Senators ask Energy Department to continue funding FutureGen
By Jim Suhr, The Associated Press
Posted: 5/20/08 Section: News
ST. LOUIS - The senior U.S. senators from Illinois and Missouri pressed anew Monday for the Energy Department to hold off on plans to scuttle its deal with an alliance of big power and coal companies to build a nearly emissions-free power plant.
Sens. Dick Durbin, an Illinois Democrat, and Kit Bond, a Missouri Republican, urged Energy Secretary Samuel Bodman in a letter to continue funding the project known as FutureGen into March of next year, allowing the next president to consider its fate.
The deal between the Energy Department and the coalition of roughly a dozen energy companies is to expire June 15, when the DOE can legally cancel the contract.
FutureGen's developers in December tapped Mattoon, Ill. as the site for FutureGen, under which carbon dioxide from the planned coal-fired power plant would be trapped and permanently stored underground. The Energy Department pulled the plug in January, citing costs that had ballooned to $1.8 billion, nearly double the original price tag.
The DOE announced this month it is moving in a different direction and expects to spend up to $1.3 billion on multiple clean-coal power plants involving carbon capture and below-ground sequestration in yet to be determined sites.
The DOE said it would be smarter to spread taxpayer money around to several smaller projects and considers the alternate plan a faster because it instantly commercializes the technology.
Undeterred, Durbin and Bond sponsored an amendment to a war-funding measure that cleared the Senate Appropriations Committee on May 15, calling for the Energy Department to continue funding FutureGen until March of next year. The full Senate has yet to take up that measure.
"We believe it is critical for this program and for the project at Mattoon to move forward," the senators wrote. "While we would prefer that the Department of Energy administratively extend the current budget period of the cooperative agreement (with the FutureGen Alliance), we felt compelled to push for this extension legislatively."
Sens. Dick Durbin, an Illinois Democrat, and Kit Bond, a Missouri Republican, urged Energy Secretary Samuel Bodman in a letter to continue funding the project known as FutureGen into March of next year, allowing the next president to consider its fate.
The deal between the Energy Department and the coalition of roughly a dozen energy companies is to expire June 15, when the DOE can legally cancel the contract.
FutureGen's developers in December tapped Mattoon, Ill. as the site for FutureGen, under which carbon dioxide from the planned coal-fired power plant would be trapped and permanently stored underground. The Energy Department pulled the plug in January, citing costs that had ballooned to $1.8 billion, nearly double the original price tag.
The DOE announced this month it is moving in a different direction and expects to spend up to $1.3 billion on multiple clean-coal power plants involving carbon capture and below-ground sequestration in yet to be determined sites.
The DOE said it would be smarter to spread taxpayer money around to several smaller projects and considers the alternate plan a faster because it instantly commercializes the technology.
Undeterred, Durbin and Bond sponsored an amendment to a war-funding measure that cleared the Senate Appropriations Committee on May 15, calling for the Energy Department to continue funding FutureGen until March of next year. The full Senate has yet to take up that measure.
"We believe it is critical for this program and for the project at Mattoon to move forward," the senators wrote. "While we would prefer that the Department of Energy administratively extend the current budget period of the cooperative agreement (with the FutureGen Alliance), we felt compelled to push for this extension legislatively."
2008 Woodie Awards
Illini Media
WPGU
buzz
Illio
Technograph
The Daily Illini encourages on-topic discussion through article commenting on its articles and blogs. It is our policy not to delete any comments based upon political or ideological point of view. However, we reserve the right to remove comments that are abusive, off-topic or use excessive foul language.
The posting of copyrighted material, including any and all content for which you are not the author, is illegal under Federal intellectual property laws. Such activity will not be tolerated. Comments containing copyrighted material will be removed, and continued violation of copyright law is grounds for being banned completely from commenting on DailyIllini.com.
If you feel any post meets these conditions or merits review, please e-mail our editors at meonline@dailyillini.com.
Be the first to comment on this story