Article 1JB7S U.S. Nuclear Power Plant Closures [Slideshow]

U.S. Nuclear Power Plant Closures [Slideshow]

by
Aaron Larson
from POWER Magazine on (#1JB7S)

According to the U.S. Energy Information Administration, nuclear power has accounted for about 20% of electricity generated in the U.S. each year since 1990. In fact, the U.S. nuclear fleet out produced France-the country with the next highest nuclear generation-by more than two to one in 2012. Russia was a distant third, generating less than a quarter of the U.S. total.

But times of late have been tough for U.S. nuclear generators. Natural gas prices are at historic lows, leading to cheap gas-fueled generation. Even with climate concerns and a worldwide movement to reduce CO2 emissions, the market is not rewarding nuclear power's zero-carbon generation. In competitive markets, nuclear power is not competitive.

Since October 2012, U.S. nuclear plant owners have closed or announced closure of 14 reactor units at 11 plant sites. Many of the units had already gone through the lengthy process of obtaining 20-year license extensions, which would have allowed them to operate until the 2030s in some cases.

The following slideshow offers a look at the facilities and information about the plants.

stock_kewaunee-npp_dominion.jpgstock_crystal-river-npp_progress-energy.stock_san-onofre-npp_sce.jpgstock_vermont-yankee-npp_entergy.jpgstock_fort-calhoun-npp_oppd.jpgstock_fitzpatrick-npp_entergy.jpgstock_clinton-npp_exelon.jpgstock_pilgrim-npp_entergy.jpgstock_quad-cities-npp_exelon.jpgstock_oyster-creek-npp_exelon.jpgstock_diablo-canyon-npp_pge.jpg<>Located in San Luis Obispo County, Calif., opponents of the 2,240-MW Diablo Canyon facility have long pointed to seismic concerns as a reason that the plant should be closed. Pacific Gas and Electric (PG&E) announced on June 21, 2016, that it would not seek license extensions for the units, which entered commercial operations May 7, 1985, and March 13, 1986, respectively, and would instead focus on increasing renewable generation. As such, Unit 1 will retire when its current license expires on Nov. 2, 2024, with Unit 2 following on Aug. 26, 2025. Courtesy: PG&E

It's not all gloomy for the U.S. nuclear fleet, however. Five units are in various states of construction. Watts Bar Unit 2 is nearing commercial operation after a long and storied construction that spanned decades. V.C. Summer Units 2 and 3 in South Carolina and Plant Vogtle Units 3 and 4 in Georgia are also expected to join the U.S. fleet by the end of 2020, but even with these additions the total nuclear capacity in the U.S. will decline.

For more on nuclear plant closures, see the following:

-Aaron Larson, associate editor (@AaronL_Power, @POWERmagazine)

The post U.S. Nuclear Power Plant Closures [Slideshow] appeared first on POWER Magazine.

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