Nuke Plant Facing Shutdown to Protect Fish
Published on by Water Network Research, Official research team of The Water Network in Government
Possible Nuclear PlantShutdownIn Order To Protect Fish
New York State is prepared to close 40 years of intermittent and costly legal wrangling over the annual destruction of billions of fish by the twin Indian Point nuclear power plants in the productive Hudson River estuary if the plant agrees to shut down during peak spawning and hatching seasons for the river's major fish populations.
But such a deal, if ratified, would mean the plants could be shut from 13 weeks to 32 weeks, an enforced idleness which could doom the already stressed financial position of Indian Point, which is having difficulty securing steady customers for its electricity due to increased competition, particularly from lower cost wind and natural gas. The maximum shut down, if required, would close the plant from February 15 through September 15, and would cut Indian Point's revenues by about $9.5 billion over 20 years, or 57% of their revenue, according to an analysis prepared by Entergy, the plants' owner, for ongoing hearings before a panel of Administrative Law Judges at the Department of Environmental Conservation. The panel will hold a public hearing on the proposed forced outages July 22 in Cortlandt Manor, about two miles from the power plant site.
"Permanent outages are a good idea," said Manna Jo Greene, an Ulster County Commissioner and environment director for Clearwater. "But they should start January 1 and end December 31. The state has had the ability to enforce permanent outages for a very long time. We didn't have to lose the shad fishery on the Hudson River. With this proposal, they are closing the barn door after the horses are out.
"After working on Hudson River issues for 40 years we are finding that 10 of the 13 signature Hudson River fish species are still in decline. We have long had shad festivals on the river, but for the last few years, the festivals have all been shad-less. The commercial fishermen can no longer catch Hudson River shad. It's a sad state of affairs that should never have been allowed to get this far. Closing Indian Point will be a huge benefit to the Hudson River ecology."
Indian Point 2 was built and operated by Consolidated Edison, which has some 4 million residential and 250,000 business customers; and Indian point 3 was built and operated by the New York Power Authority which provides electricity for government entities, including LaGuardia and Westchester Airports, the subways, Metro North, streetlights, schools, public housing, and municipal buildings. Prior to deregulation in 1999, the plants' combined 2,000 Megawatts of electricity was controlled by its respective owners.
Now, however, ConEd contracts for only 560 MW and NYPA uses no electricity from the nuclear installation in Buchanan, about 25 miles north of Manhattan. Entergy is forced to sell the remaining 75% of its electricity in the daily auction, and not always at favorable prices. That 560 MW represents only 4% of the roughly 13,000 MW used in the New York City/Westchester County service area of the state's electric grid on a typical summer day. Proponents of Indian Point contend that its electricity is still going to the same users. But NYPA's government customers operate with annual budgets requiring the type of stability only guaranteed by long-term contracts.
According to the NY Independent System Operator, which runs the state grid and the electricity auction markets, Indian Point 2 could close with no impact at all on regional electrical needs or system reliability. If Indian Point 3 also closes a shortfall of some 750 megawatts could develop in the ensuing decade unless it is made up with any combination of new generation, improved transmission, and electricity conservation.
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