Georgia Regulators Approve New Southern Co. Nuclear Reactors
17 Mars 2009 - 7:25PM
Dow Jones News
Georgia utility regulators on Tuesday approved Southern Co.'s
(SO) plan to build two reactors at the company's Alvin W. Vogtle
nuclear power plant.
The approval gives Southern Co. utility Georgia Power state
certification to build the reactors at the site near Augusta.
Georgia Power can now petition state regulators for permission to
recover costs associated with developing the reactors, said Bill
Edge, the Georgia Public Service Commission's chief information
officer.
The utility still needs federal approval before it can build the
reactors. In late March of 2008, Southern filed an application with
the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission for a combined construction
and operating license for the proposed reactors.
The NRC hasn't said when it will complete the review of
Southern's Vogtle application, but a preliminary schedule calls for
the commission to complete environmental reviews by early 2010.
Georgia Power has said the new units could enter service by 2016 or
2017. Southern hasn't provided cost estimates for the new reactors,
but other utilities have put the cost of building two new
1,000-megawatt Westinghouse AP1000 reactors - the same kind Georgia
Power plans to develop - at $12 billion to $14 billion.
Southern is one of several U.S. power companies seeking to
develop new nuclear plants. The companies have touted a nuclear
renaissance as a solution to concerns about U.S. dependence on
foreign oil. New reactors would also replace older coal- and
gas-fired power plants, reducing carbon dioxide emissions, nuclear
proponents have said.
Nuclear energy's detractors argue that taxpayers would be
burdened by the costs of multibillion-dollar reactor projects. And
the U.S. government has yet to endorse a plan for permanent storage
of nuclear waste.
Georgia regulators' decision follows the Florida Public Service
Commission's approval in October of plans by FPL Group Inc. (FPL)
and Progress Energy Inc. (PGN) to recover preliminary costs of new
nuclear development. In February, Scana Corp. (SCG) won approval
from South Carolina regulators to build two new reactors at the
V.C. Summer nuclear plant.
-By Christine Buurma, Dow Jones Newswires; 201-938-2061;
christine.buurma@dowjones.com