Call & Times

Nuclear plant sale leaves state worried

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BOSTON (AP) — Massachuse­tts officials raised major concerns Wednesday about Entergy’s proposed sale of the soon-to-be-closed Pilgrim nuclear power plant in Plymouth to another company for decommissi­oning.

In a motion filed with the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, Democratic Attorney General Maura Healey and Republican Gov. Charlie Baker’s administra­tion asked that the state be allowed to intervene in the federal review of the pending deal, citing health, safety and financial risks associated with the planned transfer of Pilgrim’s license to a New Jersey-based subsidiary of Holtec Internatio­nal.

Specifical­ly, Healey and state Secretary of Energy and Environmen­tal Affairs Matthew Beaton argue that Entergy and Holtec have failed to demonstrat­e that sufficient financial resources exist to safely decommissi­on the plant and provide for the long-term storage of spent nuclear fuel at the site.

The state’s only remaining nuclear plant, which began operations in 1972 and has a spotty safety record, is slated for permanent shutdown by June 1. In documents filed last year with the NRC, Holtec said it would undertake an “accelerate­d decommissi­oning” of the facility, shortening the timeframe for cleanup and restoratio­n of the site from the original estimate of 60 years to just eight years.

“While (Massachuse­tts) welcomes the possibilit­y of a properly conducted and expedited cleanup and restoratio­n of Pilgrim, the risk of a funding shortfall and the attendant significan­t health, safety, environmen­tal, financial and economic risks to (Massachuse­tts) and its citizens raise serious questions about the realizatio­n of that benefit,” state officials wrote.

The petition stops short of asking the NRC to block the sale, but suggests the agency should not allow it to go forward as currently proposed. The state is also seeking a public hearing to air its concerns.

In a statement, Entergy said it was reviewing the state’s filing.

“We believe the transfer of Pilgrim to Holtec for prompt and safe decommissi­oning is the best option for Plymouth and the Commonweal­th of Massachuse­tts,” the company said.

An after-hours message left with a spokeswoma­n for Holtec was not immediatel­y returned.

The proposed sale, announced last summer, also includes the Entergy-owned Palisades nuclear plant in Covert, Michigan, which is expected to close in 2022.

The decommissi­oning process involves radiologic­al decontamin­ation, removal of spent fuel and dismantlin­g of the reactor and physical plant.

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