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Duke Energy's latest 20-year plan would delay closing the Gibson coal plant by three years. Duke Energy plans to delay the retirement of its Gibson coal plant by three years. That’s according to ...
Fossil Fuels The Country’s Second-Largest Coal Plant May Get a Three-Year Reprieve From Retirement. Why? Duke Energy wants to extend the life of its Gibson plant in Indiana from 2035 to 2038 ...
As a part of that plan, all of Duke’s remaining coal-fired plants will retire or convert entirely to natural gas by the end of 2035. Before retirement, however, Duke Energy must build ...
Duke Energy today announced plans to retire its Asheville, N.C., coal-fired power plant in four to five years and modernize its generation and transmission system in western North Carolina and ...
A recent settlement between Duke Energy and Reliable Energy (REI) could result in the survival of the currently operational ...
WSOC Charlotte. Duke Energy’s Coal-fired Allen Steam Plant retires at the end of the year. Posted: November 21, 2024 | Last updated: December 11, 2024 ...
Evansville has been called a sacrifice zone due to pollution hazards, and federal goals to lower environmental safeguards ...
Similarly, North Carolina state regulators required Duke Energy to excavate 14 coal ash pits by 2038. “What remains is a lot of groundwater pollution at many of these sites,” Torrey said.
Duke's previous plan, submitted in 2021, committed the utility to going coal-free by 2035. This new plan would extend that to 2038. Duke's Gibson Plant, located in southwest Indiana, will be the ...
Duke Energy plans to delay the retirement of its Gibson coal plant by three years. That’s according to the utility’s latest 20-year plan. If the company follows through, Duke would be the last ...
As a part of that plan, all of Duke’s remaining coal-fired plants will retire or convert entirely to natural gas by the end ...
Similarly, North Carolina state regulators required Duke Energy to excavate 14 coal ash pits by 2038. “What remains is a lot of groundwater pollution at many of these sites,” Torrey said.