Golden Valley Electric Association

Healy Clean Coal Plant (HCCP)

Current status

Responding to Alaska Industrial Development & Export Authority's November 2005 lawsuit against Golden Valley Electric Association, the co-op filed a motion with the court requesting mediation which was granted January 2006 and mediation has been ongoing since then. All issues concerning the future of HCCP have been on the table, including:

As always, GVEA stands firm in protecting members' best interest in the cooperative.

For more information, you can read Golden Valley's Statement of Fact that was filed with the court in January 2006.

Purpose

When operational, the plant will provide 50 megawatts of competitively-priced power to the Interior. HCCP will provide jobs, enhance the co-op's ability to produce power from a variety of fuels, which helps stabilize the cost of power, and provide for the future power generation needs of Interior Alaskans.

Participants

AIDEA constructed and owns HCCP. The project was partially funded by the U.S. Department of Energy's (DOE) Clean Coal Technology Program in their efforts to research and develop clean burning coal technology. Usibelli Coal Mine partnered in the project as the coal supplier and GVEA participated as the future operator and power purchaser.

History

In 1989, the U.S. Department of Energy's Clean Coal Technology Program selected Healy as a demonstration plant. The goal was to use experimental technology to burn waste coal. Healy began burning coal in 1998 and generated power intermittently through 1999 in its testing phase.

HCCP's experimental clean coal technology was intended to help the electric utility industry and the environment. The goal was to prove the equipment could produce cost-effective electrical power while reducing sulfur dioxide, nitrogen oxides and particulate matter emissions.

AIDEA currently owns the plant. Under the original agreement, Golden Valley had agreed to operate the plant and purchase its power once the plant was commercially viable. The plant has been shut down since January 2000, because safe, reliable and economic operation was not possible with the experimental technology.

Construction Funding

Department Of Energy $120 million
Alaska Legislature $25 million
AIDEA $150 million
GVEA & Usibelli Coal Mine $10 million plus in-kind contributions

Timeline

1989 DOE selected HCCP as a Clean Coal Technology Program demonstration plant
1990-1994 Plant design completed and environmental permits secured
1995-1997 HCCP is constructed
1999 Plant failed to pass a 90-day operating test designed to test reliability and economics
2000 Plant shut down
2003 Joint meetings between AIDEA and GVEA
2004 GVEA offers to purchase HCCP from AIDEA
State rejects offer
2005 AIDEA files lawsuit alleging breach of contract
Jan 2006 to May 2008 GVEA & AIDEA in mediation.