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November 16, 2009
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News about the nuclear technologies industry

  News Roundup 
 
  • Duke still on board with reprocessed-fuel testing program
    Duke Energy rejected claims from anti-nuclear activists that it is no longer complying with an Energy Department program that requires it to use mixed-oxide fuel in its nuclear power facilities. Friends of the Earth said Duke has ceased tests on MOX fuel, adding that the reprocessed source was not reloaded into the company's reactor during regular cycle maintenance. The company acknowledged it did not proceed with reloading, but said that was a normal part of the test procedure. Charleston Regional Business Journal (S.C.) (11/13) LinkedInFacebookTwitterEmail this Story
  • N.H. nuclear plant receives NRC citation for faulty generator
    The Nuclear Regulatory Commission has cited NextEra Energy's Seabrook facility in New Hampshire with a low-to-moderate safety-significance finding, which will mean heightened monitoring via supplemental inspections. The finding stemmed from an earlier incident in which one of the site's emergency backup diesel generators failed a test because of a leak in the cooling system. The Daily News (Newburyport, Mass.) (11/14) LinkedInFacebookTwitterEmail this Story
  • San Antonio mayor mulls backing away from nuclear-expansion project
    San Antonio Mayor Julian Castro said he is prepared to withdraw from the planned expansion of the South Texas Project nuclear plant if CPS Energy officials don't come up with a lower cost estimate for the proposal. Toshiba, the project's Japanese contractor, has provided a cost estimate that is higher than CPS's projection of $13 billion. CPS officials traveled to Japan last week to discuss the higher estimate with Toshiba and are expected to disclose the results of negotiations during a board meeting today. San Antonio Express-News (11/13) LinkedInFacebookTwitterEmail this Story
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  Policy Watch 
  • Lawmakers use nuclear energy to bolster support for climate bill
    As international climate talks draw near, U.S. lawmakers seem to be banking on nuclear power to help advance the country's climate-change bill. As part of efforts to gain support for the legislation, Sens. Lamar Alexander, R-Tenn., and Jim Webb, D-Va., said they would advance a plan today aiming to "promote further research and development of the nation's clean-energy technologies" such as nuclear power. Google/Agence France-Presse (11/15) LinkedInFacebookTwitterEmail this Story
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  SmartQuote 
Nothing is so contagious as enthusiasm."
--Samuel Taylor Coleridge,
English poet, critic and philosopher


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