Tuesday, February 5, 2013

Reuters: Regulatory News: UPDATE 1-Duke to retire Florida Crystal River nuclear plant

Reuters: Regulatory News
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UPDATE 1-Duke to retire Florida Crystal River nuclear plant
Feb 5th 2013, 14:01

Tue Feb 5, 2013 9:57am EST

  * Power companies to retire two U.S. reactors in 2013      * Crystal River coal plants to remain in service      * Duke may build new gas plant in Florida          By Scott DiSavino      Feb 5 (Reuters) - Duke Energy Corp, the biggest  power company in the United States, said Tuesday its Progress  Energy Florida utility will retire the Crystal River nuclear  plant in Florida.      The plant has already been safely shut down and offline  since late 2009 due to damage done to the reactor's containment  structure during a power upgrade and the replacement of the  unit's steam generators.      There are currently 104 reactors licensed to operate in the  United States. The reactors have a total capacity of about  101,000 megawatts (MW) and generate about 20 percent of the  nation's power.      In addition to Crystal River Unit 3, Dominion Resource Inc   plans to retire the Kewaunee reactor in Wisconsin over the  next few months due primarily to weak natural gas prices from  record shale production that has reduced power prices to decades  low levels, making the continued operation of Kewaunee  uneconomic.       See Factbox on retired nuclear reactors       Duke said in a release it is reviewing alternatives to  replace the power produced by Crystal River, including the  potential construction of a new natural gas-fired plant.      Duke said the four coal plants at Crystal River with a  capacity of 2,291-MW will remain in service. The reactor had a  capacity of 860 MW.      "We believe the decision to retire the nuclear plant is in  the best overall interests of our customers, investors, the  state of Florida and our company," Jim Rogers, CEO of Duke  Energy said in a release.      "This has been an arduous process of modeling, engineering,  analysis and evaluation over many months. The decision was very  difficult, but it is the right choice," Rogers said.      Crystal River 3 began operating in 1977 and was shut in the  autumn of 2009 for refueling and replacement of its steam  generators when a delamination, or crack, occurred in the outer  layer of the containment building's concrete wall.      The process of repairing the damage and restoring the unit  to service resulted in additional delaminations in other  sections of the containment structure in 2011, the company said.      During the ensuing months, Progress Energy, which owned the  reactor, and Duke Energy merged in July 2012, evaluated the  ability to successfully repair the unit, the risks associated  with any repair and the repair scope as well as the likely costs  and schedule, Duke said.            TOO EXPENSIVE TO FIX      In late 2012, a report confirmed that repairing the plant  was a viable option but that the nature and potential scope of  repairs brought increased risks that could raise the cost  dramatically and extend the schedule. That report found the  repair bill could exceed $3 billion and take eight years.         In addition, the company and its insurance carrier, Nuclear  Electric Insurance Limited (NEIL), have reached a resolution of  the company's coverage claims through a mediation process. Under  the terms of the mediator's proposal, NEIL will pay an  additional $530 million.      Along with the $305 million NEIL has already paid, customers  will receive $835 million in insurance proceeds. This will be  the largest claim payout in the history of NEIL, Duke said.      "We believe accepting the mediator's proposal is in the  overall best interests of our customers and shareholders, and  the monies we receive will go directly to customers to reduce  their electric bills," Rogers said.      For the future, Duke expects to put the reactor into "a safe  storage configuration, requiring limited staffing to monitor  plant conditions, until the eventual dismantling and  decontamination activities occur, usually in 40 to 60 years."      To meet customer needs, Duke said Progress Energy Florida  will continue to serve customers reliably as it has through the  extended outage, in the coming years through a combination of  power generation, energy efficiency and purchasing electricity  in the market.            NEW GAS PLANT POSSIBLE      The company said it was evaluating the potential to build a  new gas plant that could come online as early as 2018, noting  there was no definite plan for new generating capacity at this  time.      The company did not mention in its release Tuesday the  proposed construction of a new nuclear plant in Levy County,  Florida, near the Crystal River plant.      In 2012 before the merger with Duke, Progress said it  delayed the proposed in service date for the Levy county nuclear  power plant to 2024 with a second unit following 18 months  later. The company also boosted the cost estimate for the  2,200-MW project to between $19 billion and $24 billion.         About 600 full-time employees work at the reactor. Many will  remain onsite to work through the closing and decommissioning of  the unit, Duke said, noting it will work with employees to help  as many as possible make the transition to positions in other  Duke organizations.  
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