Project Facts
| Size: | One 750 MW pulverized coal burning unit. |
| Technology: | Very efficient, ultra super-critical boilers. |
| Environmental Control Equipment: | Low NOx burners, selective catalytic reduction, low sulfur coal, wet fluegas desulfurization, a wet stack to control acid gas emissions, including sulfuric acid mist, activated carbon and hydrated quicklime injection to be installed before the fabric filter baghouse if needed for additional reductions, fabric filter to control particulate emissions, and high efficiency combustion. |
| Fuel: | Low sulfur, sub-bituminous coal from the Wyoming Powder River Basin |
| Water: | Water from deep underground wells, not surface water. |
| Rail | 31 mile coal rail spur from the Union Pacific Line. |

Demand for electricity in the Southwestern United
States is expected to outpace installed capacity.
The western utilities identified the Arizona/New Mexico/Southern
Nevada sub-region of the
western United States (of which the Las Vegas
area is a part) as an area in need of additional power
generation to sustain growth.
In a report by the Western Electricity Coordinating
Council, it states, resource capacity margins for this
summer peaking area range between 11.7 percent and 23.8
percent for the
next ten years. As with other
areas within the WECC, the future adequacy of
generation supply over the next ten years in the area will
depend on how much new capacity
is actually constructed. The Western Electricity
Coordinating Council's 2005 Ten-Year Coordinated Plan Summary
identified the Arizona/New Mexico/Southern Nevada of the
western United States as an area in need of additional
power generation
to sustain growth. The plan estimates that summer loads
in Arizona, New Mexico and South Nevada region will increase
at a compounded
growth rate of 2.9 percent. This will result in summer
peak loads increasing from 28,281 MW in 2006 to 36,526
MW in 2015, an increase
of 8,245 MW. Toquop will contribute 9% of the new
generation that will be required to serve the planned load
growth in the
Arizona, New Mexico and Southern Nevada region by 2015.
Natural gas prices have increased
substantially over the last three years and prices
have been extremely volatile. Coal sold under a long-term
contract is expected to cost less than 25 percent of
the cost of natural gas per MMBtu and because it can
be contracted for as long as 25 or 30 years it should
have much less price volatility.

