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Environment
Quick Hit
by Matthew Blake
6:16pm
Wed Sep 26, 2012

Buyer, Clean-Up Plans Still Unknown For Chicago Coal Plant Sites

A mayoral task force released a report Saturday with broad guidelines for how to redevelop the site of two Chicago coal-fired power plants on the Southwest Side that shut down in August. A main recommendation was that the sites be used to create local jobs in non-polluting industries.

Community advocates who live in the Pilsen neighborhood, the site of the closed Fisk plant, and Little Village, home of the shuttered Crawford plant, credit Mayor Rahm Emanuel not just for working with Midwest Generation company to shut down the plants, but also for using a task force to spark community dialogue.

“Usually task forces are where something goes to be forgotten,” says Nelson Soza, executive director of Pilsen Alliance and a member of the task force. “But this task force raised the profile of these sites.”

However, the panel did not weigh in on a central concern of community residents: who will take on remediation, i.e. the process of cleaning up the industrial site. The report reads that, “The issue of remediation was discussed by the Task Force, but the Task Force was unable to reach consensus on a recommendation for further action.” Read more »

Quick Hit
by Matthew Blake
5:30pm
Mon Sep 24, 2012

Environmentalists Disquieted By Ameren Pollution Reprieve

In 2006, former Gov. Rod Blagojevich heralded a major environmental compromise with Ameren for which the St. Louis energy company would spend $1.6 billion to reduce mercury, sulfur dioxide and nitrogen oxide in their Illinois coal-fired power plants.

Today, environmentalists fear that deal is in jeopardy after the Illinois Pollution Control Board granted Ameren a five-year extension Thursday for meeting new sulfur dioxide pollution standards. The company now has until 2020, instead of 2015, to meet the standards through installing pollution control equipment at their 1,186-megawatt plant in Newton.

Ameren contended that the double whammy of the economic downturn and lower electricity rates caused by the rise in natural gas competitors forced a delay in compliance. Read more »

PI Original
by Steven Ross Johnson
1:12pm
Tue Sep 18, 2012

Lobbying For Wind Energy Tax Credit Intensifies As Expiration Nears

Supporters of wind energy are predicting that what happens in Congress over the next several days could be crucial to the fate of the industry, warning that more than 37,000 jobs could be in jeopardy if lawmakers fail to extend a vital tax credit for renewable power producers. Meanwhile, supporters and opponents of the tax credit are intensifying their calls for the credit's extension or demise. 

Quick Hit
by Steven Ross Johnson
1:08pm
Fri Aug 17, 2012

Health Care Community Pushes Back Against Ameren's Attempt To Stall On Emissions Reductions

Education and health professionals joined environmental advocates this week to call on state officials to deny a request from downstate power provider Ameren to delay compliance with more stringent pollution-control regulation of its coal-fired power plants.

In a letter addressed to members of the Illinois Pollution Control Board (IPCB), 96 physicians, researchers and healthcare professionals urged the body to uphold standards that would require coal-fired plants to significantly reduce sulfur dioxide emissions by January 1, 2015.   

Read more »

Quick Hit
by Anthony Burke Boylan
3:30pm
Thu Aug 16, 2012

New Program Seeks To Sway Consumers, Lawmakers In The Battle Of The Bags

Consumers in five Chicago Wards will be seeing new bags to carry their purchases, though they may not notice the difference unless it’s pointed out to them.

It’s all part of a larger effort to ban plastic bags at large retailers in Chicago. The proposed ordinance, introduced by Ald. Proco “Joe’’ Moreno (1st), would encourage people to bring reusable bags to the store and charge a nickel for paper or so-called plastic alternative bags at retailers of 5,000 square feet or more.

Read more »

Quick Hit
by Matthew Blake
5:50pm
Tue Aug 14, 2012

Murky Future For Illinois Coal Projects

Gov. Pat Quinn used his veto pen Friday to scotch a coal gasification plant on the Southeast Side of Chicago. Environmental advocates hailed the move, but also warned that New York City-based Leucadia National Corporation would return to Springfield with a revised proposal.

And that may be the case. But energy companies have not yet figured out how to make 'clean coal' or 'coal to gas' projects both economically and environmentally appealing to Quinn and state lawmakers. Read more »

Quick Hit
by Progress Illinois
11:47am
Mon Aug 13, 2012

Op-Ed: Quinn Vetoes Leucadia's Rate Hike - The End of Springfield's Coal Plant Bailouts?

The following was written by Jack Darin of the Sierra Club, Illinois Chapter. 

Friday Governor Quinn took bold action to protect Illinois ratepayers from a gas rate hike to subsidize the coal-to-gas plant proposed by New York-based Leucadia National Corporation. The proposal has come under fire from community residents concerned about the millions of pounds of air pollution Leucadia could add to Illinois’ air. Strong opposition has also come from businesses, consumer groups, school advocates, and others who don’t want to be forced to pay, through their gas bills, for Leucadia’s overpriced gas.

Leucadia’s gamble could cost Illinois $8.7 billion over the 30 years that ratepayers would be compelled to underwrite it.

Read more »