Current:Home > ScamsCalifornia lawmakers extend the life of the state's last nuclear power plant -Pinnacle Profit Strategies
California lawmakers extend the life of the state's last nuclear power plant
View
Date:2025-04-11 20:15:28
Citing searing summer temperatures and expected energy shortages, California lawmakers approved legislation aimed at extending the life of the state's last-operating nuclear power plant.
The Diablo Canyon plant - the state's largest single source of electricity - had been slated to shutter by 2025. The last-minute proposal passed by the state legislature early Thursday could keep it open five years longer, in part by giving the plant's owner, Pacific Gas and Electric (PG&E), a $1.4 billion forgivable loan.
California, like other U.S. states and countries, has been struggling to reduce its climate-warming emissions while adapting to a rapidly warming world. Record-breaking heat waves have stressed the state's increasingly carbon-free electrical grid in recent years, triggering rolling blackouts as recently as 2020. Grid operators, fearing a similar crash, issued a statewide alert to conserve energy last month.
The state has set the goal of getting 100 percent of its electricity from clean and renewable sources by 2045. Advocates for Diablo Canyon claim that target will be difficult to achieve without the 2,250 megawatt nuclear power plant. Diablo Canyon generated nearly 9 percent of the state's electricity last year and roughly 15 percent of the state's clean energy production.
"Maintaining operations at Diablo Canyon will keep our power on while preventing millions of tons of carbon from being released into the atmosphere," said Isabelle Boemeke of the group Save Clean Energy. "This is a true win-win for the people of California and our planet."
Nuclear power has seen a resurgence in recent years as the climate crisis has worsened and governments increase efforts to cut climate-warming emissions. The Biden administration launched a $6 billion effort earlier this year aimed at keeping the country's aging nuclear plants running.
"Have no doubt, President Biden is serious about doing everything possible to get the U.S. to be powered by clean energy,"Assistant Secretary for Nuclear Energy Kathryn Huff told attendees at a nuclear energy assembly in Washington, D.C., earlier this summer. "Nuclear energy is really essential to this," she said.
Roughly one-fifth of the country's electricity comes from nuclear power plants. That's as much as all other clean energy sources combined. But nuclear power isn't without its warts.
Despite decades of debate and billions of dollars spent, the U.S. still does not have a permanent storage site for its growing amount of nuclear waste. Diablo Canyon, located on California's Central Coast, sits near several seismic fault lines, inspiring long-held fears of a nuclear disaster similar to the kind experienced in Fukushima, Japan in 2011.
PG&E has long maintained that Diablo Canyon is safe from tsunamis, earthquakes and flooding. But concerns remain.
Juliet Christian-Smith, a regional director at the Union of Concerned Scientists estimates an earthquake-induced accident could cause more than $100 billion in damages and 10,000 cancer deaths.
"The bill ignores the plant's environmental impacts and vulnerability to earthquakes," she said. "Safety cannot take a back seat in our quest to keep the lights on and reduce global warming emissions."
The bill now heads to Governor Newsom's desk where he's expected to sign it.
veryGood! (4)
Related
- Trump issues order to ban transgender troops from serving openly in the military
- Video shows flash mob steal $12,000 worth of goods from Nike store in LA
- How to check if your eye drops are safe amid flurry of product recalls
- Albuquerque police cadet and husband are dead in suspected domestic violence incident, police say
- Retirement planning: 3 crucial moves everyone should make before 2025
- Police: Kentucky bank shooter wrote in journal about ease of buying assault weapon before killings
- Pfizer's stock price is at a three-year low. Is it time to buy?
- Wilcox Ice Cream recalls all flavors due to possible listeria contamination
- Sonya Massey's father decries possible release of former deputy charged with her death
- Here's what will cost you more — and less — for the big Thanksgiving feast
Ranking
- Rylee Arnold Shares a Long
- How Travis Kelce Really Feels About His Nonsense Tweets Resurfacing on Social Media
- Ethics probe into North Carolina justice’s comments continues after federal court refuses to halt it
- 2 killed, 5 injured in Philadelphia shooting, I-95 reopened after being closed
- Travis Hunter, the 2
- Why is Thanksgiving on the fourth Thursday of November? It wasn't always this way.
- 2 charged with operating sex ring that catered to wealthy clients will remain behind bars for now
- Why Twilight's Kellan Lutz Thinks Robert Pattinson Will Be the Best Dad
Recommendation
Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
Matt Rife responds to domestic violence backlash from Netflix special with disability joke
'Really good chance' Andrei Vasilevskiy could return on Lightning's road trip
Ex-New York corrections officer gets over 2 years in prison for smuggling contraband into Rikers Island
The Daily Money: Spending more on holiday travel?
As some stores shrink windows for sending back items, these retailers have the best returns policies
Haitian police say member of a gang accused of kidnapping Americans has been extradited to the US
Travis Kelce Thanks Taylor Swift and Her Fans for Helping His and Jason Kelce's Song Reach No. 1