HOLTEC REQUESTS NRC APPROVE SALE OF PILGRIM SITE BY END OF 2019
Seeks to Complete Decommissioning Decades Earlier
On November 16, 2018, Entergy
Corporation and Holtec International, through their affiliates, asked the U.S.
Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) to approve the sale of the Pilgrim Nuclear
Power Station to Holtec after shutdown. According
to the associated press release, doing so would allow Holtec to complete
decommissioning and site restoration decades sooner than if Entergy completed
decommissioning.
Overview
The companies jointly filed a License Transfer Application, requesting
approval for the transfer of the Pilgrim Nuclear Power Station, as well as its
Nuclear Decommissioning Trust Fund, to Holtec after the plant permanently shuts
down by June 1, 2019. They also made
detailed separate filings that lay out the process each company would use to
decommission the facility.
In order to facilitate a timely transaction closing by the end of 2019, the companies have asked the NRC to approve the application by May 31, 2019. According to the press release, doing so will benefit the community, employees and other interested constituents.
Holtec’s filings describe the plan of its subsidiary, Holtec Decommissioning International, to complete the dismantling, decontamination and remediation of Pilgrim to NRC standards within eight years of license transfer (i.e., by the end of 2027) assuming timely regulatory approvals. According to the press release, Holtec’s process will achieve site restoration decades sooner than if Entergy retained the plant while meeting all applicable local, state and federal regulations.
Holtec estimates total costs for decommissioning Pilgrim at $1.13 billion. As of October 31, 2018, the balance in Pilgrim’s Decommissioning Trust Fund was $1.05 billion.
Holtec has contracted with Comprehensive Decommissioning International, LLC (CDI) to perform the decommissioning, including demolition and site cleanup. CDI is a joint venture company of Holtec International and SNC-Lavalin. According to the press release, “The decommissioning experience held by Holtec and SNC-Lavalin gives CDI more than half a century of managing complex projects in both the commercial and government nuclear sectors worldwide.”
Project Highlights
The completion of decommissioning will result in the release of all portions of
the site from the current NRC license, with the exception of the Independent
Spent Fuel Storage Installation (ISFSI) – the area where spent nuclear fuel is
stored in dry casks until the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) transfers the
spent fuel offsite.
As part of its plan, Holtec expects to move all spent nuclear fuel into dry casks within three years following plant shutdown. Additionally, Holtec has a pending application with the NRC for a Consolidated Interim Storage Facility (CISF) in New Mexico, which could eventually store spent nuclear fuel from Pilgrim and other U.S. nuclear power plants.
Background
The Pilgrim Nuclear Power Station employs about 600 nuclear
professionals and generates 680 megawatts of virtually carbon-free electricity,
enough to power more than 600,000 homes. Pilgrim began generating electricity in
1972. Entergy purchased the plant in 1999 from Boston Edison.
Entergy Corporation is an integrated energy company engaged primarily in
electric power production and retail distribution
operations. Entergy owns and operates power plants with
approximately 30,000 megawatts of electric generating capacity, including
nearly 9,000 megawatts of nuclear power. Entergy delivers electricity to
2.9 million utility customers in Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi and Texas. Entergy has annual revenues of approximately
$11 billion and more than 13,000 employees.
Holtec International is a privately held energy technology company with
operation centers in Florida, New Jersey, Ohio and Pennsylvania in the United
States. Globally, Holtec International
has operation centers in Brazil, Dubai, India, South Africa, Spain, the United
Kingdom and Ukraine. Holtec’s principal
business concentration is in the nuclear power industry. Since the 1980s,
Holtec has been densifying wet storage in nuclear plants’ spent fuel pools,
which defers the need for and expense of alternative measures by as much as two
decades. Holtec has done this at over
110 reactor units in the United States and abroad. Holtec also
offers services regarding dry storage and transport of nuclear
fuel. Holtec is working to develop the world’s first below-ground CISF
in New Mexico and a 160-Megawatt walk away safe small modular
reactor, SMR-160. The SMR-160 is developed to bring cost competitive
carbon-free energy to all corners of the earth including water-challenged
regions. Holtec is also a major supplier of special-purpose pressure
vessels and critical-service heat exchange equipment such as air-cooled
condensers, steam generators, feedwater heaters and water-cooled
condensers. Virtually all products produced by Holtec are built in its
three large manufacturing plants in the United States and one in
India.
For additional information about the Pilgrim plant, please go to www.pilgrimpower.com. Additional information about Entergy is available at www.entergy.com. To learn more about Holtec International, please visit www.holtecinternational.com.