Environment & Energy
Related: About this forumNuclear Power Plants: Freeloading in Florida
The rest of the article shows how a "reform" the public is demanding was completely subverted by the nuclear industry.
Published: Tuesday, May 14, 2013 at 12:01 a.m.
Last Modified: Monday, May 13, 2013 at 11:40 p.m.
Lawmakers have reminded us once again who their masters are when they're in session in Tallahassee and it's not the people of Florida. No, the Florida Legislature serves big business first, and nothing makes the point stronger than the House and Senate votes in the final week of this year's legislative session on what was touted as a reform of the state's nuclear Cost Recovery Act.
The Recovery Act was created by the Legislature in 2006 to help big power companies, particularly Duke Power (formerly Progress Energy) and Florida Power & Light, pay for the design and construction of costly nuclear power plants. The idea was to allow the companies to expand Florida's power-generating capacity on a pay-as-you-go basis, theoretically saving consumers in the long run.
But the law was and is flawed. It does not require the companies to actually build the plants for which they are collecting fees. Most offensive of all, it does not require the companies to reimburse customers if those plants are never built.
So far, Duke Energy and FP&L have collected some $1.5 billion, with most of Duke's portion presumably going toward the construction of two proposed Levy County nuclear power plants. Yet, increasingly it appears Duke has no immediate plans to move forward with the project. Slowed population growth and falling natural gas prices have made the urgency for more nuclear power wane.
MINIMAL OVERSIGHT
The law that ...
http://www.theledger.com/article/20130514/EDIT01/130519735/1002/SPORTS?Title=Nuclear-Power-Plants-Freeloading-in-Florida
cprise
(8,445 posts)...the corps will not be able to resist the temptation of stiffing Floridians.
madokie
(51,076 posts)When we were fighting against PSO from putting one down wind from here where I live back in the '70s they lied to us like there was no tomorrow. Nuclear power plants are not safe in that when and if they go wrong they can go wrong in a big way. Matters not why or how as once its out of control stopping it can be very difficult as what is happening in Japan now and what happened in the ukraine is proof of. I'm not sure that Pripyat will ever be safe for people to return too. As it is they'll have to tear the city down even if it became safe because of the deterioration thats happened there since. With the earths population growing as it is the last thing we need is to make any of it less inhabitable. In the distant future they might figure fusion out but in the meantime it won't help us in the plight we're in now. I'm not even convinced that fusion will ever be an option. If thorium was it would already be in use so that one is out too, as it seems that is. For the short term renewables, solar, wind and geothermal is where we need to concentrate our efforts thats for sure.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chernobyl_disaster