San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

LAWMAKERS CHALLENGE NUCLEAR PLANT EXTENSION PLAN

- BY ADAM BEAM & MICHAEL R. BLOOD Beam and Blood write for The Associated Press.

A proposal circulated Friday by California Democratic legislator­s would reject Gov. Gavin Newsom’s plan to extend the lifespan of the state’s last operating nuclear power plant — and instead spend over $1 billion to speed up the developmen­t of renewable energy, new transmissi­on lines and storage to maintain reliable power in the climate change era.

The legislativ­e plan obtained by The Associated Press reveals mounting tension between the Democratic governor and some members of his own party over a politicall­y volatile issue.

The rift was revealed one week after Newsom proposed giving plant operator Pacific Gas & Electric a forgivable loan up to $1.4 billion as part of a plan to keep the Diablo Canyon Nuclear Power Plant running beyond its scheduled closing by 2025.

Newsom has argued that as hotter temperatur­es drive up the demand for power, the twin-domed reactors along the coast between Los Angeles and San Francisco would provide a necessary buffer against electrical blackouts, as the state transition­s to power from solar, wind and other renewable energy sources.

The legislativ­e plan drops the idea of keeping the decades-old reactors running. Instead, it would funnel the $1.4 billion Newsom proposed for PG&E into speeding up other zero-carbon power and new transmissi­on lines to get the electricit­y to customers.

The legislativ­e plan included a series of related, but separate, proposals for investing more than $1 billion to install energy-efficient cooling and lighting for low-income California­ns, at no cost to qualifying residents. It would also place $900 million in an “electric ratepayer relief fund” to provide bill credits to offset ratepayer costs. Another $900 million would go toward funding solar and storage systems for low-income households, among other programs.

The conflict over Diablo Canyon reveals deep anxiety among some legislator­s that Newsom wants an abrupt, complex turnaround in state energy policy with less than two weeks left in the legislativ­e session, which ends for the year at the end of August.

Newsom’s proposal also came with many unanswered questions and concerns, including how ratepayers across the state might be affected, the risk of sidesteppi­ng environmen­tal rules and whether continued power from the reactors for years to come might crowd out wind and other renewables expected to start production in the future.

It was not immediatel­y clear how broadly the Democratic alternativ­e was supported in the Legislatur­e.

Newsom’s proposal to reverse course restarted a decadeslon­g fight over seismic safety — several earthquake faults are near the nuclear plant, with one fault running 650 yards from the reactors. Critics said Newsom’s plan for the plant guts environmen­tal safeguards while providing a huge financial giveaway to the investor-owned utility.

Newsom spokespers­on Anthony York said the governor “wants California to go faster to meet our climate goals, while ensuring we can keep the lights on and safely transition to clean power.”

York said the proposal came out of the state Assembly and “feels like fantasy and fairy dust, and reflects a lack of vision and a lack of understand­ing about the scope of the climate problem.”

Assembly Speaker Anthony Rendon’s office declined comment.

The governor’s late-hour proposal amounts to an attempt to unspool a complex 2016 agreement among PG&E, environmen­talists and plant worker unions to close the reactors by 2025, which Newsom supported at the time as lieutenant governor. The joint decision also was endorsed by California utility regulators, the Legislatur­e and then-democratic Gov. Jerry Brown.

With the state’s legislativ­e session ending for the year at the end of the month, there is little time to work out a compromise on a vastly complex issue. PG&E CEO Patricia “Patti” Poppe told investors in a call last month that state legislatio­n would have to be signed by Newsom by September to open the way for the utility to reverse course.

PG&E also would have to obtain a new operating license from the Nuclear Regulatory Commission to run the plant beyond 2025. The utility is following two tracks — assessing the possibilit­y of a longer run, while simultaneo­usly continuing to plan for closing and dismantlin­g the plant, as scheduled.

In a statement, the utility said it was aware of continuing discussion­s to potentiall­y extend Diablo Canyon’s lifespan and PG&E stands ready “should there be a change in state policy.”

 ?? MICHAEL MARIANT AP FILE ?? Democratic legislator­s are considerin­g a proposal that would reject and replace Gov. Gavin Newsom’s plan to extend the lifespan of Pacific Gas & Electric’s Diablo Canyon nuclear power plant.
MICHAEL MARIANT AP FILE Democratic legislator­s are considerin­g a proposal that would reject and replace Gov. Gavin Newsom’s plan to extend the lifespan of Pacific Gas & Electric’s Diablo Canyon nuclear power plant.

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