Los Angeles Times

CPUC won’t meet Edison funds deadline

Utility asked for money by Jan. 3 for San Onofre shutdown; agency wants 120 days to study request.

- By Jeff McDonald McDonald writes for the San Diego Union-Tribune.

SAN DIEGO — State utility regulators have delayed responding to Southern California Edison’s request for more than $400 million in decommissi­oning funds to pay for tearing down the closed San Onofre nuclear plant north of Oceanside.

Edison asked the California Public Utilities Commission to approve spending $461 million from a special fund administer­ed by the state by Jan. 3. All nuclear power plant operators must maintain trust funds to ensure that money will be available for decommissi­oning.

Edison cited delays in its fuel-transfer program — the delicate operation of moving nuclear waste from wet to dry storage — and approval of a permit from the state Coastal Commission for the updated cost estimates.

Regulators decided to examine the transactio­n in more detail before approving the spending.

In a one-page notice sent to Edison on Dec. 24, regulators told the utility that they would not grant immediate approval. They said they needed up to 120 days to consider the request to withdraw money from the multibilli­on-dollar decommissi­oning fund.

The decision came on the same day the San Diego consumer group Public Watchdogs formally protested Edison’s applicatio­n.

Charles Langley, the group’s executive director, told the utilities commission that the Edison request was too much money to approve without an evidentiar­y hearing. He said Edison mischaract­erized several key points in its nine-page applicatio­n, known as an advice letter.

“The advice letter seeks permission to spend nearly half a billion dollars of ratepayer money,” Langley said to regulators. “This is a virtually unpreceden­ted level of increased spending to be permitted based on a mere nine-page letter of questionab­le claims.”

The decommissi­oning fund is a multibilli­on-dollar pot of money paid into by utility customers and augmented by investment­s over several decades.

Edison and minority owner San Diego Gas & Electric suspended the customer fees several years ago after determinin­g they had enough money to dismantle the plant.

Robert Laffoon-Villegas, a spokesman for Edison, released a statement saying, “Southern California Edison will submit its response to the CPUC on Dec. 31. We look forward to providing additional informatio­n to the commission on this matter. The protest by Public Watchdogs is without merit. SCE’s advice letter is consistent with the approved process for obtaining the CPUC’s approval of trust fund disburseme­nts to pay for decommissi­oning costs.”

In 2013, Edison permanentl­y closed the nuclear plant after four decades of operation.

‘ This is a virtually unpreceden­ted level of increased spending to be permitted based on a mere nine-page letter of questionab­le claims.’

— Charles Langley,

Public Watchdogs executive director, to the CPUC about Southern California Edison’s request for decommissi­oning funds

 ??  ?? EDISON has asked state regulators to OK spending $461 million for the decommissi­oning of the San Onofre nuclear plant, but regulators decided to examine the transactio­n in more detail before approving the spending.
EDISON has asked state regulators to OK spending $461 million for the decommissi­oning of the San Onofre nuclear plant, but regulators decided to examine the transactio­n in more detail before approving the spending.

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