The Atomic Safety and Licensing Board (ASLB) conducted an all-day hearing Thursday, Jan. 26 in Prince Frederick. The three-judge panel heard testimony regarding a challenge to the possible granting of a license for construction of a third reactor at Calvert Cliffs Nuclear Power Plant in Lusby.
The ASLB is an independent body within the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC). The specific challenge at the hearing was the opposing groupโs contention that the NRC staffโs draft environmental impact statement (EIS) failed to adequately analyze and discuss alternatives to the proposed reactor.
The challengers hoping to kill the Calvert Cliffs 3 project are the Nuclear Information and Resource Services (NIRS), Beyond Nuclear, Public Citizen Energy Program and Southern Maryland Citizens Alliance for Renewable Energy Solutions.
From the outset, the opposition was beset with a major problem. Their main witnessโwind and solar power expert Scott Sklarโwas not only not in Prince Frederick, he was in midair. Michael Mariotte, NIRSโ executive director, told the panel that Sklar had been in Central America and was in the process of flying back to the United States. In an opening statement, Mariotte said the EIS submitted by NRC staff โunderestimatesโ potential alternative sources of energy. He noted that several entities in Maryland are building solar power facilities. Among those entities is Constellation Energy Group, the owners and operators of the existing Lusby plant. โMaryland state law demands renewables,โ said Mariotte. Itโs clear the goal is feasible, itโs attainable. The NRC is under the guise that the Maryland law will either fail or never be implemented.โ
Mariotte noted that the timeline for starting construction of the third reactor has been pushed back to 2017 and no design plan for the facility is available. โThere is time to assess wind and solarโs potential,โ said Mariotte. He also mentioned that Maryland Gov. Martin OโMalley [D] is planning to submit legislation to expand offshore wind power.
Mariotte also dismissed the contention that renewable energy sources such as wind and solar did not provide โbase-load power.โ He said Germany was successfully using base-load power from non-nuclear, โsmall scale systemsโ that were more reliable.
โWhen this plant [Calvert Cliffs] is down for repairs and refueling, they have nothing to replace it,โ said Mariotte. He noted the Calvert Cliffs 3 applicant, UniStar, only provides nuclear power. โThis company has nothing else it can sell,โ said Mariotte.
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