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posted by martyb on Sunday June 04 2017, @10:55AM   Printer-friendly
from the needs-more-wealthfar dept.

New Jersey Spotlight reports

Three Mile Island may be the next nuclear power plant to be shuttered by its owner unless it gets financial help to keep the facility afloat.

Exelon Corp., the owner of the Pennsylvania generating station, announced yesterday it will retire the plant by or about September 30, 2019 absent any change in that state's policies dealing with nuclear power.

The announcement is the latest by an owner of a nuclear plant to threaten or close its facility unless given financial assistance to make the facility profitable, a drama that could play out soon in New Jersey with its three nuclear units operated by the Public Service Enterprise Group in South Jersey.

If Exelon follows through on its threat, it would mean the Oyster Creek plant in Lacey Township, also owned by the Chicago energy giant, could outlast TMI, the site of the nation's biggest nuclear accident when it had a partial meltdown in 1979.

Oyster Creek, the country's oldest commercial nuclear plant, agreed to shut down at the end of 2019 under a settlement worked out with the Christie administration in 2010.

[...] Environmentalists oppose extending the incentives renewable sources obtain to nuclear, because unlike solar, wind, and water, the former is not sustainable. β€œIt’s not renewable; you have to keep buying the fuel,’’ said Jeff Tittel, director of the New Jersey Sierra Club.


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday June 04 2017, @04:06PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Sunday June 04 2017, @04:06PM (#520249)

    The issue is that if it's not nuclear and it's not coal or gas, then what do we use for base power generation? Of the three, nuclear emits by far the least amount of pollutants during the process.

    Hydro and geothermal are great if you're in an area that has them, but they both have their own consequences. Wind, solar and tidal are great, but they aren't consistent enough throughout the day and year for base power generation. Probably they will be in the future, but the storage technology isn't yet there to do it.