The Day

Official on State Pier: ‘We want to replicate this’

Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm visited Millstone Nuclear Power Station and New London on Friday

- By STEN SPINELLA Day Staff Writer

“The president has this goal of getting to 100% clean electricit­y by 2035. The reason why the president was fascinated by what you are doing is because we want to replicate this.” U.S. SECRETARY OF ENERGY JENNIFER GRANHOLM

“To my colleagues in the United States Senate, if you want to see the future of energy in this country, come here, come to New London, come to the State Pier. This is the future of energy in the United States of America.”

SEN. RICHARD BLUMENTHAL, D-CONN.

U.S. Secretary of Energy Jennifer Granholm said during her visit to eastern Connecticu­t Friday that President Joe Biden has singled out Connecticu­t, and Waterford and New London in particular, as examples of how the country can reach its clean energy goals.

Granholm traveled throughout eastern Connecticu­t during her visit on Friday, including a stop at UConn to tour the Energy Department’s Southern New England Industrial Assessment Center. Her two final stops were at Millstone Nuclear Power Station in Waterford and the State Pier in New London.

Millstone

Granholm was joined by U.S. Rep. Joe Courtney, D-2nd District, State Rep. Kathleen McCarty, R-Waterford, Waterford First Selectman Rob Brule and many Dominion Energy workers for a tour of Millstone on Friday.

Members of the group, comprising the news media, politician­s, their staff, and Dominion staff, traveled across the power station and into the unit 1 control room. At that point, the group split up, as a smaller group of Granholm and others went inside.

The group joined back up at the dry cast storage site. In addition to spent fuel pools, Millstone has dry storage in metal canisters encased in concrete, which can be stored for decades. There are federal efforts to find a national repository underway, with $20 million allocated in the federal budget both last year and this

year for a Request for Informatio­n process where the federal government seeks localities that would welcome such a repository. Courtney said the budget for 2023 contains $53 million to that effect.

After Dominion officials answered questions from Granholm, Granholm took questions from the news media while standing adjacent to the nuclear waste storage facility.

Granholm said solving the waste issue is an important part of relying on renewable energy.

“Clearly, we want to be able to continue to use these plants and the ones we want to build, and right now nuclear fission has waste, and so we’ve got to figure out where that’s going to be solved,” she said. “A lot of communitie­s raised their hands and said, yes, we are excited to have a nuclear plant, but they didn’t all volunteer to host the waste. So in order to make good to those communitie­s, we have to have a consent-based siting process for the waste. So we’ve begun that.”

About 200 communitie­s responded to the federal RFI expressing interest in building nuclear power in the community, but, Granholm said, a much smaller percentage of these communitie­s expressed a willingnes­s for further conversati­on about storing the nuclear waste.

“There are communitie­s that are willing to engage in that conversati­on,” Granholm said. “And those communitie­s would have to be compensate­d, there’s infrastruc­ture issues, et cetera, we want to make sure that they are made whole for doing this service to the country. That conversati­on’s ongoing, and we will be putting out another RFI based on the first before the end of the year.”

Granholm concluded the impromptu press conference discussing why Millstone is essential to the state’s and the country’s clean energy goals.

“This facility, especially for this region, is huge. It represents 40% of your power and over 90% of your clean power, so this is really important to get to the goal of 100% clean electricit­y by 2035, which is the president’s goal,” Granholm said. “It’s one of the reasons why your Congressma­n has been such an advocate for finding the solution for waste but also for nuclear power. You get a lot of your power from natural gas, but this particular site is critical to reach your goals.”

Dominion officials maintained that it can safely store the spent fuel, but urged Granholm for a federal site to be chosen.

Brule, along with other local actors past and present, have expressed frustratio­n with the fact that there is nuclear waste in town. Brule has said he wants Dominion to adhere to the original agreement, and maintains that nuclear waste puts the community in danger in multiple ways.

A bill passed in this spring’s legislativ­e session would exempt Millstone Power Station from a state nuclear power facility constructi­on moratorium.

The bill is meant to allow the state’s existing nuclear power facilities — Millstone — to expand to other nuclear technologi­es on-site, but not to build a third full-scale reactor.

As Dominion Energy New England Policy Director Mary Nuara wrote in public testimony on the bill, “Dominion Energy supports the state’s efforts to explore all options available, including advanced nuclear technologi­es like small modular reactors, to achieve its long-term decarboniz­ation goals.”

The bill was supported on a bipartisan basis in both the state House and Senate. Senate Bill 10, also passed this past legislativ­e session, requires the state to eliminate greenhouse gas emissions from electricit­y supplied to Connecticu­t customers by 2040, which legislator­s say can’t happen without the full-scale inclusion of renewable energy.

The federal government had originally committed to taking possession of nuclear waste from facilities like Millstone but later reneged, meaning Millstone stores its used fuel on site.

Dominion Senior Vice President and chief nuclear officer Dan Stoddard said Friday that Dominion will not begin planning on building small modular reactors at Millstone until a new power purchase agreement is arrived at, and until Millstone extends its operating license out to 80 years. At that point, they will begin looking closely at the possibilit­y of building such reactors at Millstone.

Granholm’s trip to Millstone follows a Thursday exchange between Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., and Granholm during a Senate Committee on Armed Services meeting. Blumenthal noted the importance of cybersecur­ity for facilities like Millstone.

“I would suggest that we need cybersecur­ity in existing industrial control systems — nuclear, wind, solar — not only new ones but those being built ... We are vulnerable,” Blumenthal said. “I will be interested tomorrow to hear and see some of your suggestion­s about how we can safeguard our cybersecur­ity, particular­ly on nuclear.”

Granholm said in response that the National Nuclear Security Administra­tion has the same concerns as Blumenthal.

“They have hired an evaluation to happen and that evaluator has identified some points of excellence but also some points of challenge, and the points of challenge involve further investment­s in the work force ... as well as infrastruc­ture that will prevent ... hacking, prevent penetratio­n,” Granholm said. “That includes monitoring, includes detection, includes addressing on the spot, includes projection about where things are going.”

Blumenthal asked if Granholm had reviewed Millstone’s security systems. She said she was looking forward to learning about Millstone on Friday.

“Well, we hope that you will give us the benefit of your assessment when you finish with your view because cybersecur­ity there and at every nuclear power plant has to be regarded with a tremendous urgency,” Blumenthal said.

Granholm concluded the exchange by saying for financial and security reasons, the U.S. needs to focus on homegrown clean energy.

State Pier

After seeing Millstone, Granholm was taken on a tour of the State Pier. She along with Courtney, Connecticu­t Department of Energy and Environmen­tal Protection Commission­er Katie Dykes, Gov. Ned Lamont, U.S. Senators Richard Blumenthal and Chris Murphy, and representa­tives from Eversource, Ørsted, Kiewit Infrastruc­ture Company, building and constructi­on workers and other state and municipal leaders, including Mayor Michael Passero, came to the site Friday afternoon to celebrate the project’s progress.

Passero pointed out that federal politician­s and officials along with Lamont have taken a great interest in New London due to the State Pier project in recent years.

“It’s one of our banner days when we celebrate New London being on the cutting edge of the new green economy that the Biden administra­tion is bringing to the United States,” Passero said.

Port Authority Board Chair David Kooris said the State Pier is a “terrific example” of what it takes to build a green and clean energy economy.

“We’re really happy to deliver this project less than a year from now, and we can’t wait to see turbines here and the ships bringing those out to the offshore farm,” Kooris said.

Eversource President Joe Nolan said the State Pier “will be the epicenter of wind developmen­t in the whole northeast.”

“There’s no other place that this vessel can land other than Norfolk, Va; that’s how large this vessel is,” Nolan said.

Ørsted Head of Northeast Government Affairs David Ortiz said the company is looking forward to beginning offshore constructi­on next year. He said its first three projects will provide enough power for a million homes in Connecticu­t and across the region.

Lamont praised the public-private partnershi­p supporting the State Pier remake.

“In the next four years, 92% of our electric grid is going to be carbon-free,” Lamont said. “I want to be a leader in this country right now. Wind power along with nuclear power, what that means in terms of a carbon-free grid; it makes a big difference.”

Lamont and others also praised the project for its provisions of hundreds of jobs. Granholm, Blumenthal and Courtney celebrated the fact that they are union jobs.

“I particular­ly want to thank the men and women who are out there every day, our laborers, our teamsters, the unions are making it happen again,” Blumenthal said. “Organized labor is coming through here.”

“To my colleagues in the United States Senate, if you want to see the future of energy in this country, come here, come to New London, come to the State Pier. This is the future of energy in the United States of America,” Blumenthal said.

Murphy said offshore wind is “the holy grail of public policy” because it begets jobs in the short term, it accounts for economic developmen­t in the long run, “it makes the country more secure, and it helps save the planet.”

“What other investment gets you all of that, all at once?” Murphy asked.

In his remarks at the State Pier news conference Friday, Courtney said that what’s happening in New London is “eye-watering.”

“Just the dimensions of this project, the complexity of the work, and the speed with which it’s being implemente­d, is really just extraordin­ary,” Courtney said. “That schedule, which we heard for next year, I think is on track and it’s going to stay on track to make sure that we execute the plan exactly as it was initially envisioned.”

Granholm said she was asked to come to Connecticu­t by the White House “because y’all have been doing amazing things here in Connecticu­t.”

“The president has this goal of getting to 100% clean electricit­y by 2035,” Granholm said. “The reason why the president was fascinated by what you are doing is because we want to replicate this.”

Costs for the State Pier project have spiraled since the original estimation of $93 million, coming to a new projection of $235 million. The project has also been facing allegation­s of corruption in recent years, including a federal investigat­ion into the spending and related contracts.

The state Contractin­g Standards Board, a watchdog agency that had its funding politicize­d, but ultimately provided, during a budget battle this past legislativ­e session, recently completed an investigat­ion into the Connecticu­t Port Authority, which criticized past practices of the Authority.

A federal grand jury has issued a subpoena for documents related to Konstantin­os “Kosta” Diamantis, the former deputy director of Office of Policy and Management, who was assigned to oversee the Connecticu­t Port Authority’s $235 million State Pier redevelopm­ent project and also led the state’s Office of School Constructi­on Grants and Review. Diamantis resigned after being suspended amid an ethics probe of his daughter’s hiring by Chief State’s Attorney Richard Colangelo Jr. and a school constructi­on contractor.

Asked whether she was aware of the federal investigat­ion, and if so, whether it would affect her feelings on the project, Granholm said, “The project is a great project. I don’t know about the local issues. This is a great project though.”

“[Millstone], especially for this region, is huge. It represents 40% of your power and over 90% of your clean power, so this is really important to get to the goal of 100% clean electricit­y by 2035, which is the president’s goal. It’s one of the reasons why your Congressma­n has been such an advocate for finding the solution for waste but also for nuclear power. You get a lot of your power from natural gas, but this particular site is critical to reach your goals.”

U.S. SECRETARY OF ENERGY JENNIFER GRANHOLM

 ?? SEAN D. ELLIOT/THE DAY ?? U.S. Secretary of Energy Jennifer Granholm chats Friday with, from left, David Kooris, chairman of the Connecticu­t Port Authority Board, New London Mayor Michael Passero, Gov. Ned Lamont, and U.S. Rep. Joe Courtney, D-2nd District, on a visit to State Pier in New London. Granholm visited the state and toured the DOE’s Southern New England Industrial Assessment Center at UConn, the Millstone Power Station in Waterford and State Pier in New London.
SEAN D. ELLIOT/THE DAY U.S. Secretary of Energy Jennifer Granholm chats Friday with, from left, David Kooris, chairman of the Connecticu­t Port Authority Board, New London Mayor Michael Passero, Gov. Ned Lamont, and U.S. Rep. Joe Courtney, D-2nd District, on a visit to State Pier in New London. Granholm visited the state and toured the DOE’s Southern New England Industrial Assessment Center at UConn, the Millstone Power Station in Waterford and State Pier in New London.
 ?? SEAN D. ELLIOT/THE DAY ?? U.S. Secretary of Energy Jennifer Granholm, center, comments Friday during a tour of State Pier in New London.
SEAN D. ELLIOT/THE DAY U.S. Secretary of Energy Jennifer Granholm, center, comments Friday during a tour of State Pier in New London.

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