Power complex
Carolina Power & Light Company's Goldsboro Plant in Wayne County began generating electricity in 1951. A second pulverized coal unit was installed in 1952. A third coal unit, which generated 252-MW, was the first coal-fired facility that was completely controlled by an electronic computer. When the third unit came into operation in 1962 the plant was renamed the H.F. Lee Plant after Harry Fitzhugh Lee, a retired district manager with Carolina Power & Light. Between 1967 and 1971 four oil-fueled combustion turbine units were added. In August 1999 Carolina Power and Light Company agreed to buy the Florida Progress Corporation. The merger was complete in 2000, and the combined company was called Progress Energy. In 2009 the company announced that the coal-fired units and combustion turbines at the H.F. Lee Plant would be retired. Progress Energy merged with Duke Energy in July 2012. The three coal-fired units were shut down on 15 September 2012, and the four oil-fueled combustion turbine units ceased operation in October 2012. Wayne County combustion turbines continued to operate at the complex. A new 920-MW gas-fired combined cycle plant began operation in December 2012. The Lee Combined Cycle Plant uses the Quaker Neck Lake as its water source. It has three 180 MW turbines and one 380 MW turbine.Quaker Neck Lake cooling pond
Quaker Neck Lake is west of the city center ofQuaker Neck Dam
The low-head Quaker Neck Dam was built in 1952 at Neuse River kilometer 225 to impound cooling water for the steam electric plant. A fish ladder was included. The Dam was high and long. The dam rose only about above the water during average flow conditions, and was completely submerged in high flow periods. Some studies found that the dam had little impact on fish, which had no difficulty in using the ladder or in crossing the dam in high water periods. Most studies found that only a few fish were able to pass the dam. The dam was classified as a barrier to fish in 1989 by the United States Fish and Wildlife Service. There were delays while the Carolina Power & Light Company looked for an alternative source of cooling water. An alternative was developed between 1993 and 1996, and it was agreed to remove the dam. Deconstruction was undertaken between December 1997 and August 1998. Bruce Babbitt, Secretary of the Interior, swung a sledgehammer to symbolically start removal of the Menominee, Quaker Neck & Cherry Hospital Dams. The Quaker Neck Dam was removed in May 1998. The work cost $222,000. The result was to restore access forAsh basins
There are four coal-ash basins at the H.F. Lee Steam Plant. An active ash pond enclosed in a dyke lies opposite Quaker Neck Lake to the north of the river. There are three inactive ash basins to the west of the river further upstream. These are forested, do not impound water and are normally dry. The basins hold coal ash in a layer thick over an area of . A Duke Energy site assessment in 2015 reported that the basins had high levels of toxic heavy metals such as arsenic, antimony and thallium. The flooded river in October 2016 flowed over the three inactive ash basins. The company said there was no risk of significant release of material from these basins, and the active ash pond was not affected by the flooding. However, in October 2016 Waterkeeper Alliance and Sound Rivers reported a large coal ash spill from at least one of the inactive basins. The basins had been underwater for over a week. One observer said "This spill is easily visible to anyone in a boat. The area looks like a winter wonderland of toxic coal ash as it has coated the water and trees." According to the Southern Alliance for Clean Energy, the spill was "yet another tragic example of why coal ash must be excavated from pits near waterways and stored in lined, dry impoundments away from rivers and well above the water table, as soon as possible." In December 2016 Duke Energy said that in compliance with the Coal Ash Management Act the company would recycle ash from the ponds for use in manufacturing concrete, aiming to excavate all the material by 2028. Any ash that could not be recycled would be buried at a lined landfill. Originally the company had planned to move the six million tons of coal ash to a landfill in Lee County. Duke Energy was now going to invest in technology to remove excess carbon to make the ash more suitable for concrete.Notes
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* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * {{DEFAULTSORT: Goldsboro, North Carolina Energy infrastructure completed in 1951 Coal-fired power stations in North Carolina Natural gas-fired power stations in North Carolina Buildings and structures in Wayne County, North Carolina Duke Energy Bodies of water of Wayne County, North Carolina