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Endangered Plant Now An Example

January/February 2003 IBEW Journal

Less than 10 years ago, environmentalists targeted Washington state’s coal-fired Centralia generating plant for its sulfur dioxide emissions, which they claimed were partly responsible for obscuring one of the most treasured natural beauties of the Northwest—Mount Rainier.

Fourteen-thousand-foot Mount Rainier, an active volcano, is a national park 85 miles south of Seattle. Environmentalists nearly succeeded in shuttering the only coal-fired plant in hydro-power-heavy Washington, said Portland Local 125 Business Manager Bill Miller.

Two hundred million dollars later, the plant not only meets but exceeds federal air pollution emission standards. The new scrubber upgrade saved the 31-year-old plant, along with its 600 well-paying union jobs.

"It was unnerving for our members here for a lot of years," Miller said. "In that area, those are really the only family wage jobs around. The plant complex there is the backbone of the economy."

More than 150 members of IBEW Local 125 are employed at the plant owned by TransAlta, which purchased it in 2000. The upgrades make Centralia among the cleanest coal-fired power plants in North America. Today, sulfur dioxide emissions at the plant have been reduced by 90 percent.

A September ceremony at the plant also celebrated the opening of a 248-megawatt natural gas generator and the operation’s recent ISO 140001 certification, an international standard of excellence for environmental management. With the scrubber technology and the other improvements, Canada-based TransAlta has invested nearly $500 million in Centralia. Now the plant generates enough electricity each year to light a city the size of Seattle.

"They’ve made a significant financial commitment and tell us they’re there for the long haul," Miller said.

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