Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Ohio measure bails out 2 nuclear plants

GOP-backed legislatio­n adds fee to electric bills to give sites $150M per year

- JOHN SEEWER

TOLEDO, Ohio — A roughly $1 billion financial rescue for Ohio’s two nuclear power plants is on the way after lawmakers and the governor signed off on a plan Tuesday that will add a new fee to every electricit­y bill in the state.

Backed mostly by Republican­s, the legislatio­n will hand over $150 million a year through 2026 to the plants near Cleveland and Toledo to keep them operating. It also will scale back and eventually end requiremen­ts that utilities generate more power from wind and solar.

Without the cash infusion from customers, FirstEnerg­y Solutions, which is going through bankruptcy reorganiza­tion, warned that the plants would be shut down within two years.

The natural-gas boom and increasing use of renewable energy have combined in recent years to squeeze the nation’s aging nuclear reactors.

President Donald Trump’s administra­tion has pledged to boost the nuclear and coal industries, which have been sagging against the competitio­n from cheaper energy sources.

New York, New Jersey and Illinois also have responded by giving out billion-dollar bailouts funded by ratepayers to stop unprofitab­le nuclear plants from closing prematurel­y.

But other states, such as Pennsylvan­ia, have refused to go along, triggering the planned shutdown of the Three Mile Island plant beginning this summer.

The two Ohio nuclear plants — Davis-Besse near Toledo and the Perry plant near Cleveland — sit along Lake Erie and produce about 15% of the state’s electricit­y.

Lawmakers in the Ohio House approved the proposal after months of debate and despite opposition from the natural gas and manufactur­ing industries.

Gov. Mike DeWine quickly signed the legislatio­n just hours later.

Supporters countered that the nuclear plants account for nearly all of Ohio’s clean energy, employ a combined 1,400 workers and generate millions in taxes for schools and services.

They also said eliminatin­g existing mandates meant to increase investment in renewable energy will result in lower electricit­y bills despite the new surcharge for the nuclear plants.

“The bottom line is this bill protects jobs and saves money,” said Rep. Jamie Callender, a Republican.

Opponents led by the natural gas industry have vowed that they will ask voters to overturn the legislatio­n in a statewide referendum next year.

The final version calls for residentia­l customers to pay 85 cents each month and for major industrial plants to pay $2,400 on their electricit­y bills. While most of the money will go toward the nuclear plants, about $20 million annually will go to large-scale solar projects already approved.

The legislatio­n also allows for monthly surcharges on all bills that will prop up two coalfired power plants, including one in Indiana.

Many Democrats and environmen­tal groups opposed the legislatio­n because it does away with incentives for solar and wind projects and also eliminates programs that help residents use less power through buying energy-saving appliances or upgrading heating and cooling systems.

“We cannot save one group of jobs on the backs of others,” said Rep. Sedrick Denson, a Democrat.

The Davis-Besse plant, which opened four decades ago, was the site of the worst corrosion ever found at a U.S. reactor when inspectors discovered an acid leak that closed the plant for extensive repairs from 2002 to 2004.

 ?? AP ?? The Davis-Besse Nuclear Power Station near Toledo, Ohio, is one of two struggling nuclear plants in that state that would benefit from a $1 billion state bailout paid for by ratepayers.
AP The Davis-Besse Nuclear Power Station near Toledo, Ohio, is one of two struggling nuclear plants in that state that would benefit from a $1 billion state bailout paid for by ratepayers.

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