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Today’s batch of burning questions, my smart-aleck answers and the real deal:
Question: With the Duke Energy plant at Lake Julian, they switched over to natural gas, which is a good thing, but now they are dependent on a pipeline to bring that gas in. In the old days they probably had 30 days’ worth of coal stockpiled on site there. What kind of surplus of natural gas, if any, do they keep on site at Lake Julian now? Do they have tanks on site? How long would they last? If not, what happens if that pipeline goes down like the Colonial Pipeline just did?
Wednesday, 12 May 2021 North Carolina regulators recently approved Duke Energy s 5-megawatt (MW) solar project in Buncombe County - the company s first that will be located on a retired county landfill. The N.C. Utilities Commission gave the project the green light to begin construction. Duke Energy and Buncombe County will team up on the project. Courtesy of Duke Energy
Duke Energy will own and operate the 5-MW solar power plant located on the closed Buncombe County landfill in Woodfin - near Interstate 26 and the French Broad River. This innovative project enjoyed great stakeholder and local support and will continue the growth of renewable energy in North Carolina, said Stephen De May, Duke Energy s North Carolina president.