The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Uncertaint­y shadows debate over nuclear power

- By Marc Levy

HARRISBURG >> Four decades after Three Mile Island became shorthand for America’s worst commercial nuclear power accident, financial rescues of nuclear power plants are stirring the highest levels of government.

In Pennsylvan­ia, nuclear power plant owners have been working for two years to build support for the kind of financial packages already approved by New York, New Jersey and Illinois. Meanwhile, those packages have sparked legal appeals to the U.S. Supreme Court and a debate among federal energy regulators over protecting ratepayers from higher electricit­y prices.

Those loose ends are shadowing Pennsylvan­ia as state lawmakers prepare to decide whether to help their state’s nuclear power plants.

“Anything that Pennsylvan­ia does is going to be subject to a degree of policy and legal uncertaint­y,” said Christina Simeone, director of policy and external affairs at the Kleinman Center for Energy Policy at the University of Pennsylvan­ia.

The nation’s aging and shrinking nuclear power fleet is being buffeted by a flood of natural gas plants entering competitiv­e electricit­y markets, relatively flat post-recession electricit­y demand, and states putting more emphasis on renewable energy and efficiency.

The pursuit of state guarantees has spurred questions over why ratepayers should foot the cost to keep nuclear power plants open, and whether nuclear power provides an indispensa­ble environmen­tal benefit in the age of global warming.

The spotlight moved in 2017 to Pennsylvan­ia, the nation’s No. 2 nuclear power state.

That’s when Three Mile Island’s owner, Chi-

cago-based Exelon Corp., announced it will close the plant that was the site of a terrifying partial meltdown in 1979 unless Pennsylvan­ia comes to its financial rescue. It set this Sept. 30 as the closing date.

Ohio-based FirstEnerg­y Corp. also said it will shut down its Beaver Valley nuclear power plant in western Pennsylvan­ia — as well as two nuclear plants in Ohio — within three years unless Pennsylvan­ia steps up.

So far, no rescue has been written into legislatio­n.

Rather, sympatheti­c lawmakers have issued a broadly worded memo saying they will introduce legislatio­n to effectivel­y give Pennsylvan­ia’s nuclear power plants the same preferenti­al treatment as solar power, wind power and a handful of other niche energy sources received under a 2004 state law.

The owners of Pennsylvan­ia’s five nuclear power plants — primarily Exelon, FirstEnerg­y and Allentown based

Talen Energy — are backing that effort.

PJM Interconne­ction, which operates the electric grid covering Pennsylvan­ia and the 65 million people from Illinois east to Washington, has said those four nuclear power plant closings — two in Pennsylvan­ia and two in Ohio — won’t affect the availabili­ty of electricit­y.

But, last summer, the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, in a 3-2 decision, ordered PJM to come up with a solution to protect the competitiv­e market from what it described as a dangerous cascade of pressure on states to prop up otherwise viable power plants.

PJM pitched an idea in October that, if adopted, could create new dilemmas, particular­ly for nuclear power plant owners.

“At that point, do they come back to the state and ask for more? Maybe,” said Glen Thomas, a Pennsylvan­ia-based consultant who specialize­s in utility regulation­s. “Do they go out of business because they don’t have enough revenue? Maybe. Does it suppress the market price for other generators? Definitely. It creates some problems for sure.”

It’s a long-shot that the U.S. Supreme Court will take up appeals in lawsuits challengin­g New York’s and Illinois’ nuclear power subsidies, say lawyers following the cases.

But FERC action still looms, and it’s not clear when or how commission­ers will respond.

Exelon said Pennsylvan­ia must enact legislatio­n by June 1 if it is to keep operating Three Mile Island, since fuel must be ordered months in advance.

Gov. Tom Wolf hasn’t taken a position on rescuing Pennsylvan­ia’s nuclear power plants — although his administra­tion suggests that keeping them operating would help slash Pennsylvan­ia’s greenhouse gas emissions over the coming decades — and neither have top lawmakers.

Meanwhile, the fight is sweeping up labor unions, business associatio­ns, ratepayer advocates, the AARP, environmen­tal groups, anti-nuclear power activists and Pennsylvan­ia’s considerab­le natural gas industry.

“FERC has created all this uncertaint­y,” said Miles Farmer, an attorney for the Washington, D.C.-based Natural Resources Defense Council. “It’s not clear how customers are going to be protected and it’s very difficult for states to set up their programs when they’re in the dark as to how the rules will work.”

 ?? AP PHOTO/CAROLYN KASTER, FILE ?? Cooling towers of the Three Mile Island nuclear power plant are reflected in the Susquehann­a River on Nov. 2, 2006, in Middletown, Pa.
AP PHOTO/CAROLYN KASTER, FILE Cooling towers of the Three Mile Island nuclear power plant are reflected in the Susquehann­a River on Nov. 2, 2006, in Middletown, Pa.
 ?? AP PHOTO/MATT ROURKE, FILE ?? The control room at the Three Mile Island nuclear power plant in Middletown, Pa., is shown on May 22, 2017.
AP PHOTO/MATT ROURKE, FILE The control room at the Three Mile Island nuclear power plant in Middletown, Pa., is shown on May 22, 2017.
 ?? AP PHOTO/MATT ROURKE, FILE ?? The Three Mile Island nuclear power plant in Middletown, Pa., is shown on May 22, 2017. Forty years after Three Mile Island became synonymous with America’s worst commercial nuclear power accident, the prospect of bailing out nuclear power plants is stirring debate at the highest levels of Pennsylvan­ia and the federal government.
AP PHOTO/MATT ROURKE, FILE The Three Mile Island nuclear power plant in Middletown, Pa., is shown on May 22, 2017. Forty years after Three Mile Island became synonymous with America’s worst commercial nuclear power accident, the prospect of bailing out nuclear power plants is stirring debate at the highest levels of Pennsylvan­ia and the federal government.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States