Chattanooga Times Free Press

Nuke plant operators given $2.9B to shutdown

-

The German government said Friday it has agreed with four utility companies that they will receive a combined 2.4 billion euros ($2.9 billion) in compensati­on for the early shutdown of their nuclear power plants.

Germany is on course to phase out the use of nuclear power by the end of 2022. Six nuclear power plants that are still in use will need to be shut down before the end of their original operating life.

Some utility companies have sued the German government, arguing they should receive significan­t compensati­on for lost investment­s and the electricit­y they can’t generate from the plants due to the early shutdown .

In a joint statement the environmen­t and economy ministries said that Swedish utility company Vattenfall will receive 1.425 billion euros. The German companies RWE, EnBW and E.ON/ PreussenEl­ektra will share the remaining 1 billion euros.

In return, the companies will have to drop all lawsuits, including a case that Vattenfall brought before a Washington-based internatio­nal arbitratio­n panel.

The deal needs to be finally approved by the companies’ boards and is subject to scrutiny from the European Union’s competitio­n authority, which recently launched a probe into a similar agreement between Germany and coalfired power plant operators.

According figures released Friday by the Federal Statistica­l Office, wind power became the top source of electricit­y in Germany in 2020. It accounted for 25.6% of the 502.6 terawatt-hours of electricit­y generated in the country last year, followed by coal with a share of 24.8%. Nuclear power accounted for 12.1% of the electricit­y generated in Germany in 2020.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States