Chattanooga Times Free Press

2nd new Vogtle nuclear unit connects to grid

- BY DREW KANN

The long-delayed second new nuclear reactor at Plant Vogtle near Augusta, Georgia, reached another milestone Friday afternoon when it synced with the electric grid for the first time, Georgia Power said.

Connecting to the grid is a key step on the path to placing the unit, known as Unit 4, into service. The developmen­t comes about two weeks after the company began a self-sustaining fission reaction inside Unit 4's reactor, a stage known as “initial criticalit­y.”

In a release, Georgia Power said operators will continue testing the unit as they raise its power to 100%.

Unit 4 was supposed to begin providing electricit­y to Georgians by the end of March, but an issue discovered in one of its critical cooling systems during start-up testing triggered a new delay. The company says the problem has been fixed, but Unit 4 is nowexpecte­d to enter service sometime between April and June.

The new Vogtle units are the first new commercial reactors built from scratch in the U.S. in more than three decades. Unit 3 has been in service since last July and once Unit 4 is complete, the two reactors combined will produce enough electricit­y to power 1million homes, without adding heattrappi­ng carbon pollution to the atmosphere.

But the project's years of delays and rising costs have been a burden on Georgia Power's ratepayers.

Unit 3 entered service more than seven years behind schedule, and Unit 4 is likely to reach the finish line more than seven years later than expected, too. The total cost of the expansion has surpassed $35 billion, more than $20 billion over its initial estimated price tag.

Before the first new unit produced any electricit­y, the average Georgia Power residentia­l customer had already paid about $1,000 over the last decade-plus in monthly bill fees to cover financing costs.

Late last year, state regulators voted to approve a deal that passed $7.56 billion of Vogtle's constructi­on costs onto the company's ratepayers. As a result, the average residentia­l customer using 1,000 kilowatt-hours of electricit­y a month will see a cumulative increase of $14.38 in their monthly bills. A portion of that increase — about $5.42 — kicked in last year after Unit 3 entered service. The rest will take effect when Unit 4 comes online.

Georgia Power holds the largest ownership stake in the Vogtle expansion with 45.7%, followed by Oglethorpe Power (30%), the Municipal Electric Authority of Georgia (22.7%) and Dalton Utilities (1.6%).

As the company prepares to bring Unit 4 online, it is already asking to add more electricit­y assets to its fleet.

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