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posted by on Wednesday January 11 2017, @03:47PM   Printer-friendly
from the city-may-need-to-learn-how-to-sleep dept.

The controversial Indian Point nuclear plant near New York will close in 2021, a casualty of low energy prices and relentless criticism by environmentalists, the power company announced Monday.

Under an agreement with New York State, Entergy plans to shut down one of the two operating units at Indian Point by April 30, 2020, and the second unit will close a year after that.

Entergy attributed the decision to close the decades-old plant to shifting energy economics. Among the changes, power prices fell as much as 45 percent due to natural gas from the Marcellus Shale formation in New York and Pennsylvania, part of the American shale boom.

"Key considerations in our decision to shut down Indian Point ahead of schedule include sustained low current and projected wholesale energy prices that have reduced revenues, as well as increased operating costs," said Bill Mohl, president of Entergy wholesale commodities.

Entergy said it would look for other opportunities for the 1,000 workers employed at Indian Point.

New York Governor Andrew Cuomo and environmentalists applauded the news since the plant, located within 30 miles of New York, has long been a concern due to safety problems and worries that an accident at the aging facility could affect some 20 million people.

Lower energy prices cited by the article have not been reflected in customer electricity bills. Indian Point supplies 30% of New York's power, so if the post-Indian point power supply drops by the same amount the high prices New Yorkers currently pay per kwh will climb even higher.


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  • (Score: 1, Informative) by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday January 11 2017, @06:13PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday January 11 2017, @06:13PM (#452599)

    Projected radiation plume from an incident at Indian Point [blogspot.com]

    Original page [agreenroadjournal.com] describes ridiculous extensions to nuke plant lifetimes.
    (Content is behind scripts.) [archive.li]

    Downwind populations [googleapis.com]

    -- OriginalOwner_ [soylentnews.org]

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  • (Score: 2) by Aiwendil on Wednesday January 11 2017, @07:02PM

    by Aiwendil (531) on Wednesday January 11 2017, @07:02PM (#452636) Journal

    Projected radiation plume from an incident at Indian Point

    I'll bite - just what _incident_ would cause that?

    And no, I will not accept _accidents_ as answer.

    (Seriously - this is about the same level as calling a monitor "the computer" (related, common, wrong).
    INES 4-7 are accidents while INES 3-1 are incidents (0 is out of scale, but called deviations in reporting))

  • (Score: 2) by Phoenix666 on Wednesday January 11 2017, @08:42PM

    by Phoenix666 (552) on Wednesday January 11 2017, @08:42PM (#452680) Journal

    The left panel of the first link makes sense, and would be perfectly acceptable to me because all that fallout would hit Westchester County, Connecticut, and the North Shore of Long Island where all the bankers live who have done so much evil. The right panel makes no sense, because that's not the way the winds move in NYC. They go west to east, or southwest to northeast; it almost never goes from the north to the south like that.

    --
    Washington DC delenda est.