Wednesday, November 5, 2025
Talen Energy reports automatic shutdown at Luzerne County nuclear power plant
Sunday, November 2, 2025
Nuclear storage project in New Mexico terminated
Nuclear storage project in New Mexico terminated
- OCTOBER 8, 2025
- NEWS
Holtec International in Camden, N.J. May 10, 2019. JOE LAMBERTI/COURIER POST-USA TODAY NETWORK
Adrian Hedden
Carlsbad Current-Argus
achedden@currentargus.com
Local officials in southeast New Mexico are searching for a new path to see a nuclear facility built and operated near the border between Eddy and Lea counties, after a company planning to do so terminated the project.
In canceling its plans, New Jersey-based Holtec International pointed to a tide of opposition from state officials – despite local support in Carlsbad and Hobbs – to its proposal to store spent nuclear fuel rods brought in from power plants around the country.
Holtec first applied for a federal license for the facility in 2017, touching off a controversial licensing process that was delayed by litigation and plagued by opposition from the state administration, New Mexico’s congressional delegation and environmental advocates.
The company was recruited to the location by the Eddy Lea Energy Alliance, a consortium of local officials from the two counties and the cities of Carlsbad and Hobbs. The Alliance owns the 1,000-acre plot of land where the facility would have operated.
Company officials wrote in a July 28 letter to the Alliance that the project “was impossible” amid strong opposition from state lawmakers and current agreements in place with local leaders, stating the company was terminating an agreement to buy the land from the Alliance once the facility was operational.
Holtec spokesperson Patrick O’Brien confirmed Wednesday, Oct. 8, that the company and the Alliance agreed to part ways, allowing the Alliance to seek other companies to develop the site and Holtec to pursue projects in other states amid recent efforts by the U.S. Department of Energy to facilitate state consent.
“After discussions with our longtime partner in the HI-STORE project, the Eddy-Lea Energy Alliance, and due to the untenable path forward for used fuel storage in New Mexico, we mutually agreed upon canceling the agreement,” O’Brien wrote in an email.
“This allows for (the Alliance) to work to redevelop the property in a manner that fits their needs and allows Holtec to work with other states who are amenable to used fuel storage based on the recent DOE work on public education and outreach.”
During a Wednesday, Oct. 8, meeting of the Alliance held in a Carlsbad, Chair John Heaton said the Alliance offered to dissolve a noncompete clause, which would allow Holtec to pursue other projects in Colorado and Utah, while continuing to pursue the site in New Mexico.
He said the company’s president, Krishna Singh, responded that he “would not put another penny” into New Mexico after heavy state opposition was voiced and the project delayed.
The Alliance’s board voted unanimously to accept the letter and termination of the project.
“He is just so frustrated with the constant roadblocks from the state of New Mexico,” Heaton said of Singh. “They just said they’re through. They want to cancel it.”
Supreme Court favors nuclear storage
The company appeared ready to build the facility which would hold up to 100,000 metric tons of the refuse after a U.S. Supreme Court verdict in June reinstated a federal license to build and operate the site.
Justices ruled the project’s opponents who initially challenged the license for the site had no legal standing to enter the licensing process in the first place.
That left Holtec and its supporters claiming victory and expecting the project to move forward, after more than a decade of debate, public hearings, and negotiations between the company and the Alliance.
But Senate Bill 53, passed by state lawmakers in 2023 barred any state agency from issuing permits Holtec would need to operate the site, a problem noted in Holtec’s letter along with the overall “political climate” in New Mexico.
“Unfortunately, the passage of state legislation that effectively prohibits the construction of the (consolidated interim storage facility), combined with the continued public opposition expressed by New Mexico’s current administration, has made the project impossible in the near future,” read the letter signed by William F. Gill, Holtec vice president and senior counsel.
During the Wednesday meeting, Heaton made a motion for the Alliance to accept the July 28 letter from Holtec canceling the land sale and a revenue sharing agreement. The motion was supported by a unanimous vote.
Other nuclear options considered
Heaton said the site could still be used for a nuclear project developed by a different company to either store or repurpose the spent fuel, but that such a move would require a new license application process.
“Any other entity that would want to create an interim storage facility at the site would need to go through the (Nuclear Regulatory Commission). It (the license) is not assignable,” Heaton said.
Hobbs Mayor Sam Cobb said that if Holtec officially terminates its role in the project, the Alliance must seek another company to build and bring the facility into service.
He argued that the commission, the U.S. government’s main approval arm for nuclear facilities, already approved the project federally, meaning it could be viable with another willing participant.
“I think it’s incumbent on us to explain any possible forward movement at the site which the (Nuclear Regulatory Commission) has deemed suitable,” he said. “The nuclear industry is resurging and it’s going to keep expanding.”
But Heaton countered that the project as approved involved “proprietary” technology owned by Holtec, meaning a new company would need to pay Holtec for its use or seek approval for a new design.
He said Holtec has built but not operated storage facilities in other areas and could be open to doing so for a new operator of the facility with new federal approval.
“They will still have to go through the process,” Heaton said. “That is the big barrier.”
He did say Wisconsin-based Shine Technologies might be ideal for a different project at the site in lieu of Holtec’s participation.
In February, Shine Technologies announced it was selected by the U.S. Department of Energy to receive funding through its Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy program to aid in developing technology to reprocess spent nuclear fuel.
That could involve the Alliance’s site, Heaton said. He said the fuel rods initially planned to be stored at Holtec’s facility could instead be reprocessed at the location, potentially by Shine Technologies or a similar company.
“Reprocessing has much more economic benefit than storage,” Cobb said. “We probably need to put together a plan to make those presentations.”
Fracking’s Broken Promise to Pennsylvania
https://insideclimatenews.org/news/21092025/pennsylvania-gas-fracking-electric-bills/
Fracking’s Broken Promise to Pennsylvania
Fracking was supposed to lower Pennsylvanians’ electric bills. Instead, they’re higher than ever—and they’re about to get worse.
An aerial view shows a natural gas processing plant under construction in Pennsylvania’s Washington County on Oct. 26, 2017. Credit: Robert Nickelsberg/Getty Images
First in a series about rising electricity prices in Pennsylvania. Read the second story here.
In 2013, when the Appalachian fracking rush was still in its early days, then President Barack Obama extolled its benefits in his State of the Union address. Not only had natural gas already helped to lower America’s carbon emissions, it could protect Americans from the fluctuations of the global oil market, Obama said. And there was one more important benefit: “Nearly everyone’s energy bill is lower because of it.”
Obama’s words echoed fracking’s champions in politics, business and government, who boasted that natural gas would save Americans money—perhaps nowhere more fervently than in Pennsylvania, the epicenter of the boom.
“Having that kind of a resource and that kind of production of energy right in our own backyard does help to keep the price of natural gas down for customers and the price of electricity down too,” the former chairman of the Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission, Terry Fitzpatrick, told television viewers in 2011. “So it’s very important to the people of Pennsylvania.”
But the savings Obama and others touted were short-lived for many Pennsylvanians, followed by punishing increases that are on track to balloon even further as forecasts for demand skyrocket in the age of AI. The result is a growing energy affordability crisis, a nightmare collision of higher utility bills, climate change and shrinking federal aid.
After state Republicans fielded “distressed calls from Pennsylvanians asking for an inquiry into rising energy prices,” the Pennsylvania House Republican Policy Committee held a hearing in 2023 to learn more about the reasons for a “dramatic increase in energy costs for residents and businesses.”
“With our immense resources, and our status as a net-energy exporter, one would think the People of PA would receive lower energy prices,” the committee wrote. “But this is not the case.”
David Callahan, then the president of the Marcellus Shale Coalition, an industry trade group for companies fracking in the Marcellus formation, said natural gas was “a solution to poverty” that is “most beneficial to lower income individuals and communities of color.” He testified that the state Department of Environmental Protection was to blame for rising prices because permitting delays held up fracking projects.
That argument didn’t address a fundamental contradiction: If Pennsylvania is producing so much more gas, why are prices going up? Why aren’t its residents benefiting more from the resource beneath their feet?
An aerial view of a fracking pad in Westmoreland County, Pa. Credit: Ted Auch/FracTracker Alliance
Impossible Choices
Another nuclear zombie to restart
- Google and NextEra Energy will collaborate to restart the 600-MW Duane Arnold Energy Center in Iowa as part of a larger partnership aimed at accelerating nuclear deployment across the U.S., the two companies said Monday.
- On Friday, Santee Cooper revealed it has signed a letter of intent regarding the potential sale of two unfinished reactors at the abandoned V.C. Summer project in South Carolina to Brookfield Asset Management. The 2.2-GW project was mothballed in 2017 following delays and cost overruns.
- The reexamination of retired or canceled nuclear projects comes as the U.S. is desperate for power resources to support artificial intelligence and other demand centers. New resources may have some market advantages over existing generators, and the recent deals are a “positive” for the sector, according to equity analysts at Jefferies.
Monday, October 27, 2025
Holtec says it was an accident
'It was an accident' Holtec says after worker falls into reactor cavity at Palisades
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Thursday, October 16, 2025
WSJ: The Frothiest AI Bubble Is in Energy Stocks
The Frothiest AI Bubble Is in Energy Stocks
Story by Jinjoo Lee • 3 min read
Sam Altman, CEO of OpenAI, has backed zero-revenue energy company Oklo.© Kyle Grillot/Bloomberg
Forget about the froth in tech valuations. The real excess might be building up in energy stocks.
For all the fears about stretched technology shares, many of those companies are hugely profitable ones that will keep chugging along even if the artificial-intelligence boom doesn’t have legs. Not so in the energy sector. A group of non-revenue-generating energy companies have collectively ballooned in value to more than $45 billion in hopes that tech companies will one day pay for their yet-to-be-built power.
The biggest of these is the OpenAI CEO Sam Altman-backed nuclear startup Oklo, whose shares have risen about eightfold year to date. The company now has a market cap of roughly $26 billion, making it the biggest U.S.-incorporated public company that generated no revenue in the past 12 months, according to data from S&P Global Market Intelligence.
Oklo is developing small modular nuclear reactors that use a non-water coolant—liquid metal sodium—and an enriched type of uranium fuel that is in limited supply. It doesn’t yet have a license from the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission or binding contracts with power purchasers. Wall Street analysts don’t expect the company to generate substantial revenue until 2028.
Another zero-revenue company is Fermi, which was valued at roughly $19 billion upon its public debut earlier this month. Only two other no-revenue companies had larger market caps than Fermi on their first day of trading after an IPO, adjusted for inflation, according to Jay Ritter, finance professor at the University of Florida. These are EV-maker Rivian, which went public in 2021, and Corvis, an optical network equipment maker that went public during the dot-com bubble.
The company is backed by former energy secretary Rick Perry and helmed by Toby Neugebauer, the former chief executive of the failed anti-woke bank startup GloriFi. It has plans to build out 11 gigawatts worth of power for data centers, roughly the amount of capacity in New Mexico. Though its shares haven’t sustained their initial pop after listing, the company still commands a market capitalization of over $17 billion. That isn’t too far from the valuation of Talen Energy, a company that already owns an operating power fleet of about 11GW.
Fermi plans to meet that 11GW target using natural gas, nuclear, solar and battery power. It has a way to go: So far, it has secured natural-gas equipment that would cover just 5% of its total capacity goal. The company hasn’t lined up any binding customer contracts.
Companies developing even smaller “micro-modular” nuclear reactors are also commanding hefty market caps despite their lack of revenue. Shares of Nano Nuclear Energy, which made its debut on the public markets last year, have more than doubled so far this year. The company is valued at more than $2 billion. Terra Innovatum, which went public last week through a SPAC merger, is valued at over $1 billion.
Chain Reaction
Others swept up in the AI excitement generate revenue but aren’t expected to turn a profit for many years. Such companies include nuclear small modular reactors company NuScale Power, which earns some engineering and licensing fees for an SMR project in Romania. Its shares have surged 155% so far this year. Hydrogen fuel-cell company Plug Power’s shares, which had been in the gutter for many years, surged 90% this year to $4.8 billion on AI excitement. Neither company is expected to turn a profit until 2030, according to Wall Street analysts polled by FactSet.
One reason investors are piling into more speculative energy companies could be because profit-generating ones already command lofty multiples. Fuel-cell company Bloom Energy’s shares have rallied more than 400% year to date and are now valued at 133 times forward earnings. The company added about $5.4 billion in market cap on Monday after Brookfield Asset Management said it would invest up to $5 billion to deploy Bloom’s technology. Nuclear-fuel company Centrus Energy is valued at 99 times forward earnings.
Arguably, more commercial interest might be just what was needed to help expensive or unproven technologies take off. But based on the track record of zero or minimal revenue EV startups that went public in 2020, (remember Nikola, Fisker and Lordstown?), it is likely that many such companies will fizzle rather than pop.
If the AI bubble ever deflates, these energy companies with no revenue have the farthest to fall and little in the way of a cushion.