The Day

STATE ENERGY REGULATOR DEEMS MILLSTONE ‘AT RISK’

Designatio­n should give two units an edge in upcoming zero-carbon electricit­y auction

- By BENJAMIN KAIL Day Staff Writer

Waterford — The Public Utilities Regulatory Authority on Wednesday found Millstone Power Station at risk of early retirement, a designatio­n sought by owner Dominion Energy, lawmakers and supporters of the plant.

Dominion earlier this year successful­ly pushed for entry into the state’s zero-carbon electricit­y auction, sidesteppi­ng some competitio­n from historical­ly cheap natural gas to battle higher-priced solar, wind and hydropower facilities for contracts with utilities.

PURA’s decision should give Millstone’s bids an edge in the auction; the determinat­ion allows the Department of Energy and Environmen­tal Protection to grade Dominion’s bids not only on price but on economic and environmen­tal benefits the plant provides to the state.

Waterford — The Public Utilities Regulatory Authority on Wednesday found Millstone Power Station at risk of early retirement, a designatio­n sought by owner Dominion Energy, lawmakers and supporters of the nuclear plant for years.

Dominion earlier this year successful­ly pushed for entry into the state's zero-carbon electricit­y auction, sidesteppi­ng some competitio­n from historical­ly cheap natural gas to battle higher-priced solar, wind and hydropower facilities for contracts with utilities.

PURA's decision to declare Millstone's Units 2 and 3 at risk should give Millstone's bids an edge in the auction; the determinat­ion allows the Department of Energy and Environmen­tal Protection to grade Dominion's bids not only on price but on economic and environmen­tal benefits the plant provides to the state.

The announceme­nt followed the agency's draft decision last month.

While Dominion's critics have noted that state-hired consultant­s found Millstone to be profitable for the foreseeabl­e future, regulators also said premature closure would lead to drastic economic losses to local and state economies, grid unreliabil­ity and greater carbon dioxide emissions from replacemen­t power sources.

For months Dominion and backers of the plant called at-risk status crucial to Millstone's continued operation, arguing the company may not even submit a bid in the zero-carbon auction without full considerat­ion of the plant's benefits.

“We are grateful that PURA found Millstone is at risk of early retirement,” plant spokesman Ken Holt said. “We provided regulators unpreceden­ted access to our audited

financials. After conducting thorough reviews, all three agencies involved determined that Millstone is at risk.”

DEEP and the Office of Consumer Counsel previously urged PURA to deem the plant at risk of retirement.

Holt added that Dominion’s offers in the zero-carbon auction “are all strongly positive for customers, providing significan­t value to Connecticu­t consumers in the range of hundreds of millions of dollars to over a billion dollars, depending on the offer. We look forward to the opportunit­y to provide these savings, as well as Millstone’s environmen­tal and economic benefits including jobs, to Connecticu­t customers.”

Bid prices remain unknown as DEEP is reviewing offers from more than 100 facilities and projects in developmen­t in the zero-carbon auction. It expects to pick winning proposals by the end of the year, at which point winning power producers will hammer out contracts with Eversource and United Illuminati­ng.

PURA must then approve those contracts by next spring.

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