Welcome to A Better NNEC

About us:

A Better NNEC is a volunteer organization of member owners of Northern Neck Electric Cooperative. A Better NNEC is working for more transparency and accountability of actions taken by the board of NNEC.  NNEC is a member cooperative of a group of eleven Coops that comprise Old Dominion Electric Cooperatives (ODEC).  ODEC has proposed a $6 billion, 1500 Megawatt coal plant in Surry, Virginia, which is 35 miles from the Chesapeake Bay.

A Better NNEC works with the Wise Energy for Virginia Coalition, which is a group of five non-profit conservation organizations committed to securing a clean energy future for Virginia.

We are working to make Northern Neck Electric Cooperative more transparent and accountable to its members, and sustainable in its energy choices.  We hope you will get involved!

This website will give you the information you need to join your fellow cooperative members in striving for a better NNEC.

Below are articles, letters to the editor, and more related to ODEC’s proposed $6 billion coal plant, and news from other cooperatives around the country that are working to improve their governance and energy portfolios.  Please share with your friends and neighbors to help make sure every co-op member is well informed.

This is a sticky post! continue reading?

A Better NNEC meeting Jan 17th, 2012

When: Tuesday January 17th, 6:00 PM
Where: Northumberland Public Library, Heathsville
What: There will be a short presentation on the Cypress Creek coal plant proposal and campaign including information on the latest developments in the campaign and how to get involved and take action to fight the coal plant. We will have a group discussion about the campaign and determine our next steps.
Who: a Better NNEC, Northern Neck Electric cooperative members and non-members, concerned citizens, all are welcome!

Questions? contact Whitney Byrd, coordinator of Wise Energy for Virginia coalition (434) 202- 7952

Momentum builds in the Cypress Creek coal plant campaign

Several partner projects of the Wise Energy for Virginia coalition have seen some serious momentum build recently on the campaign to stop the Cypress Creek coal plant. In mid November, months of pressure from Isle of Wight county citizens paid off as their County board of Supervisors adopted an official resolution of opposition to the proposed coal plant. Then, less than a week later, Old Dominion Electric Cooperative (ODEC) lost an important court case. A Surry county Circuit Judge ruled in favor of four local citizens and invalidated the town of Dendron’s zoning approval for the coal plant. The judge agreed that ODEC had rushed the approvals through without giving the public fair notice, violating Virginia law.

In light of these developments, ODEC is now mulling over their next steps for the coal plant proposal. This momentum demonstrates the cumulative impact of citizen’s involvement in this campaign. Our voices are getting through to the various decision makers and we need to ramp up the pressure now more than ever to keep up this momentum.

You have a voice in the decisions that Northern Neck Electric coop makes. Please contact Greg White, CEO of NNEC today at (804) 333-3621 and let him know that you don’t want to foot the bill for Virginia’s largest coal plant.

For more information see the Wise Energy for Virginia coalition blog

Brand new North Dakota coal plant left idle, money drain on coops

According to an article in the Minneapolis StarTribune, a brand new half billion dollar coal fired power plant in North Dakota is ready to begin operation, yet it has been left idle and has become a money drain parent company GRE (GRE is owned by 28 Minnesota electric cooperatives). The coal plant was intended to be a base load plant that utilizes environmental controls to reduce mercury and water usage. A spokesperson from a North Dakota environmental group mentioned that coal plants are becoming an increasingly risky investment due to the possibility of future federal regulations to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and skyrocketing coal prices. Slower than predicted electricity demand was cited as one reason the coal plant has failed to prove to be economically viable.

For more information see the full article in the Minneapolis StarTribune

Two letters in the Rappahannock Record

Published in the Rappahannock Record, July 21, 2011

Co-op proposal prompts concerns

The Old Dominion Electric Cooperative (ODEC) currently provides power for 10 smaller co-ops, including Northern Neck Electric Co-op (NNEC) in Warsaw.

To meet projected demands for power, a coal-powered production plant has been proposed for Dendron in Surry County. Opposition to the plant has surfaced from many quarters…

- Russ Kowalski

Read the full letters

Coal-fired plant could prove costly in several ways

I was extremely alarmed to discover last week that Old Dominion Electric Cooperative (ODEC) in coalition with the Northern Neck Electric Cooperative (NNEC) plans to build a $6 billion coal-fired power plant in the name of its members. Apparently the project has been in the works since 2009, but I have not heard of it from the co-op or in the local news…

- Chelsea Roseberry

 Read the full letters

Electric co-ops mum on Surry plant costs

Cross-posted from the Fredericksburg Free Lance-Star

Rappahannock Electric Cooperative and Northern Neck Electric Cooperative and the power supplier they partly own–Old Dominion Electric Cooperative–have plans to build a huge coal-fired generating plant in Surry County.

REC and NNEC have so far not told their member-customers how much of the proposed plant’s estimated $6 billion cost their members would have to pay.

REC and NNEC members just received the July issue of Cooperative Living magazine, which contains details of their co-ops’ upcoming annual meetings (Aug. 4 for NNEC and Aug. 13 for REC). The magazine includes a proxy card to submit in lieu of attending the meeting.

But co-op members concerned about REC’s and NNEC’s proposed $6 billion gamble on an outmoded and dirty fossil fuel should attend their co-op’s annual meeting in person, rather than mailing in a card authorizing others to act on their behalf.

A number of utilities across America have canceled planned coal plants and are investing in efficiency as a cheaper and cleaner way to ensure adequate electricity supply.

Last October, South Carolina rural electric co-ops announced a major new energy-efficiency program that could save their member-customers $4 billion in electricity costs over the years. We need that kind of innovative program here in Virginia.

NNEC’s and REC’s annual meetings are an excellent opportunity for their members to voice concerns and demand answers about the economic and environmental costs that NNEC and REC are quietly planning to impose on us.

Cooperatives are supposed to be democratic, but real democracy can’t happen unless co-op members are kept fully informed and actively participate in their co-op’s governance.

Seth Heald

Culpeper

Clear the air for facts on coal plant

Cross-posted from the Virginian-Pilot.

By Robert G. Burnley

The debate about the proposed Cypress Creek coal plant in Surry County is one of the most important that will occur in Southeast Virginia in the foreseeable future. The plant would have a major impact on the environment and economy of the region and the health of those living in and visiting one of the most populated and popular areas of Virginia.

So it’s critical that the debate not be prejudiced by incomplete or inaccurate information. Unfortunately, that is exactly what is occurring.

In a May 24 column in The Virginian-Pilot, David Hudgins, spokesman for the Old Dominion Electric Cooperative, said ODEC has modeled the impacts and that the results have been reviewed and approved by the Virginia Department of Environmental Quality and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. He then concludes that effects on the environment and public health are “insignificant.”

Such an assumption seems premature at best and disingenuous at worst.

If ODEC has conducted in-house modeling, it may have been done according to the protocols based on the data from the utility’s incomplete air permit applications.

The applications were so incomplete that DEQ’s letter to ODEC, in May 2010, outlined six pages of “deficiencies” in the applications related to toxic mercury emissions, smog-forming compounds and coal ash disposal, among other concerns affecting downwind and downstream communities. Rather than address those deficiencies, ODEC withdrew its applications in September 2010 but uses them to predict future impacts. ODEC is still aggressively pursuing other necessary approvals.

Hudgins was reacting to published studies concluding that the emissions could severely harm the health of downwind residents, pollute the Chesapeake Bay and stifle economic development. These studies were conducted using methodologies approved by the EPA and the National Academy of Sciences.

To further prejudice the debate, the Surry County Board of Supervisors has refused to honor Isle of Wight’s request for a third-party economic study, with one supervisor observing that such a study would only complicate the decision-making process.

Here are the facts. In 2010 Hampton Roads experienced very poor air quality. The region exceeded the federal health standard for ozone on five “code red” days – when the air is unhealthy for the general population to breathe, and the young, elderly and those with respiratory illnesses may have serious health complications. Through June 30 of this year, the region has already had four violations – and the ozone season has just begun.

If the ODEC plant is built, it would add more than 3,000 tons of ozone-forming chemicals to the air every year for 50 years or more.

More air pollution means less economic development and growth, more lost work-days, more lost school days and higher medical costs. In Galveston, Texas, worsening air pollution has forced the city to install an air-quality warning flag system on its beach, similar to hurricane and riptide warning flags. Galveston is essentially telling tourists to leave the beach and go back inside because of bad air quality.

Is that something we want to see on our own beaches?

New industry will not come to areas that fail to meet federal ozone standards because environmental permitting in those areas takes longer, costs more and can be unpredictable compared to areas with consistently clean air.

Businesses don’t expand in areas with bad air quality for the same reasons. Companies seek communities with a high quality of life for their employees, not communities where the air is unfit to breathe.

Emissions from this plant would also exacerbate the nutrient pollution in the Chesapeake Bay. This extra nitrogen will cost every Virginian in the form of a more protracted, difficult and more expensive Bay cleanup.

These facts don’t support the contention of Cypress Creek power plant’s proponents that the effects of this plant on the environment, health and economy of the region are benign. ODEC’s contention that impacts are insignificant is unfortunate. Let the truth inform the decision-making process; don’t let that process be prejudiced by anything less.

Robert G. Burnley was director of the Virginia Department of Environmental Quality from 2002 to 2006. He lives in Richmond.

Power official met skeptical audience at meeting

Cross-posted from the Daily Press.
ISLE OF WIGHT ——
A high-ranking official from Old Dominion Electric Cooperative made a case for a controversial coal-fired power plant, but many weren’t buying it.

David Hudgins, the group’s vice president, made a presentation Thursday at the Isle of Wight Board of Supervisors meeting to address concerns about the proposed Cypress Creek Power Station.

Hudgins’s appearance was in response to opposition levied at last month’s hearing by Bob Burnley, a former head of the Virginia Department of Environmental Quality, who urged supervisors to oppose the proposed power plant in the Surry County town of Dendron. He argued that the plant would be harmful to the area’s environment and the county’s economy.

Hudgins countered that the station would bring temporary and permanent jobs to the area.

“Our economy is based on electricity — period,” he said.

Hudgins also touted the plant’s construction will meet federal standards.

“There are no short cuts in this,” he said.

At a projected cost of $6 billion, the 1,500-megawatt plant would be the state’s largest coal-fired power plant. Old Dominion’s proposal to build the plant on 1,400 acres in Dendron has a created a stir among residents, neighboring localities and environmentalists.

At the meeting, residents from Isle of Wight and Surry counties voiced their displeasure with the power plant.

“All we get from Old Dominion Electric Cooperative is generalities,” said Surry resident Michael Eggleston.

His wife, Helen Eggleston, concurred.

“They’ve fed us much false information,” she said. “We don’t need this power plant.”

Supervisor Stan Clark called Hudgins’s presentation “preposterous.”

The public can have more to say about the power plant at a meeting Aug. 2 at 7 p.m. at the Smithfield Center, 220 N. Church St.

“I’m interested if (ODEC will) show up that night,” Clark said.

Isn’t $6 billion worth the trip to Bealeton?

Letter to the editor of the Rappahannock News from Seth Heald on July 7th.

Read the full letter

Rappahannock Electric Cooperative (REC) and the power supplier it partly owns – Old Dominion Electric Cooperative (ODEC) – have plans to build a huge coal-fired generating plant in Surry County. REC has so far not told its members/customers how much of the proposed plant’s estimated $6 billion costs we would have to pay.

…But co-op members concerned about REC’s and ODEC’s costly proposed gamble on an outmoded and dirty fossil-fuel should attend the annual meeting in person, rather than mailing in a card authorizing REC’d board to act on their behalf.

Georgia Co-op also concerned about proposed coal plant costs

A new report has been released on the costs that Georgia Cobb EMC’s proposed Washington coal plant would put on ratepayers, available from www.georgiawatch.org. An article from The Marietta Daily offers arguements from both sides of the debate, and the co-op’s stance is not unlike what we’ve heard from ODEC. We, too, are still waiting for evidence of need for the Cypress Creek plant. Full article is available here. Excerpt:

Mark Hackett, a retired electric-industry executive who lives in east Cobb and is a member of Cobb EMC, said that when he worked for Oglethorpe Power and other firms on generation-expansion plans, “I never saw a coal plant that even came close to winning in the generation-mix study, and I don’t see anything that has changed that would make me think coal would win. Natural-gas prices are very cheap. … As a customer, I don’t think we’re getting the cheapest cost options.”

Model for efficiency: South Carolina Co-ops to Develop Energy Efficiency Retrofit Pilot Program

This is a great read about co-ops that are taking the initiative to really put energy efficiency programs to work! View the full article here. Excerpt:

“Our goal is to weatherize and upgrade 225,000 homes over 10 years,” said Ron Calcaterra, CEO of Central Electric Power Cooperative. “By doing that, we could save all co-op members $4 billion, or the cost of half of a nuclear plant. In the process, we’ll also cut the state’s carbon dioxide emissions by nearly 7 million metric tons.”