Would that it were true.  

This article uses every industry troupe in the book to defame environmentalists.  Unfortunately, telling the truth about nuclear power does not inspire doaners to open up their wallets.  Mostly they want to run the other way because it is so daunting a topic. Grassroots groups can only look bitterly at the hordes of nuclear lobbyists in DC supported by the industry and dream of hiring one to speak up for us in Congress.  

Holtec has an unsavory reputation even for the nuclear industry. The company  was convicted of bribery in New Jersey. The court records are open for all to see.  Their partner Lavin was so bad that they were banned from working on World Bank projects for 10 years.  
Holtec is advertising Centralized Interim Storage in NM to my community for the fuel rods from Indian Point even though CIS is against the Waste Storage Act. The title to this land is in dispute as the Navajo Nation claims jurisdiction and has vowed to fight any attempt to create a nuclear waste dump on their sacred land.  The Governor, other officials and community members are equally opposed and have vowed to fight this tooth and nail as Nevada did for Yucca Mt.

Every community that has dealt with Holtec has complained about shady practices in using the Decommissioning  Trust Fund Monies and their lack of transparency. Will there be enough money to finish the job or will the tax payers be left holding the bag?  The answer is far from clear.  What is clear is that our community needs help from NY State in the form of a Decommissioning Oversight Board so that we are not left to deal with this ruthless multinational corporation on our own.

There is no research  to suggest that the most toxic radioactive waste, used fuel rods, are more safely stored in one place.  Transportation of this hazardous waste is questionable  and reprocessing is neither environmentally or fiscally sound.  Reprocessing can reclaim only  33% of the plutonium in a rod while leaving an even bigger mess of radioactive daughter products.  Why would we need more plutonium as nuclear plants are phased out? Reprocessing is what happened in France at Sellafield and made the Irish Sea the most radiological contaminated body of water in the world. 

The fuel rods are ours to keep.  We used them and to try to dump our radioactive garbage on another community that does not want it is not a moral choice.

Fossil fuels and uranium must stay in the ground if we are to avoid catastrophic climate changes.  Renewables are here now and can carry us to a livable future for our grandkids.  Whether or not the wind blows or the sun shines renewables are the key to a carbon free future.  Electricity use is going down, efficiency is increasing and transmission is improving.  This is the way forward to a carbon free future.


Holtec advancing clean nuclear energy despite NJ politics

Six years ago the New Jersey Economic Development Authority granted Holtec International the second-largest tax break in state history to get it to relocate its headquarters to Camden.

The potential $260 million tax credit over 10 years was hailed for bringing high-tech, very-good-paying jobs to New Jersey’s neediest city.

It also positioned New Jersey to be a leader in advancing the nuclear industry toward its necessary contribution to meeting state and national goals of eliminating greenhouse gases contributing to global warming by mid-century.

And that’s what Holtec has done since. It moved its headquarters to Camden in 2017, earning its first $26 million tax credit. It developed, received approval for and started to execute a plan to close and remediate the Oyster Creek nuclear generating station in Lacey Township in a fraction of the time that had been expected.

Just before Christmas, Lacey Township accepted a settlement allowing Holtec to place at the former Oyster Creek plant 20 more casks for nuclear waste, secure steel and concrete storage containers of its own design. There were already 48 on the site. The casks and Holtec’s decommissioning plan already had been approved by the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, or NRC.

Earlier in the month, Holtec was selected to receive $116 million from the U.S. Department of Energy to design and build a small, modular nuclear reactor incapable of overheating. That would be inherently safer and an improvement on the industry’s already excellent safety record.

Also this month, Holtec applied to the NRC to transfer licenses for the Palisades Nuclear Plant in Covert, Michigan, to Holtec so it can shut down and start decommissioning the facility in spring 2022.

The NRC in November had approved the similar transfer of New York’s large Indian Point Energy Center to Holtec. Next year, when Indian Point’s third nuclear reactor shuts down, Holtec will begin decommissioning the plant and reclaiming the land for public use. It expects to do so in a quarter of the time previously estimated.

You’d think New Jersey politicians would celebrate having a cutting edge corporation helping tap the nuclear energy that is the only way the world can have the zero-emission baseline power needed to counter climate change. But environmental organizations have raised too much money by fear mongering nuclear power over the years, and are too vested in seeing taxpayer and ratepayer dollars go to their preferred non-nuclear energy companies.

The politics doesn’t work for Gov. Phil Murphy, and not only because environmental organizations are among his ardent supporters. Last year, when Murphy demonized tax incentives as a way to attack his political foes, Holtec was a prime target. South Jersey political boss George Norcross III is on the board of Holtec, as opposed to the North Jersey political bosses from whom Murphy bought the Democratic nomination that made him governor.

So Murphy’s EDA withheld Holtec’s next tax credit payment, on dubious grounds that aren’t applied to companies connected to his political bosses. This has forced Holtec to sue to get New Jersey to live up to its agreement that brought the company to Camden.

Even Lacey Township had to be sued just to keep cleaning up the former Oyster Creek. The township had tried to deny the additional waste storage casks, demanding a timeline for the waste’s removal to a more permanent site.

Permanent nuclear waste storage, of course, has been blocked by politics at the national level. Same small-minded, science-ignoring approach, but with higher stakes.

The Yucca Mountain permanent site would have been approved in Nevada years ago were it not blocked by former Senate Democratic Leader Harry Reid.

Holtec has an application before the NRC to develop a mid-term storage facility in New Mexico. This would be much more secure than leaving the waste scattered around the country at former nuclear generating stations.

This month Murphy decided incentives for corporations are now good, signing into law a new program to provide up to $14 billion in tax breaks over seven years.

Let Holtec’s experience be a warning to companies considering the bait politicians must offer to make the state look even tolerable to business. New Jersey not only has the worst business tax and regulatory climate in the nation, it’s also run by self-serving and unreliable politicians.

Source: https://pressofatlanticcity.com/opinion/editorial/holtec-advancing-clean-nuclear-energy-despite-nj-politics/article_dfa0ecd3-823a-583c-9bb0-f7b580e7694f.html