Nuclear Energy Industry Leaders Will Hold
Major Conference in Charlotte, N.C., May 21-23
WASHINGTON, D.C.—Hundreds of nuclear energy industry executives will convene May 21-23 in Charlotte, N.C., for business meetings and policy discussions associated with the Nuclear Energy Institute's major annual conference, the Nuclear Energy Assembly.
The
conference takes place with five new reactors under construction in the
Southeast, license extension applications for 15 operating reactors under
review by the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, and 65 reactors being built
worldwide. It also comes with Congress taking early steps to advance used
nuclear fuel management recommendations from the Blue Ribbon Commission on
America's Nuclear Future, and with the industry implementing a "flexible
and diverse" strategy to enhance the readiness of U.S. facilities to
safely respond to extreme events based on key lessons learned from the
Fukushima Daiichi accident.
NEA
will be held at The Westin Charlotte, 601 S. College St. Several leading U.S.
government officials will speak during the conference:
- U.S. Rep. G.K. Butterfield (D-NC)
- NRC Chairman Greg Jaczko
- North Carolina Gov. Bev Perdue
- Commodity Futures Trading Commissioner Scott O'Malia
Other
non-industry speakers include:
- Anthony Foxx, mayor of Charlotte
- Former White House Chief of Staff Erskine Bowles and former Wyoming Sen. Alan Simpson, co-chairs of the National Commission on Fiscal Responsibility and Reform
- Sir Ken Robinson
- Philip Jones, vice president, National Association of Regulatory Utility Commissioners
- Dr. Susan Winsor, president, Aiken Technical College in South Carolina
- Mark Mills, founder, Digital Power Group
- William Borchardt, NRC executive director for operations
- David Lochbaum, director, Union of Concerned Scientists
Industry
leaders who will participate include:
- William Johnson, chairman, president and chief executive officer, Progress Energy and chairman of the Nuclear Energy Institute
- Marvin Fertel, president and CEO, Nuclear Energy Institute
- Charles Pardee, chief operating officer, Exelon Generation Co.
- Dennis Koehl, senior vice president and chief nuclear officer, Excel Energy
- Caroline Reda, president and CEO, GE Hitachi Nuclear Energy
- Stephen Kuczynski, chairman, president and CEO, Southern Nuclear Operating Co.
- Stephen Byrne, COO and president, generation and transmission, South Carolina Electric & Gas Co.
- Clarence Ray Jr., CEO, Shaw Power Group
- Bob Willard, president and CEO, Institute of Nuclear Power Operations
- Steven Lau, first deputy general manager, Daya Bay Nuclear Power in China
- Anthony Pietrangelo, senior vice president and CNO, Nuclear Energy Institute
Nuclear
energy provides 20 percent of American electricity supplies, and 70 percent of
the electricity generated by low-carbon sources. U.S. nuclear facilities
produced nearly 800 billion kilowatt-hours of electricity in 2011, with an
industry-average production cost of about two cents per kilowatt-hour.
Credentialed
press is invited to attend the Nuclear Energy Assembly and Supplier Expo.
Please complete the press registration form and bring it to the on-site
registration desk on Level Two at The Westin. The NEA Press Room will be open
May 22 from 7:30 a.m.-5 p.m., and May 23 from 7:30 a.m.-noon. For questions
please contact, Steve Kerekes (sck@nei.org or
202.739.8073), or John Keeley (jmk@nei.org or
202.739.8020).
Those
who Tweet during the conference are asked to use the hashtag #NEA2012. For news
coverage visit our dedicated
NEA Web page.
During
the Fukushima Daiichi panel discussion Wednesday morning, Pietrangelo and his
fellow panelists will take questions submitted via email and Twitter.
Interested parties can submit their questions to questions@nei.org,
or simply publish their questions on Twitter with the conference's official
hashtag, #NEA2012.
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