Back on February 4, 2012, I wrote
a long rambling note regarding the effect natural gas would have on the energy future for the United States. In that note I quoted
CarpeDiem:
But cheap gas has also thrown energy markets into turmoil. It is
impossible for almost any other source of electric power to compete,
especially coal and nuclear. By trimming fuel bills, cheap gas has
reduced incentives for energy conservation and efficiency. And it has
left solar and wind, despite their own falling costs, heavily dependent
on government mandates in California and roughly 30 other states,
including Maryland.
“Shale gas has changed the game in the United States,” said Paul
Browning, head of General Electric’s thermal-products division, which
makes gas turbines. “It is putting pressure on other power generation
technologies.”
Crain's Chicago Business is reporting (with a byline date of March 3, 2014, by the way) that Exelon may have to close three of six nuclear reactors that it operates in Illinois because they are struggling to make money.
In recent weeks, Exelon privately has said its large Byron nuclear plant
in northwest Illinois is at risk along with the Quad Cities station in
western Illinois and the downstate Clinton plant, which already had been
identified as hardship cases, according to sources who've heard the company pitches.
Unlike Clinton and Quad Cities, Byron is one of Exelon's best-performing
plants and one of its largest. Byron is licensed to run for another
decade. The three plants together employ more than 2,300 with an annual
payroll of $193 million, pay $51 million in taxes to localities and the
state and provide enough electricity to light more than 4.2 million
homes.
It is interesting to read this story in light of the February, 2012,
CarpeDiem and
Washington Post articles linked above.
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