. Coal Mines
 * Proposed coal plants in the United States
 * Proposed coal plants in Iowa
 * Coal plants cancelled in 2007
 * Coal plants cancelled in 2008
 * Coal Activist Videos: Iowa
 * Profiles of other states (or click on the map)