The University of Delaware faculty senate voted 43-0 in May
to recommend against a 279-megawatt, gas-fired power plant on a former Chrysler
factory at the University of Delaware campus, as part of a $1 billion-plus
proposal by West Chester-based Data Centers LLC -- which enjoys support from
Gov. Jack Markell and UD president Patrick Harker.
On June 9 the Democratic-led state legislature's Joint
Finance Committee retaliated, voting unanimously to stop $3 million in UD
operating funds, pending a final UD decision to back the data center. The
committee went too far in bullying UD, says State Sen. Greg Lavelle, leader of
the minority Republicans. But Lavelle stands with Democratic leaders in backing
the data center and power plant as job, tax, and spending magnets. (More on
that vote, with links, here.)
Faculty members aren't against the data center, says
Professor Michael Chajes, UD's engineering school dean from 2007 to 2011. The
center's proposed seven-burner, off-the-grid power plant is the issue: It would
run on natural gas, which Chajes agrees is cleaner than other fuels, but still
a hydrocarbon, on a campus that had carefully drafted and adopted a plan to
reduce its "carbon footprint."
The faculty was surprised by the revised larger scale of the
power plant, which, as a reliable source of salable surplus electricity, is
central to the project, Earl Eugene Kern, the chief executive for the data
center, told me last year. (More on the data center project, with links, here.)
Chajes fears the power plant will turn the ex-Chrysler
property into a largely automated but heavy-industry site, not the high-tech
incubator, research, and skilled-employment center UD wants.
Charles Riordan, chemistry professor and vice provost for
research, who abstained from the faculty vote, heads an official "working
group" studying the data center's claims. Riordan told me the group plans
its report to top administrators "in the next couple of weeks."
Gas isn't a deal-killer if a plant is efficiently designed,
he added.
If the complex rises, "job creation down there is going
to be massive," says John Bland, business agent for Bensalem-based Local
13 of the International Brotherhood of Boilermakers. He compared the UD plan to
Sunoco Logistics' $1 billion refit of its Marcus Hook oil refinery for the
Mariner East gas project: Bland said that similarly-priced project had so far
created work to keep 300 trade members busy every workday for a year. "If
you stop this [data center], you might as well put two signs on I-95 on either
end of the state: Closed for Business," Bland told me.
No faculty members say they're against jobs. But the
professors say it is their job to look beyond a few years' payments and seek
what's best long term for the communities served by the school, which traces
its roots to 1743, before Delaware was a state.
Source: Philly.com
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