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23 wrz 2023 · Saturday morning Georgia Power’s Plant Hammond smokestacks, considered by many as a Coosa landmark, stood for one last time before its scheduled demolition. Located off of Alabama Highway, Plant Hammond began commercial operation in 1954 and was retired in 2019.
21 lis 2023 · Environmental advocates are calling on the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency to act after state regulators issued a final permit signing off on Georgia Power’s plans to leave coal ash partly submerged in groundwater at Floyd County’s Plant Hammond.
19 sie 2023 · One of the next most visible steps in the decommissioning of Plant Hammond in Coosa is the removal of stacks, scheduled for 7:45 a.m. Saturday, Sept. 23. Roads around the plant will be...
20 sie 2023 · According to Georgia Power spokesman Andrew Vickery, an exact date on when the stacks will come down has not been determined, but company officials expect it will be sometime this fall. “The plan has a lot of moving parts,” Vickery said.
29 lip 2024 · In 2019, when Georgia Power retired Plant Hammond — a 65-year-old coal-burning facility near Rome — it was more than a matter of shutting down some machinery and flipping off the lights.
9 sie 2021 · Here in Georgia, the state Environmental Protection Division has issued the first proposed permit allowing Georgia Power to press forward with plans to leave more than 1 million tons of coal ash in an unlined pit at Floyd County’s Plant Hammond near the Coosa River.
19 sie 2023 · Work to dismantle Georgia Power’s Plant Hammond in Coosa is continuing, and plans are underway for the demolition of the stacks. According to Georgia Power spokesman Andrew Vickery, an exact date on when the stacks will come down has not been determined, but company officials expect it will be sometime this fall.