September 19, 2024
Company Briefs
Algonquin Buys Gamesa Wind Portfolio
News briefs on companies in PJM Interconnection: Algonquin, Dominion, Duke, and Dynegy.

Ontario-based Algonquin Power is buying the remaining 40% of a 400-MW U.S. wind power portfolio from Gamesa Wind US for about $117 million. Algonquin already holds 60% of the three projects, which include Minonk in Illinois, Sandy Ridge in Pennsylvania and Senate in Texas.

More: Heraldonline

Executives Move Up at Dominion

Photos of Robert Blue and Diane Leopold of Dominion

Dominion promoted executives to head two business units, effective Jan. 1. Robert M. Blue, now a vice president, will become president of Dominion Virginia Power and Diane Leopold, vice president at Dominion Transmission, will become president of Dominion Energy. Among other changes, Dominion also named P. Rodney Blevins to senior vice president and chief information officer and Katheryn B. Curtis to senior vice president for power generation.

More: Dominion

Duke Names Plant for Jim Rogers

Cliffside Steam Station (Source: Duke)
Cliffside Steam Station (Source: Duke)

Duke Energy renamed its Cliffside Steam Station after former President and CEO Jim Rogers, who will retire as board chairman this month. The 1,375-MW James E. Rogers Energy Complex comprises two coal units. Because of Rogers’ efforts, 825-MW Unit 6 is “one of the cleanest, most efficient coal units in the world,” the company said.

More: Duke Energy

Duke – Union Tension Prompts NRC Review

The Nuclear Regulatory Commission is reviewing Duke Energy’s safety plans at the shuttered Crystal River plant due to concerns over a possible strike by the plant’s unionized workers. Duke’s contract with 1,800 members of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers expired last week. The IBEW represents operations, maintenance, chemistry, radiation protection and warehouse personnel.

More: Tampa Bay Times

Dynegy Closes on Coal Plants

Houston-based Dynegy closed on its purchase of five Illinois coal plants from Ameren, which is focusing more on its regulated businesses. The closing came about two weeks after Dynegy got a five-year pollution control waiver from the Illinois Pollution Control Board for the Ameren plants. The deal had hinged on that waiver.

More: Daily Herald

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