Michele Kearney's Nuclear Wire

Major Energy and Environmental News and Commentary affecting the Nuclear Industry.

Tuesday, July 16, 2019

Supporters of Nuclear Energy

Supporters of nuclear energy,

Ohio legislation supporting the state’s nuclear plants is in trouble. Success of the bill (HB 6) has big implications for both New York’s largest nuclear plant (Indian Point) and our own Diablo Canyon. Its passage is considered by many to be essential to the future of U.S. nuclear power.

That’s probably why natural gas interests have mounted the largest issue-related campaign in Ohio history to kill HB 6. With $millions spent on TV commercials, they intend to convince Ohio voters the plants are old, unnecessary, and would need to be “bailed out” - fossil-fuel-speak for allowing nuclear plants to compete on a level playing field. The bill is being debated right now in the Ohio Energy and Utilities Committee, and is scheduled to either be dropped, or sent to the Senate for confirmation tomorrow (Ohio Governor Mike DeWine supports it). The Ohio legislature adjourns for the summer Thursday, and if the bill hasn’t been passed Davis-Besse and Perry nuclear plants will close.

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ACTION ITEM: Please call the office of

1) The committee’s chairman, Senator Steve Wilson, and
2) Senator Larry Obhof, Speaker of the Senate

and let them know HB 6 is not only important for Ohio ratepayers (they will save money) but for New York, California, and other states with struggling nuclear plants. Even though we’re not constituents, a personal plea about what clean energy means to you, and to the environment, can make a difference.

Senator Steve Wilson
Senate Building
1 Capitol Square
1st Floor
Columbus, OH 43215
Hometown: Maineville
(614) 466-9737

Senator Larry Obhof
Statehouse
1 Capitol Square
2nd Floor
Columbus, OH 43215
Hometown: Medina
(614) 466-7505

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Carl Wurtz
Vice President
Californians for Green Nuclear Power

Zero Emission Credits (ZECs) Aren't "Bailouts." Zero emission credits for nuclear plants are being labeled "bailouts" in press reports - BS. They’re not a tax credit either, but a fee clean electricity plants are permitted to add to the wholesale cost of their electricity, as a reward, reflecting the benefit the public receives from clean air and preventing climate change. This avoided cost of carbon is based upon the EPA’s "social cost of carbon”, currently estimated at $42/ton of CO2 prevented. Most ZECs start out lower, then are increased annually.
ZECs Level the Playing Field. Ohio's proposed zero emission credit applies to both nuclear and solar energy on equal terms.
Double-Counting is Prohibited. With Renewable Energy Certificates (RECs), renewable sources currently receive twice as much credit as they're due by "double-counting" the value of their generation. It works like this: for each megawatthour (MWh) of energy coming from a solar/wind farm, operators are awarded a certificate by the state which can be sold to utilities to erase an equal part of their dirty generation to help meet their clean-energy quota. By transferring credit for their clean energy, utilities would logically assume responsibility for the cancelled emissions in return - but they don't. Customers are supposed to believe the emissions they've already created vanish into thin air.
Like a Carbon Tax, but Backwards. Instead of penalizing consumption of carbon, ZECs reward non-consumption by paying generators to not use dirty fossil fuels to generate electricity. Though it adds a minor cost to customers’ bills, studies show keeping nuclear plants plants open has saved hundreds of $millions more by preventing utilities from having to buy expensive gas-fired electricity, at market rates, to meet predictable baseload demand - something nuclear does better, and cheaper, than anything else.

The Davis-Besse nuclear plant. Photo credit: NRC/Wikipedia

OHIO

Battles erupt over new nuclear 'bailout' plan

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