Fayette Coal: Difference between revisions

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= Fayette Power Plant =
The Fayette Power Project, a coal-fired plant in La Grange, Texas, is run and co-owned by the City of Austin and The Lower Colorado River Authority (LCRA). The first plant was built in 1979, with the third and final unit completed in 1988. Austin was set to close its portion at the end of 2021 but rolled back its plan, citing it could not reach an agreement with LCRA.
"We've been talking to LCRA for a while," Pat Sweeny, Austin Energy's vice president for power production, told KUT, "At the end of the day, we just couldn't come to terms that both parties could agree to, to allow us to exit at an affordable basis and at the timeline that was contemplated." <ref>https://www.austinmonitor.com/stories/2021/11/austin-will-keep-running-fayette-coal-power-plant-missing-key-climate-goal/</ref>
= Litigation =   
= Litigation =   


LCRA’s Fayette Power Project is under legal attack by three anti-pollution groups who filed a federal lawsuit on Monday against the coal-fired power plant located near La Grange, about 100 miles northwest of [[Houston]]. <ref>https://www.citizen.org/news/austins-fayette-coal-fired-power-plant-sued/</ref>
LCRA’s Fayette Power Project is under legal attack by three anti-pollution groups who filed a federal lawsuit on Monday against the coal-fired power plant located near La Grange, about 100 miles northwest of [[Houston]]. <ref>https://www.citizen.org/news/austins-fayette-coal-fired-power-plant-sued/</ref>

Revision as of 17:19, 15 November 2022

Fayette Power Plant

The Fayette Power Project, a coal-fired plant in La Grange, Texas, is run and co-owned by the City of Austin and The Lower Colorado River Authority (LCRA). The first plant was built in 1979, with the third and final unit completed in 1988. Austin was set to close its portion at the end of 2021 but rolled back its plan, citing it could not reach an agreement with LCRA.

"We've been talking to LCRA for a while," Pat Sweeny, Austin Energy's vice president for power production, told KUT, "At the end of the day, we just couldn't come to terms that both parties could agree to, to allow us to exit at an affordable basis and at the timeline that was contemplated." [1]




Litigation

LCRA’s Fayette Power Project is under legal attack by three anti-pollution groups who filed a federal lawsuit on Monday against the coal-fired power plant located near La Grange, about 100 miles northwest of Houston. [2]