NASHVILLE, Tenn. The Tennessee Valley Authority this week announced it will retain its Kingston and Cumberland coal-fired plants, reversing prior closure plans, while pursuing new natural gas generation and battery storage to meet rising electricity demand from data centers and population growth. TVA filed a supplemental environmental impact statement in February 2026 and submitted filings asking the board to remove scheduled retirement dates. The board voted unanimously to extend coal operations and approved a 150-megawatt power increase for xAI in Memphis under contractual conditions. Decision drew debate. Environmental groups criticized the reversal. Based on 6 articles reviewed and supporting research.
Prepared by Christopher Adams and reviewed by editorial team.
Large electricity customers, including data centers and xAI, benefit from increased firm power allocations and extended plant operations that provide additional capacity and reliability to support growth.
Local communities and environmental organizations suffered potential increased emissions exposure and the setback of delayed clean-energy transitions after TVA reversed planned coal plant retirements and canceled a proposed solar project.
Largest public utility in U.S. now says it doesn't want to close two coal-fired plants
Los Angeles TimesTVA Keeps Coal Plants Open Amid Rising Demand
https://www.wvlt.tv Yahoo! Finance timesfreepress.com https://www.actionnews5.comNo right-leaning sources found for this story.
Comments