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Owensboro to End Coal-Fired Power after 117 Years

Owensboro's coal-fired Elmer Smith generating station will be shut down by 2023.
Owensboro Municipal Utilities
Owensboro's coal-fired Elmer Smith generating station will be shut down by 2023.
Owensboro's coal-fired Elmer Smith generating station will be shut down by 2023.
Credit Owensboro Municipal Utilities
Owensboro's coal-fired Elmer Smith generating station will be shut down by 2023.

Owensboro Municipal Utilities is switching to a different source of energy after more than 100 years of burning coal.

There’s a lot of talk - and hope - among some Kentucky residents that coal will make a comeback. But Owensboro Municipal Utilities says it’s seen the writing on the wall and coal will be completely phased over the next six years. 

Sonya Dixon is a spokeswoman for OMU.

“This is a monumental change in the way that OMU has done business. You know, we have burned coal for the last 117 years and obviously, this is a shift, but we feel it’s a positive one in the best interest of our customers.” 

Dixon says one factor in the decision is the age of the city’s Elmer Smith generating station. It is the only power station for the city and it has two coal-burning units that went online in 1964 and 1974. One unit will be shut down by 2019 and the second by 2023.

An impending $37 million cost for the coal-fired plant to meet environmental regulations is another reason OMU decided to retire the Elmer Smith station.

After in-depth studies, the Owensboro utility says coal is not the most cost-efficient way to generate power for its 26,000 residential and commercial customers.

A dramatic market force is the lower price of natural gas. For that reason, the utility is considering options for future power that are mainly focused on natural gas. 

Dixon said the utility is examining the best option for a new source of energy.    

“As for OMU’s future, we have not determined what our source of power will be. We have lots of options before us, one of which could be the construction of a gas-fired plant at the Elmer Smith station. We could participate in other gas stations being built elsewhere.”

Dixon says the utility will continue to consider solar and other renewables as possible energy sources for the future.

Copyright 2017 WKU Public Radio

Rhonda Miller began as reporter and host for All Things Considered on WKU Public Radio in 2015. She has worked as Gulf Coast reporter for Mississippi Public Broadcasting, where she won Associated Press, Edward R. Murrow and Green Eyeshade awards for stories on dead sea turtles, health and legal issues arising from the 2010 BP oil spill and homeless veterans. She has worked at Rhode Island Public Radio, as an intern at WVTF Public Radio in Roanoke, Virginia, and at the South Florida Sun-Sentinel and Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. Rhonda’s freelance work called Writing Into Sound includes stories for Voice of America, WSHU Public Radio in Fairfield, Conn., NPR and AARP Prime Time Radio. She has a master’s degree in media studies from Rhode Island College and a bachelor’s degree in journalism from Boston University. Rhonda enjoys quiet water kayaking, riding her bicycle and folk music. She was a volunteer DJ for Root-N-Branch at WUMD community radio in Dartmouth, Mass.
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