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Groups Call Nuke Plant Bailout A 'Tax' On Ratepayers

Office of N.Y. Gov. Andrew Cuomo
In August Governor Andrew Cuomo announces that Exelon Generation has agreed to assume ownership and management of the James A. FitzPatrick nuclear power plant in Scriba, N.Y..

Some environmental groups say Governor Cuomo’s administration should reconsider an $8 billion bailout of three upstate nuclear power plants. They say the cost will be passed on to ratepayers.

Governor Cuomo plans to transition 50 percent of the state’s power to renewable energy by 2030. Part of the program includes a multi-billion dollar subsidy to Exelon, the company that now runs two upstate nuclear power plants, Nine Mile Point in Oswego and Ginna near Rochester, and is hoping to run a third plant, FitzPatrick, also in Oswego.   

But some environmental groups, including the New York Public Interest Research Group, say the ratepayers, who were not consulted about the deal, will be stuck with the bill in the form of increased utility rates. NYPIRG’s Blair Horner says the deal will result in  $2.3 billion in increased payments for residential utility customers, and even  more for businesses, according to a study by the Public Utility Law Project in a state that already has the among the highest utility rates in the nation.

“These charges are essentially a tax to keep aging nuclear power plants on line,” Horner said.

Jessica Azulay, with the Alliance for a Green Economy, says the nuclear plants are “dirty,” “dangerous” and at more than 40-years-old, are “antiquated” and should be shuttered. The groups say there are better ways to get to the goal of 50percent clean energy over the next decade and a half, like focusing more heavily on solar and wind power.

The groups wrote a letter to Governor Cuomo, and were immediately criticized by his spokesman, Rich Azzopardi. He says nuclear energy is cleaner than the fossil fuel alternatives that would be needed to replace the power form the plants during the transition.

“It’s an absurd stance,” Azzopardi said. “It would repeal a national model to fight climate change and replace it with more expensive, dirty fuel and fracked gas.” He says the groups’ ideas would send electric bills “skyrocketing” and put hundreds of New Yorkers out of work.

And Azzopardi points to another studythat shows a $4 billion benefit to New Yorkers from the governor’s plan, when carbon reduction, power supply cost savings and property taxes are taken into account.  

Eric Weltman, with Food and Water Watch, disagrees. “This is a national model for how not to do it,” he countered.

Governor Cuomo talked about the importance of temporarily relying on what he calls “carbon free” nuclear power during an appearance at the FitzPatrick nuclear plant in Oswego in August. He also says premature closure would cost good-paying jobs. “There’d be 615 lost jobs, average wage $120,000,” Cuomo said on August 9.

The governor has a different attitude about nuclear power plants downstate, where he is trying to close the Indian Point nuclear power plant near his home in Westchester. Over the weekend, Cuomo and state environmental officials toured the Hudson River in a motorboat after a report that some oil might have spilled out of the plant. He did not tour a similar spill at the FitzPatrick plant in Lake Ontario last summer.  

Cuomo addressed that seeming contradiction in a briefing at Indian Point on Sunday, saying the difference is that the Westchester nuclear power plant is near one of the world’s largest population centers, and logistically, there can be no safe way to evacuate people if something major goes wrong.

“This plant is the closest plant on the globe to this dense a population,” Cuomo said on October 2.

Not all environmental groups are against Cuomo’s energy plan, which includes the continued use of nuclear power through the late 2020s. The Sierra Club and the Natural Resource Defense Council have endorsed the plan.

The groups against the nuclear power plant bailout have begun a grassroots movement that they liken to the successful anti-fracking efforts that led to a state ban on the natural gas extraction process. And they say they plan to be in full force at the Public Service Commission’s meeting in November, when it will consider whether to enact the plan.

Karen has covered state government and politics for New York State Public Radio, a network of 10 New York and Connecticut stations, since 1990. She is also a regular contributor to the statewide public television program about New York State government, New York Now. She appears on the reporter’s roundtable segment, and interviews newsmakers.