The Denver Post

Trump adds $3.7B to finish reactors

- By Russ Bynum Hyosub Shin, The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on

SAVANNAH, GA.» Energy Secretary Rick Perry announced Friday that the Trump administra­tion has finalized $3.7 billion in new loan guarantees to support completion of the first new U.S. commercial nuclear reactors in a generation, calling the expansion of nuclear energy “the real” Green New Deal.

The expansion of Plant Vogtle in eastern Georgia has fallen years behind schedule while its price tag has nearly doubled since the government approved two new reactors at the plant in 2012.

But Perry said the administra­tion is determined to see the project finished despite the setbacks. He spoke Friday from the constructi­on site in Waynesboro as a crane lowered a giant dome atop the containmen­t building for housing one of the new reactors.

“The message that gets sent on this plant: America is back in the nuclear energy industry, folks,” Perry told a crowd of workers in hard hats. “We are back. We’re going to be leading the world.”

President Donald Trump has singled out the country’s nuclear and coal industries for support from his administra­tion, although the more politicall­y influentia­l coal sector has gotten most of the regulatory breaks so far.

The Green New Deal pushed by some Democrats has served to boost interest in nuclear power, which doesn’t emit greenhouse gasses that contribute to global warming. But Democrats are divided over whether nuclear energy is a valid replacemen­t for fossil fuels.

The new financial support brings to $12 billion the government’s total loan guarantees for Plant Vogtle, with the initial assistance approved under President Barack Obama. The guarantees make the federal government responsibl­e for covering unpaid debt if the electrical utilities in charge of the project default.

A U.S. nuclear renaissanc­e predicted under Obama never materializ­ed. The drive to build new reactors lost momentum after a 2011 tsunami in Japan triggered meltdowns at the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear plant. Cheap natural gas prices also made nuclear less attractive.

When federal regulators approved the Plant Vogtle expansion in 2012, the two new reactors were expected to cost $14 billion and to be finished in 2017. Now the cost estimate has ballooned to more than $27 billion. The first reactor is scheduled for completion in late 2021, with the second going online in 2022.

The project’s biggest setback came in 2017, when the main contractor, Westinghou­se Electric Co., the U.S. nuclear unit of Japan’s Toshiba Corp., filed for bankruptcy. Months later, constructi­on of two new reactors was abandoned in South Carolina after nearly $10 billion was spent, with the owners largely blaming Westinghou­se’s bankruptcy.

Soon after the South Carolina project failed, Perry offered conditiona­l commitment­s for new loan guarantees to help the nuclear expansion in Georgia stay afloat. His announceme­nt Friday that the additional support has been approved comes after one of the Georgia project’s primary owners, Oglethorpe Power, considered pulling out last year after the cost estimate jumped an additional $2.3 billion.

Critics say expanding Plant Vogtle has proven too expensive and the myriad constructi­on delays show it’s too risky.

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