Colorado's last standing coal plant?
Coal to feed the roaring blast furnaces of Pueblos steel mill was being mined a century ago at dozens of hamlets in the foothills of Colorados Sangre de Cristo Range. Little remains today of those camps near Trinidad nor of the mine works at Crested Butte, Lafayette, and other one-time coal-mining towns.
Were now in the midst of an even greater change. Get your photos quick. The smokestacks of the giant coal-burning plants that have generated most of our electricity during the last 50 years will soon start falling.
What will be Colorados last standing coal plant? Its an open question. Xcel Energy, Colorados largest utility, wants it to be Comanche 3. It operates and is majority owner of the plant, along with Intermountain Rural Electric Association and Holy Cross Energy. In late March Xcel will submit plans to state regulators to keep the plant burning coal until 2040.
All other coal plants in Colorado will close by 2030, according to current plans. Colorados energy transition iswell, the metaphor of picking up steam doesnt work as well as it used to. The state had a combined 4,412 megawatts of electrical generating capacity in December 2018.
Read more: https://mountaintownnews.net/2021/03/04/colorados-last-coal-plant/