Georgia Power
{{#badges: CoalSwarm | Nuclear Spin}}Georgia Power describes itself as "an investor-owned, tax-paying utility that serves 2.25 million customers in all but four of Georgia's 159 counties." It is the largest of four electric utilities comprising Southern Company.[1]
In 2006 the Savannah Electric & Power Company, a separate subsidiary of Southern Company, was merged into Georgia Power.[citation needed]
Contents
Transmission system
Georgia Power utilizes transmission lines carrying 115,00 volts, 230,000 volts and 500,000 volts. Georgia Power has interconnections with the Tennessee Valley Authority to the north, Alabama Power Company to the west, South Carolina Gas and Electric and Duke Energy to the east, and Florida Power and Light to the south.[citation needed]
Georgia Power and coal
Georgia Power operates Scherer Steam Generating Station. In January 2009, Sue Sturgis of the Institute of Southern Studies compiled a list of the 100 most polluting coal plants in the United States in terms of coal combustion waste (CCW) stored in surface impoundments like the one involved in the TVA Kingston Fossil Plant coal ash spill.[2] The data came from the EPA's Toxics Release Inventory (TRI) for 2006, the most recent year available.[3]
Georgia Power asked the state's public service commission for approval to convert the coal-fired Plant Mitchell to run on wood fuel. If approved, the retrofit will begin in 2011 and the biomass plant will start operating in mid-2012. The 96-MW biomass plant will run on surplus wood from suppliers within a 100-mile radius of the plant, which is located near Albany, Georgia.[citation needed]
Georgia Power and nuclear
Georgia Power generates energy from two nuclear plants in Georgia -- Plant Hatch and Plant Vogtle [4] -- comprising 19 percent of the company's generating sources in 2008. [5]
In a bid to add two reactors to the Vogtle plant, Georgia Power lobbied the state legislature for the ability "to charge electric customers for construction costs before the nuclear plants start producing electricity," referred to as construction work in progress (CWIP). The legislature passed CWIP, as Senate Bill 31, but environmentalists filed a legal challenge to the measure in September 2009. The Southern Alliance for Clean Energy argued that in giving "Georgia Power permission to charge electric customers for construction costs before the nuclear plants start producing electricity, that the law amounted to a sort of tax that gives the utility something for nothing." The Alliance lawsuit states: "The adoption of the nuclear tariff by the Georgia General Assembly creates an unconstitutional gratuity in favor of Georgia Power and its stockholders, for, among other reasons, paying such stockholders of Georgia Power a return on equity in excess of $1 billion before Units 3 and 4 at Plant Vogtle are even put into service, i.e., for services which have not been rendered." [6]
Generating facilities
Georgia Power owns and operates 14 fossil fueled generating plants, 20 hydroelectric dams, and two nuclear power plants, which provide electricity to more than 2 million customers. [7]
Fossil fuel power plants
Plant | Nearest City | Number of Units | Capacity |
---|---|---|---|
Bowen Steam Plant | Cartersville, Georgia | 4 | 3,160,000 kW |
Harllee Branch Generating Plant | Milledgeville, Georgia | 4 | 1,539,700 kW |
William P. Hammond Steam-Electric Generating Plant | Rome, Georgia | 1 | 800,000 kW |
Kraft Plant | Savannah, Georgia | 4 | 281,136 kW |
John J. McDonough Steam Generating Plant | Smyrna, Georgia | 2 | 490,000 kW |
McIntosh Power Plant | Savannah, Georgia | 9 | 810,000 kW |
McIntosh Steam Plant | Rincon, Georgia | 2 | 1,240,000 kW |
Mitchell Plant | Brunswick, Georgia | 2 | 596,000 kW |
W. E. Mitchell Steam-Electric Generating Plant | Albany, Georgia | 4 | 243,000 kW |
Robins Steam-Electric Generating Plant | Warner Robins, Georgia | 2 | 166,000 kW |
Scherer Steam Generating Station | Juliette, Georgia | 4 | 3,272,000 kW |
Wansley Plant | Carrollton, Georgia | 2 | 951,872 kW |
Allen B. Wilson Combustion Turbine Plant | Waynesboro, Georgia | 354,100 kW | |
Yates Steam Generating Plant | Newnan, Georgia | 7 | 1,250,000 kW |
Contact information
Website: www.georgiapower.com
Articles and resources
Related SourceWatch articles
References
- ↑ Georgia Power: About Us", Georgia Power website, accessed July 2009.
- ↑ Sue Sturgis, "Coal's ticking timebomb: Could disaster strike a coal ash dump near you?," Institute for Southern Studies, January 4, 2009.
- ↑ "TRI Explorer", U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, accessed January 2009.
- ↑ "Plants," Georgia Power website, accessed September 2009.
- ↑ "Facts & figures," Georgia Power website, accessed September 2009.
- ↑ Walter C. Jones, "Nuclear opponents attacking from many angles: Lawsuit may halt reactor construction," Morris News Service / Athens Banner-Herald (Georgia), September 5, 2009.
- ↑ "Generating Plants", Georgia Power website, accessed August 2009.
External resources
External articles
Wikipedia also has an article on Georgia Power. This article may use content from the Wikipedia article under the terms of the GFDL.