The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Troubled Ga. project is said to seek aid

Backers of nuclear plant reportedly ask Trump for assistance.

- By Ari Natter and Mark Chediak Bloomberg News

President Donald Trump has vowed to revive America’s dying nuclear industry. Backers of a troubled Georgia nuclear project want him to prove it.

They have asked the administra­tion to come to the aid of a project to build two reactors to the Southern Co.’s Vogtle power plant, according to people familiar with the talks. That could include increasing or speeding up disburseme­nts of $8.3 billion in federal loan guarantees to the companies behind the nuclear plant, the people said. They asked not to be identified discussing ongoing negotiatio­ns.

A Georgia public service regulator was in Washington to make a case for the project, the last nuclear plant under constructi­on in the U.S., and Southern has hosted congressio­nal staff members at the constructi­on site. The company also wants Congress to extend tax breaks for nuclear power.

“We have asked anybody that would help us achieve the best commercial outcome possible,” Southern chief executive officer Tom Fanning said in an interview Aug. 2.

With Southern set to tell regulators in Georgia by the end of this month whether it plans to continue with constructi­on plans for the plant, federal support could be crucial. Last week, Southern said it estimated its portion of the cost to complete the reactors was at least $11.5 billion, excluding $1.7 billion in guaranteed payments from Toshiba, parent company of Westinghou­se, which was

managing the project before it declared bankruptcy in March.

Given Southern’s 46 percent stake inthe project, that would put the total cost of building the two reactors at $ 25 billion.

“This thing is in our national security interest,” Fanning said. “That’s why we’ ve preserved the option to go forward. That’s why government has been helpful.”

But after Energy Secretary Rick Perry turned down a request for $3 billion in aid for Scana Corp.’s nuclear plant in South Carolina, it’s not clear howmuch the federal government will help. Scana abandoned its V.C. Summer nuclear projects last month after it concluded the two reactors would end up costing it more than $20 billion to build.

In general, the Trump administra­tion has said it’s studying the nuclear issue.

“A complete reviewof U.S. nuclear energy policy will help us find new ways to revitalize this crucial energy resource,” Trump said during a visit to the Energy Department earlier this summer.

The Energy Department is close to issuing a study on howto help baseload power, which is primarily coal and nuclear power. Plants using those fuels are struggling as cheap natural gas and renewable energy has kept wholesale power prices largely flflat.

The request for help could be in addition to or part of the $8.3 billion loan guarantee provided by the Energy Department under the Obama administra­tion. As of June 30, Southern has borrowed $ 2.6 billion through the loan guarantee pact, but disburseme­nts from that financing agreement were put on hold until it decides if constructi­on will continue, according to a company filing.

Oglethorpe Power Corp., which has a 30percent stake in the Vogtle project, said in a filing Thursday that its cost estimate to complete the reactors had increased from $5 billion to as much as $7.3 billion. It has withdrawn $ 1.7 billion of a $3.1 billion loan guarantee from the federal government.

Both the Summer and Vogtle projects hit additional delays and cost over runs after Westinghou­se went bankrupt. The company was building both plants.

Instead of giving Scana a grant, Perry suggested the company apply for a loan guarantee, according to an Energy Department offifficia­l. Kevin Marsh, Scana’s CEO, told state regulators he got “no response” on the company’s grant request.

“When Scana showed up on Perry’s doorstep dragging the carcass of Westinghou­se behind it, it’s understand­able the administra­tion blanched and turned away,” Peter Bradford, a former member of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, said in an interview.

A spokeswoma­n for the department didn’t respond to a request for comment. Southern continues to talk with the administra­tion and Congress and has found support from Washington to be “critical to the project,” spokesman Schuyler Baehman said inane mailed statement.

But James Lucier, an energy analyst and managing director at Capital Alpha Partners, was skeptical.

“On Vogtle and nukes in general, the Trump administra­tion is what the Texans call ‘Big Hat and No Cattle,’” said Lu ci er .“They don’ t have any ammo in the gun.

“You hear them talking such a good game about nuclear power and baseload power, but the reality is there isn’t a lot they can do,” he added.

Beyond re-jiggering or expanding the loan guar- antee, direct aid for Southern would most likely require an act of Congress, and getting that done is uncertain. The House has passed an extension of the production tax credit for nuclear power; however, because of delays in the Vogtle project, it may not be completed before those credits are set to expire.

Tim Echols, the vice chairman of the Georgia Public Service Commission, was in Washington this week to brief lawmakers about the project. If Westinghou­se comes through with the payment of $3.68 billion it has promised toward the project, it should be in good shape, he predicted.

“We are not going to throw in the towel like South Carolina,” he saidin an interview.

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