Labadie is the largest coal-fired power plant in Missouri. [1] [2] [3]
Unlike most coal energy plants, the Labadie coal plant in Franklin County, Missouri, does not have sulfur dioxide scrubbers, making it the country's highest emitter of the pollutant, according to a St. Louis Post-Dispatch report. Even if Labadie's SO2 emissions were cut in half, it would still emit more than all but two coal plants in the country. [4]
In 2023, a Sierra Club report included Ameren's Labadie Energy Center among the 17 deadliest coal plants in the US, with calls to the EPA to pass regulations on harmful emissions contributing to regional haze affecting neighboring communities. [5] Labadie is also the second-largest producer of greenhouse gases among the nation's coal plants, according to EPA data. A study published in the journal Science used Medicare records to estimate the number of deaths tied to air pollution from coal plants, estimating that from 1999 to 2020, about 4,000 deaths were linked to “fine particulate matter” from Labadie, far more than any other coal plant across seven Midwestern states. [6]
Labadie received notice of Clean Air Act violations from the EPA in at least 2010 and 2011, being cited for “major modifications that caused a significant net emissions increase” without first obtaining proper permits. [7]