My apologies for the lack of posts today, as I was down on Capitol Hill this morning for the press event announcing NRG's license application with NRC to build an additional two reactors at the site of the South Texas Project. For more details directly from NRG, click here.
I was at the event with my video camera, so I should have some footage to share later this afternoon. Congratulations to everyone at NRG and STP on taking an important first step -- one that hasn't been taken in the U.S. since 1978 -- on the road to building America's next new nuclear reactor.
UPDATE: Here's NRG Energy's President and CEO, David Crane, at the press conference:
I was at the event with my video camera, so I should have some footage to share later this afternoon. Congratulations to everyone at NRG and STP on taking an important first step -- one that hasn't been taken in the U.S. since 1978 -- on the road to building America's next new nuclear reactor.
UPDATE: Here's NRG Energy's President and CEO, David Crane, at the press conference:
UPDATE: And here's a clip of a statement from Senator Pete Domenici:
Comments
from Environment News Service covering the announcement:
"Nuclear power is an essential component of any comprehensive national energy plan," said United States Senator Mary Landrieu, a Louisiana Democrat. "According to the Nuclear Energy Institute, 35 new nuclear power plants are needed in the next 40 years to keep pace with our escalating energy demand. A new power plant in Texas will prove to help combat the impact of global climate change and allow America to continue on a path toward energy independence."
Mary Landrieu is on the Energy and Natural Resources committee.
I am just waiting to see how Toshiba goes about building the GE FDA version of the US ABWR.
Toshiba either needs GE-Hitachi to revise the design certification to include the features of the Toshiba version of the plant in Japan, or Toshiba needs to build the US version of the plant.
Either way, I am not sure how Toshiba can get around sending lots of money to GE-Hitachi.
If NRG plans to modify the design to match the Japan design, then that will delay construction waiting for new design approvals.
NRG would have been better off selecting Hitachi as the lead rather than Toshiba. They are trying to save a little here and there, but it will cost them in the end.