Coal plants are struggling to make a profit in Ohio. And there have been proposals from regulators and lawmakers that would help prop up those plants by passing additional costs on to customers. However, legislators say their latest plan would help a struggling plant that was created under unusual circumstances that go back 60 years.
Customers could see additional fees on their electric bills to help prop up the struggling Ohio Valley Electric Corporation, a coal plant commonly known as OVEC.
OVEC was created by a conglomeration of utilities in the 1950鈥檚 to meet electric needs during the Cold War. Republican Senator Bob Peterson says OVEC needs the ability to recover costs through added fees because of those utilities are still tied together.
鈥淣o other facility in the country is required to stay together. Because of the restrictions they鈥檙e basically unable to sell their interests in the facility.鈥
But opponents say customers shouldn鈥檛 carry the burden of propping up OVEC. The Sierra Club says AEP, FirstEnergy, Duke Energy and Dayton Power and Light all reached the current agreement well after the Cold War ended.
Copyright 2021 The Statehouse News Bureau. To see more, visit .