Nuclear Power Plant Construction License Application Making Progress in Maryland
It has been darned hot on the East Coast, and the electric companies have been asking their customers to conserve power whenever possible, especially in the heat of the day. Each day this week one of the topics of conversation in my carpool has been the oppressive heat and poor air quality.
The power conservation warnings and the “Code Red” air quality alerts made me think about last week’s announcement by Unistar Nuclear, a partnership between Constellation Energy, Areva, Bechtel, and EDF, that they had successfully filed their combined Construction and Operating License (COL) application for a third unit at Calvert Cliffs.
The plant is not exactly in my backyard, but it is only about an hour’s drive south of my home. Though watching and waiting for the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) to issue a new nuclear plant license to allow the beginning of construction can be a bit like watching grass grow, the decision to “docket” the application indicates that real progress continues.
If you want to read an article that provides an indication of how the idea of the plant plays to local politicians I recommend a visit to a Washington Post article titled Coalition Formed to Advocate For New Power Plants, Lines.
The Chesapeake Bay area is a world class treasure, but among its many environmental challenges is that it receives a large dose of noxious pollutants from the large coal fired power plants on its shores and tributaries. Those plants provide a major portion of the electricity supplies in Maryland, the District of Columbia, and Virginia. The area is densely populated and continues to grow. Even if residents begin to use less energy per person, the increased population will require increased electrical power source.
If that power is supplied by coal, the air quality will continue to deteriorate. Without massive subsidies, solar electricity is a non starter according to Solar power and ‘green mortgages’ If it is supplied by wind turbines, it will disappear on the days when we need it the most. As a long-time Bay sailor, I agree with those who call it “The Dead Sea” during the summer months. If you have never experienced a series of days on the East Coast with a stationary “Bermuda High” off the coast, consider yourself lucky to have avoided the muggy, hazy, desperate-for-a-breeze weather that is only made bearable by air-conditioning or a swimming pool.
Of course, there is always the option of long transmission lines that would allow the Mid-Atlantic region to import electricity from coal burned somewhere else or the possibility of increasing the flow of Liquified Natural Gas (LNG) from distant lands to the Cove Point, Maryland LNG terminal.
As a ratepayer in Maryland who plans to remain in the state for a long time, neither of those solutions is quite as appealing to me as a well-operated, 1600 MWe, emission-free, new nuclear power plant located just a few miles away in a place that is already the hub of a number of expandable transmission corridors.
Photo credit: NukeWorker.com with permission
Disclosure: A small portion of my modest portfolio is in Constellation Energy since it is one of the companies that is actively pursuing new nuclear power plant construction and operation.



Two issues that have confounded and stalled our energy in the USA:
1. Moratorium on oil drilling, exploration and refining. Controlled by congress and is still stalled, BY LAW.
Idiots and politicians, same thing.
2. Moratorium on Nuclear Power. The only sane country in the world is France. They build standardized nuclear power plants, run by the military and is considered a premium job in France. They recycle and refine the waste products and burn them again. The resulting nuclear ash is nothing like the first generation ash with long half life radiation. No mind, because with vitrification (encasing in glass spheres), packing in stainless steel, concreted and stainless containers, this waste is not an issue and can be buried for thousands of years without an issue.
Nuclear power is the safest and cleanest form of energy on the planet. We have enough uranium to keep us supplied far beyond where our current political parties are dead.
With nuclear, there is the source for a hydrogen based energy system with clean electrolysis. There is no issue of any pollutant other than Oxygen. (I’m sure that some nut-case enviro-greeny will figure that electrolysis will over stimulate the air with O2 and declare it as a pollutant. Congress will surely follow.
Politicians and public opinion have massive power when our leadership in industry and government cannot make a case for nuclear power or oil production as a carryover.
With the current players, it is hopeless.
Larry Brunetti
Eagle, Idaho
tuku@tuku.com