Today: 23 May 2026
New report puts Alabama Power coal ash ponds back under scrutiny near Mobile-Tensaw Delta
31 December 2025
2 mins read

New report puts Alabama Power coal ash ponds back under scrutiny near Mobile-Tensaw Delta

NEW YORK, December 31, 2025, 09:30 ET

An Inside Climate News investigation published this week said Alabama Power is storing more than 21 million tons of coal ash in an unlined pond at its James M. Barry plant on the Mobile River, near the Mobile-Tensaw Delta. Alabama Power “remains committed to operating in full compliance with environmental regulations,” spokesperson Alyson Tucker said in an email. Inside Climate News

The issue is back in focus as regulators and communities push utilities to deal with coal ash — the residue left after burning coal — which can contain contaminants linked to cancer and other serious health effects, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency says. Federal rules adopted over the past decade set minimum national standards for how utilities store and close ash ponds and landfills.

Investors are also watching because cleanup choices can drive large capital spending and years of regulatory filings. In a Dec. 30 blog post, Meyka said the Barry site has raised questions about future cleanup budgets, potential recycling plans and how much cost recovery regulators may allow in 2026.

Rolling Out also highlighted the issue in a story published Tuesday, saying Alabama has more than 117 million tons of coal ash in unlined ponds along waterways.

Mobile Baykeeper, a local environmental group, says “21 million tons” of coal ash sit beside the Mobile River at Plant Barry and that Alabama Power intends to leave most of it in the unlined pit, which the group says remains in contact with groundwater. Mobile Baykeeper

The EPA has already taken enforcement action tied to the site. In a 2024 news release, the agency said it finalized a settlement with Alabama Power over alleged violations of federal coal ash rules at Plant Barry, requiring a more robust groundwater monitoring program and revisions to the plant’s emergency action plan.

Alabama has also been at the center of a broader federal-state dispute over coal ash oversight. A Federal Register notice shows EPA denied Alabama’s application for a state coal combustion residuals permit program, a decision that became effective in July 2024.

Much of the fight turns on “cap-in-place” closures — covering ash where it sits — versus excavating it to lined landfills. Alabama Rivers Alliance says utilities’ plans to cap coal ash in unlined pits, often in or near groundwater, “does not stop or clean up pollution.” alabamarivers.org

The Barry closure plan is also being contested in court. Mobile Baykeeper’s lawsuit under the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act was argued at the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals after a lower court dismissal, according to CourtHouse News.

Peer utilities in the Southeast have adopted a range of approaches. Georgia Power, another Southern Company subsidiary, says it is removing coal ash from 20 ponds, with ash moved to lined landfills, consolidated with other sites or recycled for beneficial use.

Alabama Power has pointed to recycling as part of its strategy at Plant Barry. The company said in a 2024 release that it plans with Eco Material Technologies to harvest coal ash from the Barry pond and recycle it into construction materials, with an on-site processing facility expected to be in service by January 2026.

Stock Market Today

  • Tesla and 5 AI Stocks Near Buy Points After Market Rebound
    May 22, 2026, 6:42 PM EDT. Following a brief market pullback, Tesla and five key artificial intelligence (AI) stocks have positioned near critical buy points. The rally came after major indexes showed an orderly decline earlier this week, prompting bullish moves from market leaders. Investors are eyeing these stocks for potential entry as part of a broader recovery in technology shares. This development signals renewed confidence in the AI sector and electric vehicle market. Traders will watch whether the momentum sustains amid ongoing economic uncertainties.

Latest articles

Peloton Shares Surge 10% as Index Funds Set to Buy

Peloton Shares Surge 10% as Index Funds Set to Buy

23 May 2026
Peloton shares closed up 10.23% at $5.71 after S&P Dow Jones Indices announced the company will join the S&P SmallCap 600 before May 27. Trading volume hit 34.9 million shares, more than double the 50-day average. The move follows Peloton’s recent report of $630.9 million in quarterly revenue and a 70% drop in net debt. U.S. markets will close May 25 for Memorial Day.
POET Shares Drop Again With $400M AI Optics Push Raising Dilution Concerns

POET Shares Drop Again With $400M AI Optics Push Raising Dilution Concerns

23 May 2026
POET Technologies shares fell 1.55% to $14.59 Friday on Nasdaq, despite closing a $400 million private placement with one institutional investor. The company issued 19.05 million shares and warrants, aiming to expand manufacturing capacity tenfold. Trading volume reached 33.4 million shares, down from last week’s spike. First-quarter revenue was $503,389 with a net loss of $12.3 million.
Artelo Biosciences Stock Just Whipsawed — Here’s What Traders Are Watching Now

Artelo Biosciences Stock Just Whipsawed — Here’s What Traders Are Watching Now

23 May 2026
Artelo Biosciences shares fell 10.5% to $1.19 Friday, then jumped to $2.01 in after-hours trading. The company activated a $75 million shelf registration May 19 and ended its at-the-market stock-sale agreement after raising $451,527. Artelo reported a Q1 net loss of $3 million and held $10.3 million in cash and investments as of March 31.
Rivian stock slips in premarket as Tesla delivery report looms on year-end session
Previous Story

Rivian stock slips in premarket as Tesla delivery report looms on year-end session

XRP price today: Ripple-linked token slips as year-end trading thins — key levels before 2026
Next Story

XRP price today: Ripple-linked token slips as year-end trading thins — key levels before 2026

Go toTop