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FPL Faces Renewed Opposition to Higher Rates For Nukes Plant Construction Years in the Future

August 18, 2015 | FlaglerLive | 8 Comments

turkey point fpl
Turkey Point. (USGS)

Florida Power & Light received pushback Tuesday from South Florida officials and other critics as it requested $34.2 million from customers to continue planning a pair of nuclear reactors at its Turkey Point complex in Miami-Dade County.


The request, if approved by the Florida Public Service Commission in October, would place the cost for new nuclear power at 34 cents on a typical residential customer’s monthly bill in 2016.

Jessica Cano, an FPL lawyer, told the commission during the opening of what is expected to be two days of hearings in Tallahassee that the request for funding through the state’s nuclear-cost recovery law would allow the company to secure needed licenses and permits for the reactors.

“FPL has not begun pre-construction work. It intends to seek approval from this commission in 2016 to begin pre-construction work in 2017, upon receipt of its combined license,” Cano said.

FPL contends the proposal will further diversify the company’s fuel sources, reduce carbon dioxide and other emissions and increase the reliability of the overall system, which serves 4.8 million customers in Florida.

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The company has asserted that the reactors will save customers $12 billion over a projected 60-year life.

But critics, including Rep. Jose Javier Rodriguez, D-Miami, countered that the commission should reject the request because they don’t believe the project, even if eventually completed, is economically viable for ratepayers.

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Rodriguez also argued that FPL’s plan doesn’t adequately address storm surge and sea-level increases or the economic impact to South Florida’s drinking water supply.

“We’re talking about plans that have to account for a span of 70 years from now,” Rodriguez told the commission. “It is completely unrealistic to rely on one foot of sea-level rise adjustment that we’ll need to make at Turkey Point.”

The reactors, projected to eventually cost $13.7 billion to $20 billion, await approval of a combined operating license from the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.

The licenses are anticipated to be awarded in 2017. The reactors are projected to be completed by 2027 and 2028.

Patricia Ann Christensen, an attorney with the state Office of Public Counsel, which represents consumers, argued that an FPL feasibility study is flawed. She said, in part, it uses data that is six years old.

“The cost inputs being utilized by FPL need to be updated to use the best current information available for the feasibility analysis, especially before seeking commission approval to begin the pre-construction phase,” Christensen said.

Attorney Jon Moyle, representing the Florida Industrial Power Users Group, noted that a year ago FPL had projected the reactors would cost between $12.62 billion and $18.42 billion.

Moyle noted that his group of large electricity users supports reasonably priced nuclear energy but equated the increasing cost projections to a frog slowly cooking on a stove.

“If you look at the track record of the nuclear project from the beginning until now … it started out it was tepid. It’s getting turned up, getting turned up, it’s starting to get warm,” Moyle said. “We’re hoping that the commission will exercise its duties and responsibilities, as this conversation continues, as the heat continues, and make sure the ratepayers of Florida don’t get cooked.”

George Cavros, representing the Southern Alliance for Clean Energy, an environmental group, claimed the escalating costs would have kept the nuclear plans from advancing in a competitive market. And Cavros added that many of the company’s current customers won’t see the projected savings from the reactors.

“There are counties that Florida Power & Light serves within its service area where almost half the population is almost 45 years or older,” Cavros said. ”

Plans for the reactors have already drawn about $250 million in pre-construction charges through a controversial 2006 law that legislators modified, but kept alive, in 2013.

–Jim Turner, News Service of Florida

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Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Bob says

    August 18, 2015 at 9:23 pm

    I think I can afford 34 cents a month. Well worth it for clean power. We need more nuclear power, especially if the idiot in the White House shuts down coal fired power plants. And no, wind turbines won’t cut it.

  2. Anonymous says

    August 19, 2015 at 1:06 pm

    But wind turbines do cut THOUSANS of birds.

  3. Sherry E says

    August 19, 2015 at 3:32 pm

    SAY NO TO DANGEROUS HAZARDOUS NUCLEAR POWER!

    There is NOTHING clean about the tons of highly toxic radioactive waste created by nuclear power plants! Even the Italian crime syndicate has gotten involved. . . this from Wikipedia:

    The ‘Ndrangheta, a criminal organization from Calabria (Italy) has been involved in radioactive waste dumping since the 1980s. Ships with toxic and radioactive waste were sunk off the Italian coast. In addition, vessels were allegedly sent to Somalia and other developing countries with toxic waste, including radioactive waste cargoes, which were either sunk with the ship or buried on land. The introduction of more rigorous environmental legislation in the 1980s made illegal waste dumping a lucrative business for organized crime groups in Italy.[1]

    A 1995 parliamentary waste commission report spoke of the “possible existence of national and international trafficking in radioactive waste, managed by business and criminal lobbies, which are believed to operate also with the approval of institutional subjects belonging to countries and governments of the European Union and outside the EU.” Its conclusions noted “interferences and threats” against investigators, and were critical of ENEA, Italy’s state energy research agency, and their management of nuclear waste.[2]

  4. Sherry E says

    August 19, 2015 at 3:39 pm

    Just do even a tiny bit of research to find that hazardous radioactive materials are haphazardly contained and continuously dumped illegally all over the world. . . creating tremendous hazards to the humans, animals and plants on our planet by massively polluting our water, land and air.

  5. Bob says

    August 19, 2015 at 7:04 pm

    You’ll be the first to cry when your electric bill skyrockets or you don’t have electricity!

  6. Sherry E says

    August 20, 2015 at 3:58 pm

    NO. . . I’m one of the first people to support the truly clean, renewable energies of the future like Solar and Wind! This is NOT a question of nuclear or nothing!

  7. Bob says

    August 20, 2015 at 7:47 pm

    Well prepare to see nothing but wind turbines and solar panels everywhere. I prefer nice scenery.

  8. Sherry E says

    August 21, 2015 at 9:25 am

    And, “I” prefer NOT to live in a toxic waste dump!

    Solar panels should be placed on every Roof Top in our nation! NO Dangerous Toxic Nuclear Power Plants!!!

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