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Oklahoma State Senate
Communications Division
State Capitol
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma 73105
For Immediate Release: March
30, 2005
Audio Clip
Sen. Kenneth Corn along with Rep. Glen Bud Smithson and a group
of coal miners talk with reporters.
Senator Says Inaction by OG&E Threatens Coal Industry
If Oklahoma Gas and Electric Company doesn’t
sign a new long-term contract to buy electricity from the AES Shady
Point co-generation plant in Le Flore County soon, more than 2,000
Oklahoma coal miners and truck drivers could be forced into the
ranks of the unemployed, State Senator Kenneth
Corn said Wednesday morning
“We’re talking about real people with mortgages to pay
and children to clothe and feed. We’re talking about wiping
out an entire industry in our state,” said Corn, D-Poteau.
The Senator’s comments came during a State Capitol press conference
in which he was flanked by a group of coal miners and officials
from AES Shady Point.
Corn said OG&E currently contracts with AES to buy all of the
electricity produced at the plant near Panama. The plant produces
electricity by burning coal, including 75 percent of all the coal
mined in Oklahoma.
“It’s the only power plant in the state with the scrubbers
to burn the high-sulfur coal dug out of the mines in southeastern
Oklahoma. If AES can’t get a new contract with OG&E soon,
it won’t be able to extend its contract with the coal mining
companies and without that contract, the coal miners and the truckers
who transport the coal to the plant will be out of work,”
Corn said.
The Senator said the AES Shady Point plant itself is not at risk.
Company officials believe they can sell the electricity elsewhere
on the open market, but doing so would mean making an investment
in new transmission equipment.
The current contract between AES Shady Point and OG&E expires
in 2007.
“What AES needs is some certainty so it can plan for the future.
If that future includes a new long-term contract with OG&E,
then AES can extend its contract with the Oklahoma coal miners.
If it doesn’t or if the future remains uncertain, AES won’t
be able to renew that contract and thousands of miners and truck
drivers will lose their jobs. Open market energy sales simply can’t
provide the company with the certainty it needs to extend its contract
with its Oklahoma coal supplier,” Corn said.
Corn said it is in the best interest of Oklahoma ratepayers for
OG&E to renew the contract because it is as much as five times
less expensive to produce electricity in coal-fired power plants
than with natural gas.
“And with the price of natural gas continuing to rise, the
cost savings of coal is only going to increase,” Corn said.
For more
information contact:
Senate Communications Office- (405) 521-5774

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