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Delmarva Daily Times -

Delaware Lies Amid Cluster of Nuclear Reactors (new window)

Nowhere else in America is the nuclear neighborhood more crowded than around Delaware.

Nearly 10 percent of the nation's reactors stand within 20 to 30 miles of some part of Delaware, including seven reactors no more than 25 miles from New Castle County's border, and two others within 35 miles of southwestern Sussex County.

The cluster, rivaled only by a collection of nuclear plants in central Illinois, could grow in the coming years, according to the Nuclear Regulatory Commission and industry publications. Other plants operate or are being contemplated only slightly farther away, both to the north and south, as companies rush to join what has been described as an emerging nuclear renaissance.

"One of the strengths as we see it of the U.S. electric system, for a long time, has been diversity," said Steven Kerekes, a spokesman for the Nuclear Energy Institute. "That's why we see nuclear as something that continues to be a strong component" as the nation works to reduce its dependence on fossil fuels."

Exelon Corp. operates four reactors to the state's northwest in Pennsylvania: two at Peach Bottom in York County and two at Limerick in Montgomery County. Both put northern Delaware well within the 50-mile circle where the NRC says food and water contamination could be a problem in the event of an accident.

PSEG operates three reactors along the Delaware River due east of the busy Boyds Corner interchange, putting a wide swath of New Castle County inside potential evacuation zones.

To the south, UniStar Nuclear Energy filed a combined license application in July to build a 1,600-megawatt reactor at Constellation Energy's Calvert Cliffs plant along the Chesapeake Bay's western shore. The reactor, less than 50 miles from Seaford, would be larger and simpler to operate than any now in use around the country.

UniStar is a joint venture of Constellation and EDF Group, the main electricity producer and generator in France and a major supplier in Europe generally. The company applied for a Maryland Public Service Commission license to build and operate the Calvert Cliffs plant last month, and said it would use a newly approved design developed by an international reactor designer based in Paris.

Pennsylvania-based PPL last week submitted an application to build a third reactor at its Berwick plant southwest of Wilkes-Barre. PPL, which already has two reactors at Berwick, has proposed using the same 1,600-megawatt "evolutionary" reactor design that UniStar chose for Calvert Cliffs.

Dominion Energy has separately proposed a new reactor at its North Anna power station north of Richmond, Va.

Calvert County commissioners already have offered $300 million in tax breaks to support the Calvert Cliffs plan. But the proposal was immediately criticized by Maryland's chapter of the Sierra Club and other environmental groups, and recently sparked formation of a new anti-nuclear group, the Chesapeake Safe Energy Coalition.

"We believe that nuclear power is dirty and dangerous and expensive, and that safer, cleaner and more affordable alternatives are available," said Johanna Neumann, spokeswoman for the nonprofit Maryland Public Interest Research Group.

Salem County, N.J., resident Tom Pankok disagreed. Pankok, a member of a New Jersey group that supports nuclear energy, said in a recent letter to a group of Delaware anti-nuclear activists that the American nuclear power industry has never caused an injury to the general public.

"When you add to that the fact that the state's four nuclear power plants, including Oyster Creek, produce more than half of New Jersey's electricity with zero greenhouse gas emissions, it becomes clear that nuclear is an important part of the global-warming solution" he said.