The Mercury News

Remaining reactor shut down after 45 years

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HARRISBURG, PA. >> The moneylosin­g Three Mile Island, the 1979 site of the United States’ worst commercial nuclear power accident, was shut down Friday by its energy giant owner.

The end of the 45-year electricit­y-producing career of Three Mile Island Unit 1 came after Chicago-based Exelon Corp. tried and failed to get financial aid from Pennsylvan­ia in the spring.

Three Mile Island’s Unit 1 opened in 1974 and was licensed to operate through 2034, but Exelon complained the plant was losing money in competitiv­e electricit­y markets.

Three Mile Island also faced particular­ly difficult economics because the 1979 accident that destroyed Unit 2 left it with just one reactor.

Decommissi­oning Unit 1, dismantlin­g its buildings and removing spent fuel could take six decades and cost more than $1 billion, Exelon estimates, although companies specializi­ng in the handling of radioactiv­e material are buying retired U.S. nuclear reactors and promising to do it in under a decade.

The destroyed Unit 2 is sealed, and its twin cooling towers remain standing. Its core was shipped years ago to the U.S. Department of Energy’s Idaho National Laboratory. What is left inside the containmen­t building remains highly radioactiv­e and encased in concrete.

Work to dismantle Unit 2 is scheduled to begin in 2041 and be completed in 2053, its owner, FirstEnerg­y, has said.

No nuclear plant proposed after the 1979 accident has been successful­ly completed and put into operation in the United States.

 ?? JOE HERMITT — THE PATRIOT-NEWS VIA AP ?? A woman shoots a video of Three Mile Island, site of the United States’ worst commercial nuclear power accident, minutes before the power plant was shut down on Friday.
JOE HERMITT — THE PATRIOT-NEWS VIA AP A woman shoots a video of Three Mile Island, site of the United States’ worst commercial nuclear power accident, minutes before the power plant was shut down on Friday.

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