Once-notorious plant undergoes cleanup

A 50-mile drive northeast from Las Vegas on Interstate 15 leads through scrub desert to the pastoral Moapa Valley, where farmers farm and cows graze under a fresh, wind-scrubbed sky.In the distance are the four smokestacks of the infamous Reid Gardner power plant, which has earned the scorn of environmentalists as one of the nation's dirtiest coal-fired generators. But today the plant, which for 43 years has provided electricity to feed Nevada's growth, no longer belches as much soot and smoke. Reid Gardner is in the midst of an $85 million overhaul to clean up its emissions.The improvements stem from a settlement announced in April between Nevada Power Co. and state and federal environmental protection agencies. The settlement came after a yearlong investigation by the state into 56 alleged violations of pollution limits and record-keeping regulations. Without the improvements, Reid Gardner would have been forced to shut down.With the company expecting to wrap up installation of new technology in 2009, the Sun decided to take a look at its progress.One result is immediately obvious: clearer skies. Nevada Power has cut the amount of visible soot and smoke from its Reid Gardner stacks by half in each of the past two years, with more to come.Environmentalists, usually quick to criticize the power company, applaud the improvements.John Thompson of the Clean Air Task Force, a nonprofit environmental group, said the federal Environmental Protection Agency estimates that every dollar spent nationally on pollution control improvements saves $10, mostly in health care costs. That figure might be lower in the West, where populations are more dispersed, but the benefits still outweigh the cost, Thompson said.The improvements include retrofitting the plant's three oldest units -- built in 1965, 1968 and 1976 -- with giant air filters that remove dust and ash particles from smokestack emissions. A fourth unit, built in 1983, already has one of the filters.The company also is changing the way it lights the giant boilers that burn pulverized coal dust at the plant. Igniters used to heat the boilers and make them burn coal more efficiently are being changed from diesel fuel to natural gas.The use of diesel fuel causes puffs of black smoke, which violate environmental regulations. Natural gas burns more cleanly. Most of the cost of conversion is to build an extension to the Kern natural gas pipeline.Another major improvement, being made to the fourth unit, is to pump air into the top of the boiler to reduce production of nitrogen oxide emission by 30 to 40 percent. The pollutant contributes to formation of ozone.Dante Pistone, a spokesman with the state's Environmental Protection Division, said the agency also is requiring the utility to clean up and monitor ponds used to store waste from scrubbers and cooling towers. That should address long-standing complaints from the Moapa band of Paiutes, whose reservation abuts the plant site, about a sulfur stench from those ponds.Pistone said the division hasn't received complaints about the smell in several months. "That's usually a pretty good gauge that something's working," he said.Work on the ponds is not part of the settlement.Mike Elges, chief of the Air Pollution Control Bureau for the state Environmental Protection Division, said historical environmental issues with Sierra Pacific Resources, Nevada Power Co.'s parent, have faded since the settlement."There has been a 180-degree change in the management ... of environmental issues," Elges said. "They've really made some incredible changes that have resulted in dramatic changes at the facility from an air quality and, in general, an environmental perspective."(Distributed by Scripps Howard News Service, www.scrippsnews.com.)

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