(Source: Lancaster New Era)

By Tim Mekeel, Intelligencer Journal/Lancaster New Era, Pa.
Nov. 27--Years ago, as PPL pondered how to get its Brunner Island power
plant under sharply lower emissions limits coming Jan. 1, 2010, it had two
options.
It could build its way there or buy its way there.
PPL chose the former. And now, three years and $800 million later, the
coal-fired electricity-generating station has achieved its goal.
"This will keep the plant in compliance for the extended future," PPL
spokesman George Lewis said Wednesday.
The project represents a strategic shift for PPL, which had been keeping
the York County facility in compliance by using the latter strategy.
PPL had been buying "allowances," a kind of credit, from other utilities
that had power plants under emissions limits, and applying them to Brunner
Island.
It also had been transferring "allowances" to Brunner Island from its
other coal-fired power plants that were under their limits.
But knowing that the limits were to get much tighter, and allowances much
costlier, PPL figured Brunner Island needed a long-term fix so it could stand
on its own.
PPL's solution was to install two scrubbers that will reduce the plant's
sulfur dioxide emissions by 95 percent, from about 105,000 tons annually to
about 5,000 tons annually. Installation of the first scrubber was completed in
the spring, the second last week.
Under the 1990 Clean Air Act, Brunner Island -- on the west side of the
Susquehanna River, opposite Conoy Township -- now is allowed to emit 48,195
tons of sulfur dioxide annually.
That maximum will fall to roughly 24,100 tons a year starting Jan. 1, and
to 16,900 tons a year starting Jan. 1, 2015, said Lewis.
But thanks to the scrubbers, Brunner Island will be well below those
ceilings -- good news for Lancaster County and other places downwind.
As a result, Brunner Island's role will be reversed.
Rather than need allowances, it will create allowances. Those could be
worth millions of dollars for PPL, though the price fluctuates.
Scrubbers use a mixture of limestone and water in a chemical process that
transforms sulfur dioxide from the plant's exhaust into synthetic gypsum and
water vapor.
The synthetic gypsum is collected for use in making cement and wallboard.
The water vapor is released through the plant's new 600-foot-tall chimney.
The scrubbers also will reduce mercury and other materials from the
emissions, as a side benefit, by unknown degrees, PPL said.
Besides installing scrubbers, the project replaced two electrostatic
precipitators that capture ash and fine particles, built a treatment plant for
water used in the scrubbers, and built equipment to handle and store the
limestone and synthetic gypsum.
The project cost will not be passed on to PPL customers, Lewis noted. The
plant is part of the corporation's PPL Generation division. Electric users are
served by PPL Electric Utilities. Brunner Island, a three-unit, 1,500-megawatt
power plant built in the 1960s, is among PPL's three biggest power plants in
Pennsylvania.
It employs 280 people, including 30 recently hired to run the scrubbers
and related equipment.
In other power-plant news, PPL said Tuesday that the operating licenses
for both reactors at its Susquehanna nuclear facility in Berwick, Luzerne
County, have been extended 20 years. Susquehanna is PPL's biggest power plant.
The Nuclear Regulatory Commission approved lengthening Unit 1's
license to 2042 and Unit 2's license to 2044. PPL, which applied for the
license renewal in 2006, said it spent $18.2 million on the renewal process.
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