CATCHING UP VIA A FEW ESPRESSO SHOTS: I…
2000 by Jeff HessShots of information, not coffee, unfortunately. Sitting here this week I’m looking at six pieces that I’ve been trying to read, and blog, for some time. I’m not going to get around to doing in-depth, individual, posts, but in the tradition of my Time Shovel Out The Blog Pile posts, here are quick reflections on the first of the six articles.
No. 1: from 2 March, Sharon Kelly’s How America’s clean coal dream unravelled for The Guardian. She begins:
High above the red dirt and evergreen trees of Kemper County, Mississippi, gleams a 15-story monolith of pipes surrounded by a town-sized array of steel towers and white buildings. The hi-tech industrial site juts out of the surrounding forest, its sharp silhouette out of place amid the gray crumbling roads, catfish stands and trailer homes of nearby De Kalb, population: 1,164.
The $7.5bn Kemper power plant once drew officials from as far as Saudi Arabia, Japan and Norway to marvel at a 21st-century power project so technologically complex its builder compared it to the moonshot of the 1960s. It’s promise? Energy from “clean coal”.
“I’m impressed,” said Jukka Uosukainen, the United Nations director for the Climate Technology Centre and Network, after a 2014 tour, citing Kemper as an example of how “maybe using coal in the future is possible”.
Kemper, its managers claimed, would harness dirt-cheap lignite coal—the world’s least efficient and most abundant form of coal—to power homes and businesses in America’s lowest-income state while causing the least climate-changing pollution of any fossil fuel. It was a promise they wouldn’t keep.
Last summer the plant’s owner, Southern Company, America’s second-largest utility company, announced it was abandoning construction after years of blown-out budgets and missed construction deadlines.
This is what happens when people get trapped in the echo chamber and start believing their own fantasies. What I found to be the most important paragraph—what Andrew Sullivan used to call the money shot until his mother asked him what he meant—comes high in the story:
Company officials have blamed the failure on factors ranging from competition from tumbling natural gas prices to bad weather, bad timing and plain old bad luck.
But a review by the Guardian of more than 5,000 pages of confidential company documents, internal emails, white papers, and other materials provided anonymously by several former Southern Co insiders, plus on- and off-record interviews with other former Kemper engineers and managers, found evidence that top executives covered up construction problems and fundamental design flaws at the plant and knew, years before they admitted it publicly, that their plans had gone awry.
This is why public relations and advertising folks make the big buck.
More tomorrow…








