By submitting, you consent that you are at least 18 years of age and to receive information about MPR's or APMG entities' programs and offerings. The personally identifying information you provide will not be sold, shared, or used for purposes other than to communicate with you about MPR, APMG entities, and its sponsors. You may opt-out at any time clicking the unsubscribe link at the bottom of any email communication. View our Privacy Policy.
An artist's rendition of Excelsior Energy's Mesaba Energy project near the town of Taconite, Minn.
Graphic courtesy Excelsior Energy
Excelsior Energy, once hailed as an
innovative project that would bring jobs to Minnesota's Iron Range
while cleanly tapping America's abundant coal supply, is in danger
of running out of gas if it can't attract additional investments
from the public or private sector soon, the Duluth News Tribune
reported.
While significant work has gone into planning, engineering and
garnering permits, Excelsior has yet to move a shovelful of dirt or
find a customer for the power it would produce, the newspaper
reported in a two-part series this week (part one and part two).
The project, which morphed from a $2.1 billion clean-coal
technology power plant when it was proposed in 2001 into a
conventional natural gas-fired plant, has already burned through
nearly $20 million in state finding. And it will soon exhaust more
than $22 million in federal funding, according to records the
newspaper obtained through the Freedom of Information Act. Those
records show that as of last Sept. 30, Excelsior had only about
$1.9 million in unobligated Department of Energy funds still
available.
"At the end of the day, this is a project that has not hired
one full-time worker on the Iron Range. Only lawyers, lobbyists and
professional meeting attenders have gotten jobs," said Rep. Tom
Anzelc, D-Balsam Township, the only Iron Range legislator who
opposes the project.
Turn Up Your Support
MPR News helps you turn down the noise and build shared understanding. Turn up your support for this public resource and keep trusted journalism accessible to all.
Tom Micheletti, Excelsior's co-president and CEO, refused to say
how much money the company has left or where it will turn next, but
he projected confidence in the project's future.
"We've got staying power to see our way through this," the
Hibbing native and former Northern States Power executive told the
newspaper.
Micheletti said the project has suffered from the economic
slump, which has cut demand for power and the need for new
facilities. He said he's stopped predicting when Excelsior will be
built.
"It bothers me that, given the current economic situation,
we're not where we thought we'd be," he said. "By now, 3,000
people would be working on the site if things had gone the way we
thought."
Despite receiving virtually all of its backing from taxpayers,
the company's spending records, including its officers' paychecks,
remain secret, the News Tribune reported.
Before 2008, the financial reports that the company is required
to submit to the state Iron Range Resources and Rehabilitation
Board as part of its loan agreement had been public data. But the
Legislature changed state law at the request of the regional
development agency to make those records private. Sheryl Kochevar,
an IRRRB spokeswoman, said its aid recipients should have "privacy
protections that are similar to those a business would expect and
receive when it is dealing with a bank."
Besides $9.5 million in IRRRB funds, the company also received
$10 million in state aid through the Renewable Development Fund,
despite objections from environmental groups about tapping that
money for a plant designed to run on fossil fuel.
Anzelc, the legislator, said any entity that has received so
much taxpayer money ought to be more forthright about how it has
spent it. He also said he expects Excelsior to turn to the IRRRB
for yet more funding.
But IRRRB Commissioner Tony Sertich said there have been no
board discussions about providing aid to Excelsior beyond the loans
that it already has received and he doesn't anticipate any further
requests.
After Excelsior found itself unable to move ahead on a gasified
coal plant, it obtained authorization from the Legislature this
past session to proceed initially with a plant fueled by natural
gas. Sen. Tom Bakk, D-Cook, said allowing the project to start as a
natural gas plant would substantially increase the chance of the
coal plant getting built eventually.
Micheletti estimated that a couple of 600-megawatt natural
gas-powered units could be built for about $900 million, less than
half the estimated cost of the original proposal for a
2,000-megawatt gasified coal plant. One roadblock is that federal
money earmarked for clean-coal technology probably could not be
used for a natural gas plant, he said.
But Anzelc said Excelsior still lacks a crucial essential: a
customer.
While Micheletti would not discuss specifics because of
confidentiality concerns, he said Excelsior is in active talks with
power buyers.
Pat Mullen, vice president of marketing and public affairs for
Minnesota Power, isn't surprised that Excelsior is looking at
alternatives.
"Their original project was way too expensive, and it didn't
get any traction," Mullen said. "We didn't want it and neither
did Xcel."
Xcel Energy and Minnesota Power told regulators they didn't need
the power and warned that it would drive up customers' rates.
Excelsior sought to compel Xcel Energy to buy its electricity, but
the Public Utilities Commission refused.
"We've looked at the energy needs of our customers," Minnesota
Power spokeswoman Amy Rutledge said, "and it is clear we have no
need for additional power from Excelsior."
(Copyright 2011 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)
Gallery
1 of 1
An artist's rendition of Excelsior Energy's Mesaba Energy project near the town of Taconite, Minn.
Graphic courtesy Excelsior Energy
Dear reader,
Political debates with family or friends can get heated. But what if there was a way to handle them better?
You can learn how to have civil political conversations with our new e-book!
Download our free e-book, Talking Sense: Have Hard Political Conversations, Better, and learn how to talk without the tension.
News you can use in your inbox
When it comes to staying informed in Minnesota, our newsletters overdeliver. Sign-up now for headlines, breaking news, hometown stories, weather and much more. Delivered weekday mornings.