Elmwood Energy Center

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This article is part of the Coal Issues portal on SourceWatch, a project of Global Energy Monitor and the Center for Media and Democracy. See here for help on adding material to CoalSwarm.

Elmwood Energy Center is a proposed coal plant near Chicago, in Elmwood, Illinois.[1]

In 2003, the Illinois EPA issued a draft permit to Indeck Energy Services to build a 660 MW coal plant near Chicago in Elwood, Illinois. The proposed location was in the greater Chicago area (50 miles south of the Chicago Loop) and adjacent to Midewin National Tallgrass Prairie, the nation’s first prairie preserve. Working together with the City of Chicago and the Chicago branch of the ALA, the Sierra Club filed a lawsuit against Indeck. In September 2006, the U.S. EPA’s Environmental Appeals Board overturned the air permit, finding that it lacked emissions control requirements and environmental impact assessments. [2] Subsequently, Indeck declined to renew the option for the property the company intended to use for the plant, indicating that it did not intend to pursue the project further.[2]

Project Details

Sponsor: Indeck Energy Services
Location: Elmwood, Illinois
Size: 660 MW
Type: Circulating fluidized bed
Projected in service: 2007
Status: Cancelled

Financing

Citizen Groups

Resources

References

  1. “Tracking New Coal-Fired Power Plants,” National Energy Tech Lab, May 1, 2007, page 12. (Pdf)
  2. 2.0 2.1 "Stopping the Coal Rush", Sierra Club, accessed December 2007. (This is a Sierra Club list of new coal plant proposals.)

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