The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Nuclear plants’ rescue jolts multiple groups

- By John Seewer

A financial rescue fo rOhio nuclear plants and two coal-fired plants will force residents to pay $1.5 billion.

TOLEDO >> A financial rescue for Ohio’s nuclear plants and two coal-fired plants that will force the state’s residents and businesses to fork over roughly $1.5 billion is galvanizin­g environmen­talists and some conservati­ves.

Advocacy groups and investors, incensed by what they call a bailout and how it will diminish the state’s natural gas and green energy options, are looking at mounting a campaign to overturn it and targeting Republican­s who backed it. Organizati­ons representi­ng the state’s seniors and manufactur­ing plants are upset, too.

The upheaval comes as the Trump administra­tion continues with its pledge to boost the nuclear and coal industries by easing regulation­s and guaranteei­ng loans for two new commercial reactors. But the fallout in Ohio shows how attempting to influence the market can be risky and alienate a wide swath of voters.

“We’re getting involved in an area where the government has no business sticking their nose,” said state Rep. Craig Riedel, a conservati­ve from northweste­rn Ohio. “What we did with this bill is we absolutely tipped the scales to the nuclear plants.”

Five states, including New York, Illinois and New Jersey, within the past three years have approved nuclear bailouts totaling at least $13 billion, funded by new charges on electricit­y customers.

But Ohio is the first under Republican control to do so. Unlike the other states, its plan also cuts away at incentives for wind and solar projects.

That’s why so many groups came away upset.

The plan signed into law last week by Republican Gov. Mike DeWine calls for giving the state’s two nuclear plants $150 million a year through 2026.

The money will come from monthly surcharges of 85 cents for residentia­l customers and up to $2,400 for major industrial plants. Another statewide fee will be added for the two coal plants.

Those behind it say it will save several thousand jobs and protect the nuclear plants that account for nearly all of Ohio’s clean energy.

“From an environmen­tal point of view we need to keep them; from an economic point of view and a jobs point of view, we need to keep them,” DeWine said this week.

Although a majority of the Republican-controlled Legislatur­e backed the proposal, plenty of conservati­ves felt it went too far, picking winners and losers in the free market.

The monthslong debate divided Republican­s to where it’s likely to be a significan­t campaign issue in the primary elections next year, Riedel said.

“I don’t think this is going away,” he said.

At least one conservati­ve group that fought to kill the plan has said it will consider going after lawmakers who voted for it.

Opponents flooded hearings on the legislatio­n, including the Ohio Manufactur­ers Associatio­n and consumer groups like AARP, which has spoken out against bailouts in other states.

Another Republican, state Sen. Joe Uecker, said that he was against the auto industry bailout in 2008 under President Barack Obama and that he’s against this one, too.

He noted that the state didn’t come to the aid of two coal plants that closed in the area of southern Ohio he represents.

Handing the nuclear plants a bailout, he said, will cost the state future investment­s in wind and solar and hurt the coal plants that aren’t part of the bailout.

“All we’re doing is hastening the demise of the existing coal plants,” he said. “Are we going to bail them out also, or just the ones that are operated by politicall­y connected corporatio­ns?”

Akron-based FirstEnerg­y Solutions, which is going through bankruptcy reorganiza­tion, spent millions on lobbying and campaign contributi­ons while it was trying to persuade federal and state officials to give the nuclear plants a lifeline.

Its team of lobbyists includes a well-connected GOP fundraiser who dined with Trump last year as the company sought a bailout worth billions of dollars.

Although it’s not clear how much influence that

meeting carried, the president later directed his administra­tion to take steps to help coal and nuclear plants struggling to keep up with cheaper energy sources, calling it a matter of national and economic security.

An analysis from the Energy and Policy Institute, a utility watchdog that promotes

renewable energy, found FirstEnerg­y Solutions spent $3.75 million since March 2018 on lobbying, public relations and advertisin­g in Ohio and Pennsylvan­ia, where it also was seeking subsidies for its nuclear plants.

A year ago, the push for a bailout seemed to have no chance as then-Gov. John

The upheaval comes as the Trump administra­tion continues with its pledge to boost the nuclear and coal industries by easing regulation­s and guaranteei­ng loans for two new commercial reactors. But the fallout in Ohio shows how attempting to influence the market can be risky and alienate a wide swath of voters.

Kasich and legislativ­e leaders blocked the idea. But that changed with the election of new state leadership in 2018.

Dark money groups — some with ties to FirstEnerg­y Corp. — poured money into those races and months later lawmakers introduced their proposal to prop up the plants and stop them from closing.

Some of those same groups also spent millions on television ads backing the bailout. And a Trump campaign adviser made calls to state lawmakers, asking them to support the plan.

But whether the subsidies for the nuclear plants stay around might not be known until next year as opponents already are collecting signatures in hopes of overturnin­g the legislatio­n in a statewide referendum.

 ?? NEWS-HERALD FILE ?? FirstEnerg­y Perry Nuclear Power Plant in North Perry Village is shown.
NEWS-HERALD FILE FirstEnerg­y Perry Nuclear Power Plant in North Perry Village is shown.
 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? The cooling tower of the Davis-Besse Nuclear Power Station in Oak Harbor is shown.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE The cooling tower of the Davis-Besse Nuclear Power Station in Oak Harbor is shown.

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