The Columbus Dispatch

Utility plans to close plants in Ohio, Pennsylvan­ia

- By John Seewer

TOLEDO, Ohio — FirstEnerg­y Corp. said it will shut down three nuclear plants in Ohio and Pennsylvan­ia within the next three years, making it the latest U.S. utility to announce closings as the nuclear industry struggles to compete with electricit­y plants that burn plentiful and inexpensiv­e natural gas.

The company announced the closings on Wednesday and a day later appealed to the U.S. Department of Energy for help, asking that it be allowed to get more money for electricit­y produced by its nuclear and coal-fired plants. It said in its request that the closings of its nuclear plants could threaten the reliabilit­y of the electric grid across the East Coast.

FirstEnerg­y said Wednesday that it would be willing to work with both Ohio and Pennsylvan­ia to find a way to keep the plants open, but lawmakers remain unwilling to offer a financial rescue and it appears the plants are nearing a shutdown.

The natural gas boom and increasing use of renewable energy have combined in recent years to squeeze the nation’s aging nuclear reactors, which are expensive to operate and maintain.

New York and Illinois have responded by giving out billion dollar bailouts that will be paid by ratepayers to stop unprofitab­le nuclear plants from closing prematurel­y.

But similar proposals have met with resistance in Connecticu­t and New Jersey , as well as in Ohio and Pennsylvan­ia, because such subsidies would cause utility bills to increase.

Some proponents of nuclear power say the plants are needed to maintain a diverse lineup of energy sources, arguing that while natural gas is cheap now, that might not always be the case. They also say the nuclear plants are vital to the rural towns where they’re located, providing millions in tax money for schools and local government­s.

In Ohio, where FirstEnerg­y is based, state lawmakers said earlier this year that there would be no more hearings on a proposal to increase electric bills to give the company’s plants an extra $180 million a year.

FirstEnerg­y said it plans to close its Davis-Besse nuclear plant near Toledo in 2020, and that a year later it will shut down the Perry plant near Cleveland and its Beaver Valley operation in Pennsylvan­ia.

“Though the plants have taken aggressive measures to cut costs, the market challenges facing these units are beyond their control,” said Don Moul, president of FirstEnerg­y Solutions, a subsidiary that runs the nuclear plants.

The three plants, built in the 1970s, employ a combined 2,300 people who would be affected by the closings.

PJM Interconne­ction, which operates the electric grid covering 65 million people from Illinois east to Washington, is likely to review the impact the potential closings would have on it.

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