1,875 MW Plant Confirms Coal as Emergency Fuel
Published Date: 3/10/2026
Notice
Summary
Guernsey Power Station LLC has told the Department of Energy that their new power plant, which will produce 1,875 megawatts, can use coal if needed—even though it plans to run mainly on natural gas. This self-certification follows a law that says new big power plants must be ready to burn coal or another fuel. This notice means Guernsey is officially following the rules before starting operations, with no immediate cost changes announced.
No Economic Impacts Identified for this Document
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Previous / Next Documents
Previous: 2026-04636 — Certification Notice-258; Notice of Filing of Self-Certification of Coal Capability Under the Powerplant and Industrial Fuel Use Act
South Field Energy LLC has told the Department of Energy that their new power plant can use coal if needed, even though it mainly plans to use natural gas. This is required by law to make sure new power plants can switch fuels if necessary. This notice lets everyone know the plant meets the rules before it starts running, with no extra costs or delays expected.
Next: 2026-04638 — Certification Notice-261; Notice of Filing of Self-Certification of Coal Capability Under the Powerplant and Industrial Fuel Use Act
Long Ridge Energy Generation LLC told the Department of Energy that their new powerplant, which runs on natural gas, can also use coal if needed. This is required by law to make sure new powerplants can switch fuels if necessary. The notice lets everyone know this certification was filed, keeping things transparent and on schedule.