January 08, 2024
By Mike Jaffe
Only a nuclear
reactor can make Pueblo “whole” after Xcel Energy closes last
coal-fired plant, local group says
After a 10-month study, a
community-based committee says the only energy technology that can
make up for lost jobs, taxes and economic activity is an advanced
nuclear power plant
Xcel Energy’s Comanche Generating Station, shown
here in a March 7, 2020, photo, is the largest power plant in
Colorado. The steam-driven, coal-fueled plant, located in Pueblo,
generates 1,410 megawatts of power.
(Mike Sweeney, Special to The Colorado Sun)
PUEBLO — The
only way Pueblo can be “made whole” after the closure of Xcel Energy’s
massive, coal-fired Comanche Station is for the utility to replace it
with an advanced nuclear power plant, according to a community-based
energy committee.
“Comanche has been an economic generator for this community for a long
time,” Frances Koncilja, co-chair of the committee, said Friday at a
press conference. “The closure is going to have a big economic
impact.”
The Pueblo Innovative Energy Committee was formed 10 months ago, with
support from Xcel Energy, to look at ways to offset the losses in tax
base, jobs and economic activity the 2031 closure of the Comanche 3
unit will bring.
With the shutdown of the first two Comanche units, in 2022 and 2025,
tax payments to Pueblo County will have dropped by 21% and when the
third unit is shuttered in 2031 tax payments will drop another 69% to
$7.1 million.
Xcel Energy has committed to paying $15.9 million annually in lieu of
lost taxes through 2040. This “transitional period,” the committee
said in its report, “should not be wasted.”
The committee looked at a variety of energy technologies — such as compressed
air energy storage, flow
batteries and solar — and concluded in its report that
from the standpoint of jobs and taxes the only comparable replacement
was a modular nuclear plant.
“The only way we don’t feel pain is a nuke,” said Jerry Bellah, a
committee member and the vice president for the International
Brotherhood of Electrical Workers District 8. The committee was
composed of prominent business, labor, education and civic leaders.
The recommendation, however, drew immediate criticism from
environmental and clean energy advocates.
“A small handful of people are misleading Pueblo officials into
pushing for an untested and outrageously expensive new nuclear
reactor,” Noah Rott, a spokesman for the Sierra Club, said in an
email. “Xcel has already said that an advanced nuclear reactor cannot
be built in time to replace Comanche 3 — which must close by 2031 — if
it could be built at all.”
Ken Danti, chairman of the City of Pueblo Energy Commission, a group
formed by the mayor to move the municipality to 100% renewable power
by 2025, said that the energy committee looking for Comanche 3
alternatives is “placing all its eggs in one basket.”
“The technology isn’t going to be available before 2040 and a lot
could change before then — new innovations, new technology,” Danti
said.
Robert Kenney, president of Xcel Energy’s Colorado subsidiary,
welcomed the report and praised the committee, but stopped short of
endorsing the idea of a nuclear reactor in Pueblo.
The utility must file an electric resource plan every four years with
the Colorado Public Utilities Commission showing how much electricity
it needs and how it will supply it. There is an open bidding process
to meet those supplies.
Kenney said in future years Xcel Energy may be open to a nuclear plant
depending on its competitiveness. “We will see what technology bidders
bring forward,” he said.
Nuclear generation in use in Minnesota is not what
Pueblo is talking about
The technology the Pueblo committee is recommending is for a small
modular nuclear reactor or SMR. The reactors use
prefabricated components and are built in segments, each one for a set
number of megawatts.
By using manufactured components and relying on a modular design the
goal is for the facilities to be easier and less expensive to
construct.
They are also smaller, fewer than 300 megawatts of generating
capacity. By way of comparison, Xcel Energy’s traditional, boiling-water
reactor in Monticello, Minnesota, is 671 megawatts.
There are no operating SMRs in the U.S. There are SMRs
operating in Russia and China. Others are under construction or
seeking permitting in five countries, according to the International
Atomic Energy Agency.
The U.S. Department of Energy is promoting
the technology saying that it has a smaller footprint
making siting easier, requires less capital investment and has better
security safeguards.
More than $1 billion in private investment and DOE funds have flowed
into the sector, according to SMR Start, an industry trade group.
Companies such as GE
Hitachi and Rolls-Royce are
developing reactors.
Nevertheless, critics point to the experience of Portland,
Oregon-based NuScale Power Corp., which in February 2023, was the
first company to receive the go-ahead from the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory
Commission to build an SMR.
NuScale Power, a subsidiary of Fluor Corp., was going to build a
462-MW reactor at the Idaho National Laboratory and supply two dozen
members of the Utah
Associated Municipal Power Systems with electricity, but the Utah
utilities pulled out after the price of the reactor jumped 75% to $9.1
billion, and the estimated price of power rose more than 50% to $89 a
megawatt-hour,
In November 2023, NuScale
terminated the project. Higher interest rates and inflation
leading to a rising cost of raw material, such as cement and steel,
led to the rise in the project’s price tag, the company said.
An analysis by
the Natural Resources Defense Council said that the $89 megawatt-hour
power cost was based on the project receiving a $1.4 billion DOE
subsidy. Without the federal aid the price per megawatt-hour was $100
— or four times the cost of wind or solar.
“Arguments in favor of SMRs are based on many questions as yet
unanswered with data from real-world experience with this technology,”
the NRDC issue paper said.
What Comanche Station looks like in the financial
ledgers
Based on the Pueblo committee’s calculations it will be difficult to
find a single energy project other than an SMR that will fill the void
left by the Comanche Station, especially unit 3.
Comanche 3 has 77 employees, but according to a study done by Colorado
State University – Pueblo, the unit provides indirect employment to
161 and induced employment to 173.
So, when direct employment, jobs associated with servicing the plant
from vendors and jobs at local businesses depending on money being
spent by workers, Comanche 3 is responsible for 411 jobs – with the
high-paying Xcel Energy jobs a driver.
“The jobs at Comanche 3 are valuable to the community,” the IBEW’s
Bellah said. “They pay their way.”
Xcel Energy is partnering with Form Energy, a
maker of massive battery arrays, for a renewable energy storage
project at the Comanche Generating Station in Pueblo. This rendering
shows a larger Form storage project,
but the layout in Pueblo will be similar.
(Rendering courtesy of Form Energy Inc.)
In 2021, the Comanche Station generated $31 million in taxes, with
Xcel Energy paying $25 million and the two minor owners of the power
plant — CORE
Electric Cooperative and Holy Cross Energy — responsible for the
other $6 million.
Comanche 3 accounts for $15.9 million of Xcel Energy’s tax bill, and
that is the portion the utility has committed to paying until 2040.
“Relying on those continued payments in lieu of the $15.9 million in
taxes without a plan as to how to replace those taxes is reckless,”
the report said, adding that CORE and Holy Cross have not indicated
whether they will continue their payments.
The committee analysis said that an SMR could provide 200 to 300 jobs,
with salaries ranging from $60,000 to $200,000 and annual property
taxes of $95 million.
A 500-MW solar facility, in comparison, would provide five to 10 jobs,
with salaries ranging from $40,000 to $80,000, and property tax
revenues of $1.69 million a year. A facility burning hydrogen as a
primary fuel would create 20 to 30 jobs, with salaries of $80,000 to
$120,000, and taxes of $1.73 million.
“The only thing that is going to make Pueblo whole after Comanche 3 is
advanced nuclear,” said Koncilja, who previously served on the state’s
Public Utilities Commission, which regulates Xcel in Colorado..
That conclusion is based on the idea that one single project must
replace Comanche 3, Danti, chairman of the city energy committee said.
“There is a better way to generate property taxes,” he said. “Going
after multiple manufacturing projects would do.”
And that, Danti said, is something the county and city can do now and
not have to wait a decade while the SMR technology is being perfected.
“We don’t know if the PUC would even approve something like this,” he
said.
Corrections:
This story was
updated at 2:05 p.m. on Jan. 10, 2024, to correct the description of
Xcel Energy's nuclear reactor in Monticello, Minnesota. It uses
boiling water to generate electricity.
Type of Story: News
Based on facts, either observed and verified directly by the
reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources.
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