BUSINESS A8 • HERMISTONHERALD.COM WEDNESDAY, JUNE 17, 2020 Oregon bids goodbye to coal power Fifteen years ago, the newspapers at EO Media Group published a landmark series of stories on climate change. In April, we began a new series, Climate Changed, that will revisit many of the sources we talked with then and look at what has happened in the intervening time. By NICK ROSENBERGER EO MEDIA GROUP BOARDMAN — Since 1980, the Boardman Coal Plant has produced reliable energy capable of powering 500,000 homes. But keep- ing the lights on has come at a cost. The plant can burn up to 8,000 tons of coal a day, mak- ing it the largest single source of greenhouse gas emissions in the state. In 2019, the plant sent roughly 2.5 million met- ric tons of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere. That production — both of energy and emissions — will come to an end in just a few months. The Portland Gen- eral Electric-owned facility, the last coal plant operating in Oregon, will close by the end of 2020. And though about a third of the electricity used in Oregon will still be created by out-of-state coal, Boardman’s closure will mark the end of an energy era. Located 160 miles east of Portland along the Columbia River in Morrow County, the Boardman Coal Plant oper- ates within the environmen- tal rules set down by both the state and federal govern- ments. It is nowhere near the end of its design life. “There’s no expiration date for a plant like Board- man if it’s well maintained,” said PGE spokesperson Steve Corson. Yet, the company made the unprecedented deci- sion to shut it down. “It was the fi rst volun- tary plant closure in the U.S. of its kind,” said Rebecca Smith, a senior policy analyst at the Oregon Department of Energy. The plant no longer pen- ciled out economically and environmentally, according to Corson. In 2010, Oregon passed strict emission con- trol laws. Meeting those regu- lations would require PGE to make more than $600 million in upgrades to the plant, a sig- nifi cant investment that “over the long term ... just wasn’t going to make sense,” said Corson. PGE instead made cheaper, short-term fi xes that limited sulfur and nitrogen emissions, then started making plans to shut the plant down within a decade. “2020 ended up being the compromise date,” said Cor- son. “It gave our employees at the plant time to plan for the transition. It also gave us time ... to think about how our resource mix would change with Boardman leaving the picture.” Boardman isn’t the only coal plant facing pressures, both economic and cultural. There are nearly 600 coal- fi red plants still operating in the U.S., though more than 200 others have closed in the last two decades due to declining revenue or envi- ronmental regulations. Those regulations are an attempt to reduce the effects of burning coal, the largest human-made contributor to carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. regulators nor customers. And while cleaner than coal, nat- ural gas would still produce signifi cant carbon emissions. Corson said the company then considered torrefaction as a fi nal option before clos- ing the plant for good. Simi- lar to roasting coffee, torre- faction chars woody biomass to a level similar to charcoal. This torrefi ed wood can then be used as an energy-dense fuel with a much smaller car- bon footprint than coal. Torrefi ed wood “cer- tainly could be a viable fuel” at a plant like Board- man, said Matt Krumenauer, vice president of the U.S. Endowment for Forestry and Communities. According to Krume- nauer, torrefaction has ben- efi ts beyond the bottom line. It fi nds use for low-value wood, which in turn supports local timber jobs and can help make rural Oregon safer. Kru- menauer, who is also the CEO of Restoration Fuels, said tor- refaction can lead to a “reduc- tion in wildfi re smoke, reduc- tion of overall wildfi res.” Currently, Restoration Fuels is focused on export- ing torrefi ed biomass to fac- tories in Europe and Asia. But the long-term goal is to cre- ate a local market for biomass and the power it can create. Krumenauer and Restoration Fuels are currently building the fi rst North American com- mercial scale facility in John Day, set to open this summer. Due to high transporta- tion costs, however, it can be expensive to implement torre- faction in less-wooded terrain. Just driving the biomass three hours from the dry pine for- ests of John Day to the sage desert of Boardman would cost about $300 per load — and that doesn’t include the costs of cutting, loading or chipping the lumber. Because of that, “you’re at a loss for every single ton of biomass you use,” said Krumenauer. That proved a fatal blow to the transformation of the Boardman plant. It would simply cost too much to trans- port tons of torrefi ed biomass to be worthwhile. Torrefac- tion was axed from consid- eration, and with it any hope that the plant would remain in operation. “That story is over,” said Corson. “We will decommis- sion it.” Human cost For all the environmen- tal benefi ts, the closure of the plant has a human cost. In addition to prior staff reduc- tions, Boardman employs 67 full-time workers who earn an average salary of nearly $110,000 per year — well above the county, state and national average. In addition, contractors and local vendors, such as Boardman’s fuels and lubricants distributor, will also lose an important customer. “Those are coveted jobs,” said Morrow County Com- missioner Don Russell, who said the plant has helped sup- port the Boardman economy for decades. Plant manager Dave Rod- gers said he was able to send his children to college thanks to a career at the plant. His daughter now works for NASA and his son is an accountant in Portland. In addition to provid- ing livable paychecks, PGE supported the community in other ways. “If you needed someone to coach a Little League team or be involved in the local cham- ber of commerce, there’s always been PGE employees involved in that,” said Com- missioner Russell. When the plant closes, Corson said some employ- ees will retire, some will be transferred to other plants around the state, and others may attend Blue Mountain Community College, where PGE is funding a scholarship program. “No employee in good standing will leave the com- pany without the benefi t of our support as they make this transition,” said Corson. A new wind Even though the coal plant will close, residents of Mor- row County are already pre- paring for a new energy future. The county will con- tinue to remain an important seat in the regional energy transmission system, and for PGE. “We’ll have a very strong presence in Morrow County for a long time to come,” said Corson. As part of the state’s push toward renewable energy and away from high emis- sions produced by coal, PGE and Pacifi c Power, along with organizations including the Oregon Environmental Coun- cil, Northwest Energy Coa- lition, and Sierra Club, came together to support the 2016 Oregon Clean Electricity & Coal Transition Plan. The plan called for Oregon to dou- ble the use of new renewable energy in the state to 50% by 2040 and end coal generation entirely. PGE developed its own goal to reduce 80% of its 1990 level emissions by 2050. To help meet that mark, they partnered with NextEra Energy. According to NextEra, the company is the “world’s largest generator of renew- able energy from the wind and sun.” The company has a generation capacity of 21,000 megawatts, a majority of which is produced by their 119 wind farms spread across North America. The two companies are working together on build- ing a renewable energy facil- ity across both Morrow and Umatilla counties that is one of the country’s largest. The 380-megawatt Wheatridge Renewable Energy facility will convert wind and solar EO fi le photo A stacker reclaimer digs up scoops of coal to feed a conveyer belt that fuels the Boardman Coal Plant. energy to produce roughly two-thirds of the energy that the coal plant did — with none of the air pollution emissions. Port of Morrow Director Ryan Neal said Wheatridge, and projects like it, “are crit- ical to the growth and econ- omy of the region.” The new energy facil- ity will also have an impact through Strategic Investment Program agreements that will help fund educational pro- grams for Morrow County students. A SIP agreement means that after the fi rst $25 million in taxable income, the companies will pay a portion of their income to local enti- ties in lieu of property taxes. The county has a 15-year SIP agreement with Wheat- ridge. If built to its full poten- tial, the project could lead to nearly $5 million in annual SIP payments to Morrow County. Legislation When Gov. Kate Brown signed the Oregon Clean Electricity & Coal Transition Plan in 2016, she committed Oregon to be the fi rst state in the nation to end coal-fi red power. Rebecca Smith saw the Boardman closure as a sign that “Oregon was on the bleeding edge” of America’s transition away from coal. “In Oregon we like to do it our own way,” she said. “We’re not following the ‘California solution’ or any- thing like that. We’re like, ‘OK, we have this much hydro, we have these peo- ple, these are our costs, these are the protections we want, this is how we’re going to approach it.’” Across the country and the world, the economic argu- ment for renewable energy is strengthening, while the eco- nomic and environmental arguments for coal weaken. The cost of generating solar energy has dropped 89% in the last decade, while wind power costs have dropped 70%, according to global fi nancial advisors at Lazard. A company that generates power with solar energy rather than coal now makes an additional $69 per mega- watt hour. “I see this as the future of electricity generation,” said Smith. “Oregon is moving towards cleaner, and frankly cheaper, electricity.” SAVE $10 ON THIS GREAT GIFT FOR DAD! $34.95 Once PGE decided it would no longer use coal to power the Boardman plant, PGE had to decide what to do with the facility. The company briefl y con- sidered using natural gas as a fuel, but that did not please BURNS MORTUARY of Hermiston & Hermiston Crematory 685 W. Hermiston Ave. Hermiston, Oregon (541) 567-6474 www.burnsmortuaryhermiston.com $44.95 plus shipping offer expires 6/21/20 Alternative fuel sources Serving Families with Care and Compassion for Over 70 Years. Companies have noticed the economic forces at play. Over the next two decades, more than 30 coal projects from Montana to Arizona are scheduled to close. Many, like in Boardman, are closing well before the end of their design life. “The push for decarbon- ization and clean electricity is also happening globally,” said Smith. “And Oregon is defi nitely part of that march forward.” In Morrow County, that march includes the closure of the state’s last coal plant and the construction of one of the nation’s largest renewable energy facilities. The closing is hard for people like Dave Rogers, who spilled a career’s worth of sweat at the plant, and for Commissioner Don Russell, who must pay the county’s bills and balance its budget. But both said there is a sense of pride in Board- man and hope for the future of energy production in the region. “I can honestly say I feel really proud about what we did here” said Rodgers. 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