Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Beaver Valley nuclear plant will remain open past 2021, owner says

- By Anya Litvak and Laura Legere

The Beaver Valley nuclear power plant in Shippingpo­rt was scheduled to shut down next year. But Energy Harbor Corp., the new name for the formerly bankrupt FirstEnerg­y Solutions, announced Friday that it will keep the plant open after all.

The power station employs 1,000 people and has a total capacity of 1,872 megawatts, enough to power more than 1 million homes.

FirstEnerg­y Solutions notified regulators in March 2018 that it planned to close the plant claiming it was not economic to operate without some kind of subsidies for carbon-free electricit­y. The company pushed for legislativ­e help in Pennsylvan­ia and Ohio, where it operates two nuclear plants. The effort didn’t progress in Pennsylvan­ia, but Ohio last year passed legislatio­n that FirstEnerg­y credited with keeping its power plants viable.

What changed in Pennsylvan­ia, according to Energy Harbor President and CEO John Judge, is Gov. Tom Wolf’s decision to join the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative, a program for capping and gradually decreasing carbon dioxide emissions from the power sector in 10 Northeast and Mid-Atlantic states.

It requires coal, gas and oil-fired power plants in the participat­ing states to pay a fee for their carbon emissions. Much of the resulting revenue is spent on efforts to improve air quality and cut greenhouse gas emissions further.

Joining RGGI, Mr. Judge said in a statement, “will begin to help level the playing field for our carbon-free nuclear generators.”

Mr. Wolf announced his intention to add Pennsylvan­ia to the 10state program in October. The Department of Environmen­tal Protection is writing rules to guide Pennsylvan­ia’s participat­ion, with a full first draft expected in mid-April. The goal is to join the program in 2022.

Energy Harbor warned that if the state doesn’t stick to that timeline, the company “would need to revisit deactivati­on.”

Nuclear operators have said the plan is critical to preserving Pennsylvan­ia’s remaining nuclear

plants, which do not emit carbon dioxide when they create electricit­y but face punishing competitio­n from power plants running on low-cost natural gas. Because fossil fuel plants would need to purchase carbon emissions credits and nuclear plants wouldn’t, the nuclear plants would become more cost-competitiv­e in the market.

Modeling in October by economic research nonprofit Resources for the Future found that a carbon price of around $3 to $5 per ton would be enough to keep open Pennsylvan­ia nuclear plants that would otherwise close by 2026. In the greenhouse gas initiative’s most recent quarterly auction, carbon allowances were sold at $5.65.

The Republican-led Legislatur­e has so far balked at the plan, fearing its impact on the state’s substantia­l natural gas and coal industries.

State Sen. Gene Yaw, R-Lycoming, who heads his chamber’s environmen­t committee, said in February that if the governor is not prevented from joining the initiative by the General Assembly or the courts, it “will lead to a discrimina­tory and job-killing tax on all coal and gas fired electric generation plants in the Commonweal­th.”

The Wolf administra­tion called Energy Harbor’s decision “very encouragin­g.”

“Reducing emissions and maintainin­g existing clean energy resources are primary components in the fight to address climate change, and energy companies like Energy Harbor recognize this,” Mr. Wolf’s spokeswoma­n, Elizabeth Rementer, said.

“That Energy Harbor is reversing course specifical­ly because of our efforts to participat­e in RGGI is a concrete example of the importance of this policy, and one that Pennsylvan­ia is extremely pleased to hear.”

 ?? Darrell Sapp/Post-Gazette ?? The Beaver Valley nuclear power plant in Shippingpo­rt was scheduled to shut down in 2021, but it will stay open past that.
Darrell Sapp/Post-Gazette The Beaver Valley nuclear power plant in Shippingpo­rt was scheduled to shut down in 2021, but it will stay open past that.
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