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The two aging coal plants at Cayuga station might live on, despite Duke Energy’s proposal earlier this year to retire them in favor of natural gas units. In a settlement reached with Reliable ...
The state agency tasked with protecting utility consumers has asked regulators to reject Duke Energy Indiana’s “ill-advised” plan to retire two coal-powered units—and replace them with new ...
Duke Energy is exploring the possibility of selling its Cayuga Generating Station rather than shutting it down. It’s possible Duke Energy’s Cayuga coal plant might not shut down after all. The ...
Duke Energy in February revealed its plans to build natural-gas units at the site of its coal-fired Cayuga Generating Station. Duke Energy estimates the project at its Vermillion County station ...
Coal ash costs baked into pending customer rate proposals by Duke Energy will be reduced by 60% if the settlement is finalized, which would diminish any proposed increase. In an email, Archie said ...
Duke Energy estimates the project at its Vermillion County station will cost at $3.33 billion. The electricity utility serves about 900,000 customers in 69 Indiana counties.
After demolitions, Duke Energy’s will have invested $9 billion in five new plants. The new plants allows the company to retire approximately 3,400 MW of older coal units by the end of 2013.
The project would add more than 470 megawatts to the aging facility’s 1005-megawatt capacity. Cayuga has operated for 55-plus years and is the oldest coal-fired facility in Duke’s Hoosier fleet.
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