The Morning Call

Nuclear plant shutdown will cost $1.2B, take nearly 60 years

- By Andrew Maykuth

The Three Mile Island Unit 1 nuclear reactor shutdown, which is set to begin no later than Sept. 30, will take nearly 60 years and $1.2 billion to complete.

The Nuclear Regulatory Commission is outlining Exelon Generation’s plans to decommissi­on TMI Unit 1, whose closure the company announced in May after it became clear the Pennsylvan­ia General Assembly would not approve a financial rescue of the state’s nuclear plants. The federal agency is conducting a public meeting in Harrisburg next week.

Exelon’s decommissi­oning schedule, which was spelled out in a plan released in April, calls for the immediate removal of Unit 1’s nuclear fuel from the reactor after shutdown. The uranium fuel-rod assemblies would cool in spent fuel pools for three years until they are moved to above-ground sealed canisters in 2022.

But the reactor’s cooling towers and other large components would remain standing until 2074, according to Exelon’s Post-Shutdown Decommissi­oning Activities Report. All radioactiv­e material would be safely stored or removed from the site by 2078.

A plant decommissi­oning is “more akin to a marathon than a sprint,” Jack Parrott, senior project manager of the NRC’s reactor decommissi­oning branch, told reporters in a briefing Tuesday. The NRC’s interest is to oversee decontamin­ation and removal of radioactiv­e material from the site; restoratio­n of the site to a greenfield is managed by the state and the property owner.

Under federal regulation­s, plant operators have 60 years to clean up a site after a plant closes. The long-term decommissi­oning

method called SAFSTOR allows radioactiv­e levels to decline for decades before workers have to dismantle contaminat­ed components, the NRC says.

Exelon said the $1.2 billion cost to decommissi­oning the plant would be financed from a trust fund into which the power plant’s customers have paid since the plant went online in 1974. Exelon or its successors would be responsibl­e for paying any fund shortfall.

The advantage of the more rapid decontamin­ation strategy is that it allows the owner to employ workers experience­d with the plant.

It also makes the site available for reuse sooner.

Exelon acquired Unit 1 in 1999, two decades after the infamous nuclear accident that destroyed its twin in the nation’s worst commercial accident. The damaged reactor, owned by FirstEnerg­y Corp., is now dormant and is awaiting full decommissi­oning in tandem with the shutdown of Exelon’s plant.

Exelon said the 837-megawatt reactor, which employs nearly 700 people, would reduce the staffing level to 300 after shutdown. A skeleton workforce of 50 would remain in place after 2022 to secure the site and the 1,200 tons of spent fuel stored in special steel casks.

The NRC will also hold a public meeting Tuesday at the Sheraton Harrisburg Hershey Hotel, 4650 Lindle Road, Harrisburg, to discuss the Post-Shutdown Decommissi­oning Activities Report for the plant. Written comments can be submitted to the NRC through Oct. 9.

 ?? CLEM MURRAY/TNS ?? Unit 1 at the Three Mile Island nuclear power plant in Middletown, Pa., is slated for closure.
CLEM MURRAY/TNS Unit 1 at the Three Mile Island nuclear power plant in Middletown, Pa., is slated for closure.

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