Emma Creek Coal Energy


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Emma Creek Coal Energy
Soft sandstone bluffs striped with jet-black coal alongside Emma Creek
COAL ALONG EMMA CREEK — Soft sandstone bluffs striped with jet-black coal alongside Emma Creek — Get Photo

The Emma Creek Energy Project was a proposal for a large coal-fired power plant that still remains in the conception process. This 200 megawatt plant was to be located near the Jumbo Dome lease tract owned by Usibelli Coal Mine Inc., 15 miles from Denali National Park. At a proposed $420 million (in 1992 dollars), this plant would have produced more power than all of the existing coal-fired plants in Alaska combined. It would be a circulating fluid bed (CFB) plant and was projected to use 1.5 million tons of coal per year. The primary advantage of a power plant located at this site would be reduced transportation costs of the fuel and of waste back to the mine site for burial, but the power would also have to be transported a significant distance to consumers in Fairbanks and Anchorage. At the time of the proposal, the plant was estimated to take 7.5 years to permit, design, and construct but has not gone beyond the conception stages and has met with a mixed and mostly lukewarm response from power companies.

The site of the proposed Emma Creek Power Energy Project and Healy CTL project.
ENERGY FRONTIER — The site of the proposed Emma Creek Power Energy Project and Healy CTL project. — Get Photo

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Created: Jan. 19, 2018