It’s not just because I finally watched “An Inconvenient Truth” this weekend that I find the news that Florida Power & Light is planning to build one of the country’s largest coal-fired generating plants in the Everglades so infuriating.
It’s also the unmitigated gall of a company that sucks every last dime of profit from its customers while feeding at the public trough. Floridians will be a long time forgetting how FPL used hurricane damage as an excuse to raise rates and then asked the state legislature for money to fix its equipment and lines. And got both.
But this latest news takes the cake.
Florida Power & Light’s rush to build one of the largest coal plants in the nation sets back the state’s efforts toward a clean energy future and dramatically increases global warming pollution…
The proposed coal plant would be a 5,000-acre industrial facility constructed in the heart of the Everglades, in the city of Moore Haven in Glades County, and would emit harmful pollutants 24 hours a day for more than 50 years.
The pollutants include: sulfur dioxide, that would acidify lakes, rivers, and the Everglades; nitrogen oxide, which is a precursor to smog and exacerbates respiratory diseases like asthma; soot that has been scientifically linked to lung cancer and cardiac arrest; and mercury, which is a potent neurotoxin that has already contaminated every major water body in Florida, leading to fish consumption advisories by the Department of Health. Lastly, the plant would emit 16 million tons of climate-changing carbon dioxide, making it the largest single source of global warming pollution in the state.
FPL does not talk about the emissions from the plant and its effect on our health and environment but rather on the low cost of coal as compared to other fuels.
It also talks, on its web site, about what a great friend to the environment it is.
We strive for more efficient operations and improved performance with less impact on the environment.
…Our commitment to reduce emissions has yielded important dividends for air quality.
…We look for ways to improve our operations to minimize impacts on wildlife near our facilities.
If, like me, you can’t let this plan stand, contact FPL and tell them what a bunch of money-grubbing hypocrites they are. As you might expect, they make it hard to give them feedback by requiring names and addresses in an online form but make something up. And give them an earful.
- Topic: Politics
- Topics: Florida, Natural Disasters





The plant likely won’t make it 50 years, as it will be under the ocean before then. Meanwhile, the coal to be atomized, burned, and belched up the stacks will likely come from outside the US. Southern Company, which cleans Florida’s air with Georgia’s lungs, firing several 100+ railroad-car-per-day plants, is already importing South African coal into Florida for their Gulf Power plants. And air pollution from [unregulated] ocean freighters is 3 times that from aircraft. Grim.