PG&E's Future : NPR: Critics say management failures by PG&E, the bankrupt investor-owned utility, have worsened the California wildfire threat. Now some lawmakers want the company broken up or made a public utility.
Governor Newsom
Outlines State Efforts to Fight Wildfires, Protect Vulnerable
Californians and Ensure That Going Forward, All Californians Have Safe,
Affordable, Reliable and Clean Power
Published:
SACRAMENTO – Governor Gavin Newsom today redoubled his call for
fundamental change to PG&E and laid out a path forward to ensure the
overly broad application of Public Safety Power Shutoffs (PSPS) will
never happen again.
After spending eight days on the road talking to Californians during
the blackouts and wildfires and deploying state resources to help those
impacted, the Governor outlined the state’s efforts to fight wildfires,
protect vulnerable Californians and ensure that going forward,
Californians have safe, affordable, reliable, and clean power.
In a Medium post and
in taking questions at the Capitol from media, the Governor laid out
the steps the parties in the PG&E bankruptcy must take to ensure
safety investments and fundamental transformations can be made before
the next fire season. His office also released a roadmap of how a transformed PG&E should operate.
To help the state game out every option and be prepared to intervene,
the Governor is tapping his Cabinet Secretary Ana Matosantos to serve
as Energy Czar along a with a dedicated team of advisors. Matosantos
will continue to serve as Cabinet Secretary and play a leadership role
in the budget process.
The Governor’s Medium post reads in full below: This week, Californians stepped up and met the moment. In the
face of fires and unprecedented blackouts, our state banded together –
everyday Californians, local leaders, private businesses, philanthropy,
unions and state government – to make sure that no Californian was left
behind. California’s incredible firefighting and emergency response
personnel showed why our state is world-class when it comes to wildfire
preparation and firefighting expertise. Faced with historic winds and
extreme fire danger, CAL FIRE quickly extinguished more than 2,000
wildfires this week and contained a number of fast-moving blazes, like
the Kincade and Tick fires, without widespread loss of life. The latest
predictive technologies, prepositioned fire crews, new equipment,
expedited vegetation management, and increased staffing all worked to
keep Californians safe and minimize property damage. With our wildfire
mitigation efforts that stopped wildfires before they started, and this
immediate response to quickly put out the fires, thus far California has
experienced a fire season that is below the average in the last five
years in the number and severity of wildfires and the resulting damage. While this week showed how California is leading the world in
wildfire prevention and response, PG&E presented the opposite
portrait. Long and widespread blackouts highlighted their culture of
ineptitude – a behemoth that was slow to act and resistant to change. For decades, PG&E failed to prioritize public safety. Their
lack of safety investments left PG&E – and nearly half of
Californians – with an antiquated electrical system that is vulnerable
to weather events and not at all prepared for the more extreme weather
associated with the climate change that has been predicted for the past
several decades and is now here. This outdated infrastructure, lack of
preparation and a failure to lead and be accountable to their customers
and communities led PG&E to today’s overreliance on, and botched
implementation of power shutoffs – failing customers and the state.
Millions of Californians lost power for days at a time. Far too many
households and businesses were without power for seven days straight. This cannot – and will not – be the new normal. California
demands better. PG&E customers deserve a utility that leads the
nation – just like our state’s fire and emergency response personnel.
California utilities must reflect our values by prioritizing public
safety, affordability, renewable energy innovation, and climate change
adaptation. Some of California’s utilities are leading the way. However,
PG&E must fundamentally change – starting with a total
transformation of its culture and governance. Most importantly, those
changes must begin now, ahead of next year’s fire season. The major wildfire safety bill that I signed into law earlier
this year – AB 1054 – requires PG&E to make these fundamental
changes. It forces PG&E to make massive investments in safety, ties
executive compensation to the utility’s safety record and demands that
every year the utility earn a safety certification from the state. And
earlier this week, a newly energized California Public Utilities
Commission took strong action by opening a major investigation into
PG&E’s use of Public Safety Power Shutoffs (PSPS), and vowing a
total reform of the rules and regulations governing power shutoffs. But achieving a permanently transformed utility requires PG&E
to exit bankruptcy as quickly as possible. The State of California is
developing the blueprint for a transformed utility. Consistent with AB
1054, PG&E must incorporate that blueprint into its bankruptcy plan.
To expedite the exit from bankruptcy and facilitate implementation of
this transformation, I am convening current executives and shareholders
of PG&E, wildfire victims, and PG&E’s other creditors in
Sacramento next week in an effort to accelerate a consensual resolution
to the bankruptcy cases that creates a new entity – one that better
reflects our California values and will advance massive safety
transformations beginning before next fire season. Let me be clear – the creativity that so many people desire for
PG&E to be a new company that prioritizes safety, understands the
communities it serves, and is responsive to the needs of customers can
only happen if we first get out of bankruptcy court. It is my hope that the stakeholders in PG&E will put
parochial interests aside and reach a negotiated resolution so that we
can create this new company and forever put the old PG&E behind us. If the parties fail to reach an agreement quickly to begin this
process of transformation, the state will not hesitate to step in and
restructure the utility. To that end, I have tapped my Cabinet Secretary, Ana Matosantos,
to serve as the state’s Energy Czar to lead a dedicated energy team with
Ann Patterson, our lead attorney on the matter, Alice Reynolds, our
lead energy and environmental policy expert, and Rachel Wagoner, our
senior legislative strategist, spearheading the Administration’s energy
efforts. They will work closely with other senior leadership in my
office, outside legal, financial and energy advisors, and leadership
across state government to game out every option and prepare a plan
should the state need to intervene. All options are on the table. Californians deserve world-class utilities that prioritize safety
and affordability, entities that will lead the world in green
innovation and zero-carbon growth. That will continue to be the priority
of our state and my Administration.
I-TEAM: History of PG&E's power problems | abc7news.com: The latest rounds of planned power outages come after decades of problems for Pacific Gas and Electric. The utility has struggled since state lawmakers deregulated the energy producers in 1996.
How PG&E fell 10 years behind San Diego on wildfire safety: One utility in California is burying lines, putting up high-tech systems to cut power to fewer people, and dramatically improving fire safety. Why hasn't PG&E followed suit?
How PG&E fell 10 years behind San Diego on wildfire safety: One utility in California is burying lines, putting up high-tech systems to cut power to fewer people, and dramatically improving fire safety. Why hasn't PG&E followed suit?
The NRA will probe
F. Daiichi work management due to two incidents classified as safety violations…
Tepco will invest about $2 billion toward the restart of Tokai Unit #2.
California Must Take Back Its Power—Literally | Common Dreams Views: We Californians are watching our state burn. Our houses are literally on fire, and yet we should not be surprised. Our current “new normal” is an utterly predictable consequence of global warming. While the climate crisis fueling our wildfires is the direct result of the fossil fuel industry’s profit-driven corporate greed, another culprit, one that has for years valued
How Going Woke Makes Companies Quickly Go Broke: When company leaders would rather spend resources on liberal causes than provide the best products to customers, run away fast and take your money with you.
PG&E Knew for Years Its Lines Could Spark Wildfires, and Didn’t Fix Them - WSJ: Documents obtained by The Wall Street Journal show that the utility has long been aware that parts of its 18,500-mile transmission system were dangerously outdated. That includes towers on the line that sparked last year’s deadly Camp Fire.
How Going Woke Makes Companies Quickly Go Broke: When company leaders would rather spend resources on liberal causes than provide the best products to customers, run away fast and take your money with you.
To
see the full speaker list, agenda, attendee list and key conference themes for the International SMR & Advanced Reactor Summit 2020 (April 8-9, Atlanta, GA), make sure to download the brand-new brochure here.
Over
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Dominique Miniere, Nuclear President, OPG
Marilyn Kray, VP Nuclear Technology & Strategy, Exelon
Frank Saunders, President Ontario Nuclear Innovation Institute, Bruce Power
Tom Mundy, Chief Commercial Officer NuScale
Ramzi
Jammal, Chief Regulatory Operations Officer, CNSC
Richard Deakin, Head of Innovation – Advanced Nuclear Technologies, UK Government - Department of Business, Energy & Industrial Strategy
Diane Cameron, Director of Nuclear, Canadian Government – Natural Resource Canada
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World’s Largest Nuclear Power Producer Confronts Serial Glitches: (Bloomberg) -- Want the lowdown on European markets? In your inbox before the open, every day. Sign up here.On the shores of the English channel in Normandy, engineers are struggling to fix eight faulty welds at a plant that’s supposed to showcase France’s savoir faire in nuclear power.As they consider
Indian Nuclear Plant Was Affected by Malware - Bloomberg: Nuclear Power Corp. of India Ltd., the country’s monopoly atomic power producer, said malware infected a computer network used for administrative functions at one of its nuclear installations, while leaving core plant systems unaffected.
Impacts of Santa Ana and Diablo winds on California fire risk: California's damaging Santa Ana and Diablo wind events - occurring in otherwise sunny skies might be hard to comprehend for people living in other parts of the world where such winds usually accompany a storm with rain or snow.
DOE readies multibillion-dollar AI push | Science: The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) is planning a major initiative to use artificial intelligence (AI) to speed up scientific discoveries. At a meeting here last week, DOE officials said they will likely ask Congress for between $3 billion and $4 billion over 10 years, roughly the amount the agency is spending to build next-generation “exascale” supercomputers.
“That's a good starting point,” says Earl Joseph, CEO of Hyperion Research, a high-performance computing analysis firm in St. Paul that tracks AI research funding. He notes, though, that DOE's planned spending is modest compared with the feverish investment in AI by China and industry.
But DOE has a big asset: torrents of data. The agency funds atom smashers, surveys of the universe, and the sequencing of thousands of genomes. “We generate almost unimaginable amounts of data, petabytes per day,” Chris Fall, who directs DOE's Office of Science, said at the last of four town halls DOE has held here to build support for the AI initiative. Algorithms trained with these data could help discover new materials or spot signs of new physics. “It's going to impact everything we do,” Fall says.
Russia's newest nuclear submarine test fires ballistic missile: Moscow (AFP) Oct 30, 2019 - Russia's newest nuclear submarine on Wednesday successfully test fired a Bulava intercontinental ballistic missile from the White Sea off Russia's northwestern coast, the defence ministry said.
Russian accident-tolerant fuel completes first tests - World Nuclear News: TVEL, the nuclear fuel manufacturer subsidiary of Russia's Rosatom, has completed the first phase of testing its accident-tolerant fuel in a reactor, at the State Research Institute of Atomic Reactors in Dimitrovgrad.
Demolition of Oak Ridge centrifuge facility begins - World Nuclear News: Demolition of the most visible remaining structures at Oak Ridge's East Tennessee Technology Park - the Centrifuge Complex - has started as employees aim to finish major cleanup work at the site by the end of 2020.
Rosenergoatom said the Generation III+ VVER-1200 unit received final approval for operation from national nuclear regulator Rostechnadzor on 31 October.
Two experimental ATF fuel assemblies were loaded into the reactor in January. Each fuel assembly contained 24 fuel elements with four different combinations of cladding and fuel matrix materials.
After the first irradiation cycle, both assemblies were removed from the reactor. Tvel said preliminary examination of the assemblies, performed onsite by a team from the Bochvar Institute for Inorganic Materials, a Moscow-based Tvel research facility, revealed neither changes in the fuel rods’ geometry, nor damage to the cladding.
Second Novovoronezh II unit enters commercial operation - World Nuclear News: Unit 2 of the Novovoronezh II nuclear power plant in southwest Russia has entered commercial operation, 30 days ahead of schedule, state nuclear corporation Rosatom announced today. Commissioning of the VVER-1200 brings the number of power reactors in commercial operation in Russia to 36.
UK turns to satellites to support nuclear cleanup work - World Nuclear News: The UK Space Agency and Nuclear Decommissioning Agency have issued a challenge to smaller businesses and university start-ups to research and develop satellite-enabled technologies that could help support the country's nuclear decommissioning efforts.
US Air Force Research Laboratory developing space solar power beaming: Kirtland AFB NM (SPX) Oct 28, 2019 -
The Air Force Research Laboratory, or AFRL, is developing space-based solar power transmission capability using high-efficiency solar cells to collect the sun's energy, convert it to radio frequency
Evolution of Nuclear Power Continues with Operation of First EPR: Unit 1 at the Taishan Nuclear Power Plant in China is the site of a milestone for nuclear technology. It also illustrates cooperation between France and China, using the lessons learned from earlier projects
Cover Focus: Nuclear Top Plants Extended Power Uprate Is a Winning Strategy for Nuclear Plant
The Browns Ferry Nuclear Plant is a POWER Top Plant award
winner, thanks to a successful extended power uprate project that added
465 MW of generation capacity to the facility’s three units. The
project is part of the Tennessee Valley Authority’s plan for ensuring
it can meet the power needs of the region for years to come. Evolutionary Triumph: China’s First ACPR1000
China has been building nuclear plants for only 30 years,
but it has so far installed a stunning 47 reactors. Last year, it
began commercial operation of its first indigenously designed
third-generation reactor—the ACPR1000 at Yangjiang 5. The project, which
also adopts a novel “nuclear-grade” distributed control system, was
completed within just 58 months. Evolution of Nuclear Power Continues with Operation of First EPR
Commercial operation of Unit 1 at the Taishan nuclear
plant in China was a milestone for nuclear technology, as the unit is
the world’s first operational Evolutionary Power Reactor, or EPR, to
enter service. The EPR is a third-generation pressurized water reactor
design. Energy Storage Stranded Nuclear Asset Provides Opportunity for Seawater Pumped Storage
The closure of a nuclear power plant or other power
generation site does not mean the facility has no future. Experts who
have studied the closed San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station in
California think the location, with its existing infrastructure and
geography, could be ideal for development of seawater pumped storage
technology. Waste Heat to Power Innovative Technology Captures Energy from Waste Heat
A novel new engineering design allows power generation
from low-temperature heat sources ranging from 170F to 270F. This
waste-heat-to-power technology converts various sources of energy into
power including waste heat generated by small geothermal, biomass,
concentrated solar, and process heat sources, as well as from internal
combustion engine cooling water. Wind Power Is Small Beautiful? Maybe Not When It Comes to Wind Power
Bigger is proving better for wind power, as larger
turbines and blades, along with larger installation sites, are helping
move the technology forward and provide for ever-increasing power
generation capacity. Managing Risk When the Storm Strikes, Will You Be Ready?
Every power plant and industrial facility needs a
disaster preparedness plan. Implementing best practices for storm
preparation helps ensure downtime and outages are kept to a minimum.
Utilizing a service company to help with developing a plan can reduce
the cost of storm preparation and restoration. Heat Recovery Steam Generators Operating HRSGs with Elevated Feedwater pH
Combined cycle power plant owners and operators need to
study several factors as they work to optimize the chemistry program
and operation of each unit. The cycle-chemistry guidelines for these
plants have evolved, and today’s maintenance levels for pH may cause
problems with the operation of condensate polishers. A one-size-fits-all
approach does not work. Biomass Energy Dependable Renewable Energy for the Power Grid
A South Korean power plant that can burn multiple fuels,
including several types of biomass, is a model for a new kind of
renewable energy, much different than solar or wind. At the plant’s
heart is an advanced circulating fluidized bed boiler.
Evolutionary Triumph: China’s First ACPR1000
China has been building nuclear plants for only 30 years,
but it has so far installed a stunning 47 reactors. Last year, it
began commercial operation of its first indigenously designed
third-generation reactor—the ACPR1000 at Yangjiang 5. The project, which
also adopts a novel “nuclear-grade” distributed control system, was
completed within just 58 months. https://view.imirus.com/427/document/13242/page/31
Extended Power Uprate Is a Winning Strategy for Nuclear Plant
The Browns Ferry Nuclear Plant is a POWER Top Plant award
winner, thanks to a successful extended power uprate project that added
465 MW of generation capacity to the facility’s three units. The
project is part of the Tennessee Valley Authority’s plan for ensuring
it can meet the power needs of the region for years to come.
How The Future Of California’s Power Grid Hangs On The Constitutionality Of ‘Inverse Condemnation’: PG&E, in court documents filed last week in its ongoing bankruptcy case, made clear its position that until courts and lawmakers change what the utility sees as unconstitutional state laws, northern Californians will have little choice but to suffer more forced power outages when the wind gusts.
What Do Scholars Say About the Impeachment Power? - Lawfare: Then-Rep. Gerald Ford once defined an impeachable offense as “whatever a majority of the House of Representatives considers it to be at a given moment in history.” But legal scholars have concluded that impeachment is considerably more law-governed, and constrained, than Ford suggested. They draw on clues from the Founders, the text and structure of the Constitution, and the
50 Years Ago: The Day Nixon Routed the Establishment – Patrick J. Buchanan – Official Website: Ten days after the "silent majority" speech, Vice President Spiro Agnew, in Des Moines, launched an assault on the unholy matrimony of media power and liberal bias. Agnew questioned whether the networks near-monopoly over the primary source of information for the American people should be permanently ceded to so tiny and unrepresentative an elite. [Note:…
Novel NRL instrument enhances ability to measure nuclear materials: Researchers with the U.S. Naval Research Laboratory (NRL) designed and built an instrument called NAUTILUS to provide new measurement capabilities unlike those available at other laboratories to measure nuclear, cosmo/geo-chemical, and electronic materials.
Work under the contract will include condition assessments of systems, structures and components for the Candu unit, which began commercial operation in December 1996.
Demolition of Oak Ridge centrifuge facility begins - World Nuclear News: Demolition of the most visible remaining structures at Oak Ridge's East Tennessee Technology Park - the Centrifuge Complex - has started as employees aim to finish major cleanup work at the site by the end of 2020.
Way clear for geological disposal planning, British regulators say - World Nuclear News: British regulators see no fundamental issues that would prevent Radioactive Waste Management from developing "a fully scoped safety case in the future" for a geological disposal facility, but have identified a number of areas that RWM will need to improve when it does.
Russian accident-tolerant fuel completes first tests - World Nuclear News: TVEL, the nuclear fuel manufacturer subsidiary of Russia's Rosatom, has completed the first phase of testing its accident-tolerant fuel in a reactor, at the State Research Institute of Atomic Reactors in Dimitrovgrad.
UN agency submits evaluation of PHL’s readiness for nuclear: THE International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) on Wednesday transmitted to the Department of Energy (DoE) its 19-point Integrated Nuclear Infrastructure Review (INIR) on the Philippines’ preparedness for nuclear energy.
Shutting Down All Of Japan’s Nuclear Plants After Fukushima Was A Bad Idea: By now, more Japanese have died from the closing of Japan's nuclear power plants following the 2011 Tohoku quake than from the tsunami and the earthquake combined, which was about 20,000 people. But no one has died from any radiation released by the crippled reactors.
FPL gets NRC go-ahead on potential 80-year lifespan for Turkey Point nuclear units in Florida | Power Engineering: Several U.S. nuclear plants could be octogenarians by the time they are done. Florida Power & Light has cleared a significant federal regulatory hurdle in its quest to re-license the Turkey Point nuclear plant for another 20 years beyond the current operational timeline. The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission environmental review found that “the adverse environmental...
Yes, PG&E Sucks—But Can You Sue Them? | Law.com: While I admit no electricity is preferable to catastrophic wildfires that kill dozens of people and destroy billions of dollars in property surely the choice shouldn’t be eitheror.
Belgium closes down its nuclear plants by 2025: By the end of 2025, the Belgian nuclear plants will have to be closed down, but it is unclear how possible power shortages can be avoided. The government
APNewsBreak: State investigating MIT lab radiation complaint: BOSTON (AP) — Massachusetts public health officials are looking into allegations that workers at a Massachusetts Institute of Technology laboratory may have been exposed to radioactive...
Philippines progresses with plan for nuclear energy - World Nuclear News: The Philippines' Department of Energy today received the International Atomic Energy Agency's report on Phase 1 of its Integrated Nuclear Infrastructure Review mission. Energy Secretary Alfonso Cusi said the country will now prepare a plan of action for the introduction of nuclear energy.
Russia plans next two nuclear icebreakers - World Nuclear News: Atomenergomash, the engineering division of Russia’s Rosatom, has signed a contract for the supply of RITM-200 reactor units for two more nuclear icebreakers in Project 22220. The contract was signed between Atomenergomash subsidiary OKBM Afrikantov and the Baltic Shipyard.
Asia sees energy supply and climate benefits of nuclear, report shows - World Nuclear News: Nuclear energy in Asia is meeting the growing demand for electricity, whilst helping to tackle air pollution and climate change, according to a new report by World Nuclear Association. The World Nuclear Performance Report 2019 Asia Edition shows that last year nuclear generation in the region increased by 12% and avoided the emission of over 500 million tonnes of CO2 that would have otherwise been produced by coal-fired plants.