Georgia’s public utility commission voted 5-0 on Thursday to continue construction on two half-finished nuclear reactors that will cost an estimated $25 billion, even though the project is now “more than $10 billion over budget and five years late.”
“Georgia Power should scrap this disaster immediately and instead transition away from dangerous nuclear and fossil fuel-based electric generation and toward a 100 percent clean energy economy.”
—Ted Terry, Sierra Club’s Georgia Chapter
Opponents of nuclear power were disappointed by the unanimous decision, which the Wall Street Journal notes was considered “a victory for Southern Co., whose subsidiary Georgia Power is the primary owner of the Alvin W. Vogtle Electric Generating Plant, which has two existing reactors.” The project has faced opposition from local residents as well as national groups that emphasize the long-term risks of nuclear power.
“Georgia Power should scrap this disaster immediately and instead transition away from dangerous nuclear and fossil fuel-based electric generation and toward a 100 percent clean energy economy that creates good jobs, protects our environment, and shields our communities from the gross financial risks associated with bad bets like Vogtle,” said Ted Terry, director of the Sierra Club’s Georgia Chapter, after the vote.
“Georgia Power’s profits have soared because they’ve been allowed to pick the pockets of families, schools and churches for a boondoggle that even the [public utility commission’s] staff has called too uneconomic to continue—yet today commissioners chose not to stop it,” Terry added. “The commission has failed Georgia’s hard-working families and businesses today by choosing to be lapdogs for Georgia Power instead of watchdogs for the people of Georgia.”
Construction on the reactors “has been plagued by delays and spiraling costs, compounded when the main contractor filed for bankruptcy” in March, the Associated Press reports.
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