Calif. OKs Initiative That Would Shutter SONGS, Diablo Canyon Nuclear Plants

California's attorney general has announced that the man who led a successful drive to shut down the Rancho Seco nuclear plant in 1989 can begin gathering signatures for an initiative that would close all of the state's power reactors.

Diablo Canyon. Source: NRCOn Thursday, the attorney general's office announced that Ben Davis Jr. has until July 8 to gather 504,760 signatures to place the measure on the ballot. New nuclear plant construction is already prohibited under California law until the federal government approves a repository and/or reprocessing system for spent fuel. If enacted, the initiative would extend that moratorium to the state's four operational reactors at Diablo Canyon and San Onofre. As the Obama administration has halted work on a geologic waste repository in Nevada's Yucca Mountain, finalization of any alternative for spent-fuel disposal is likely decades off.

Southern California draws a substantial portion of its power from nuclear. Writing on the measure's potential economic effects, the attorney general's office said its passage would have "potentially major impacts on state and local finances in the near term in the form of decreased revenues and increased costs due to near-term disruptions in the state's electricity system and electricity price increases. The magnitude of these impacts would depend on the time to develop replacement power, the frequency and duration of rolling blackouts, and various related factors, such as electricity demand and weather conditions."

The initiative's proponents have called the state's analysis misleading.

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  • Anonymous
    Anonymous

    If California does this, then there ought to be a punitive premium on any power the state imports.

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous

    There will be a punitive premium and it will be paid by Californians as well as people in surrounding states that sell power into California.  Merchant plants bid on how much power they are willing to sell at what price.  Turn off a few megawatts and watch the bids go up.  (Didn't Enron do something like this a while back?) But hey, who really cares about Californians - only the super rich live in California. People to feel sorry for are the more common folk and businesses in Arizona, Nevada, and Oregon that will watch rates for power generated in their back yards go up as California agrees to buy power at almost any price.  The real winners will be Southeastern states when businesses decide California is too expensive a place to stay and look for a new place to set up shop.

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous

    they just want more people to not have jobs, by the thousands

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous

    Guess where pot is legal? Hint, what state wants to eliminate 5,000 mega-watts of green power?

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous

    I live in California and am not super rich by any standards.  Neither are my neighbors (have you ever been in Santa Maria?)  This is a ridiculous ploy by a rabid anti-nuke who wouldn't have to live with the consequences.