Duke Energy Suspends Effort to License North Carolina Nuclear Units:
Reuters, May 2, 2013
http://mobile.reuters.com/article/idUSL2N0DJ2QG20130502?irpc=932
Duke
Energy, the largest U.S. electric utility, says it has notified
regulators that it will drop plans to build two new nuclear reactors in
North Carolina due to slow growth in power demand. Progress Energy,
which Duke acquired last year, proposed building two AP1000 reactors at
the Harris nuclear plant site in Wake County, North Carolina, and
submitted an application in 2008 for a construction and operating
license from the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission. The company's
supply forecast indicates additional nuclear generation won't be needed
at Harris for at least 15 years. However, Duke said it will continue to
work to obtain NRC licenses for two new reactors in Levy County,
Florida, and another two reactors in Gaffney, South Carolina. Four new
reactors are currently under construction at two sites in the
southeastern United States: two at Scana Corp's Summer nuclear station
in South Carolina and two at Southern Co's Vogtle station in Georgia.
======================================
NRC Shoots Down Texas Nuclear Plant Expansion Citing Too Much Foreign Ownership:
Dallas News, by James Osborne, April 30, 2013
http://bizbeatblog.dallasnews.com/2013/04/nrc-shoots-down-texas-nuclear-plant-expansion.html and
San Antonio Express-News, by Nolan Hicks, April 30, 2013
http://nukefreetexas.org/2013/05/regulators-too-much-foreign-ownership-for-nuclear-expansionPlans
to build two new reactors at the South Texas Project nuclear facility
outside Bay City have hit a road block. The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory
Commission ruled that a partnership between NRG and Toshiba Corp.
through the holding company Nuclear Innovation North America violated a
U.S law prohibiting foreign control of nuclear power plants. The holding
company plans to appeal the ruling to the NRC’s Atomic Safety Licensing
Board, arguing that NRG controls 90 percent of the holding company, a
NRG spokesman said. NRG and Toshiba remain hopeful they can convince the
atomic safety board to overrule NRC staff. But they will likely face an
uphill climb. No date for a hearing has been set.
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