SAN FRANCISCO--(BUSINESS WIRE)--
Pacific Gas and Electric Company said today’s vote by the State Lands
Commission to approve a lease extension necessary to run the Diablo
Canyon Power Plant (DCPP) to 2025 was a critical first step toward
realizing the historic clean energy plan jointly proposed by PG&E, labor
and leading environmental organizations.
Consideration of the joint proposal moves next to the California Public
Utilities Commission. PG&E will file the proposal with the CPUC in July
and convene a conference of interested parties who will be able to
comment on and join in the settlement.
“We thank the commissioners for their leadership and their support,
without which this historic proposal could not move forward. While there
is much more work to do, today’s vote was a critical first step,” said
PG&E Electric President Geisha Williams, who spoke on behalf of the
company at the commission today.
Joint Proposal
Reflecting California’s changing energy landscape, PG&E last week
announced a joint proposal with labor and leading environmental
organizations that would increase investment in energy efficiency,
renewables and storage beyond current state mandates while phasing out
PG&E’s production of nuclear power in California by 2025.
The joint proposal would replace power produced by two nuclear reactors
at the Diablo Canyon Power Plant (DCPP) with a cost-effective,
greenhouse gas free portfolio of energy efficiency, renewables and
energy storage. It includes a PG&E commitment to a 55 percent renewable
energy target in 2031, an unprecedented voluntary commitment by a major
U.S. energy company.
The Parties to the joint proposal are PG&E, International Brotherhood of
Electrical Workers Local 1245, Coalition of California Utility
Employees, Friends of the Earth, Natural Resources Defense Council,
Environment California and Alliance for Nuclear Responsibility.
Recognizing that the procurement, construction and implementation of a
greenhouse gas free portfolio of energy efficiency, renewables and
storage will take years, the parties recognize that PG&E intends to
operate Diablo Canyon to the end of its current NRC operating licenses,
which expire on November 2, 2024 (Unit 1) and August 26, 2025 (Unit 2).
This eight- to nine-year transition period will provide the time to
begin the process to plan and replace Diablo Canyon’s energy with new
GHG-free replacement resources.
PG&E does not believe customer rates will increase as a result of the
joint proposal because it believes it is likely that implementing the
proposal will have a lower overall cost than relicensing DCPP and
operating it through 2044. Factors affecting this include, in addition
to lower demand, declining costs for renewable power and the potential
for higher renewable integration costs if DCPP is relicensed.
Commitment to Employees and the Community
The parties to the agreement are jointly committed to supporting a
successful transition for DCPP employees and the community.
PG&E’s DCPP Retention Program will provide, among other things,
incentives to retain employees during the remaining operating years of
the plant, a retraining and development program to facilitate
redeployment of a portion of plant personnel to the decommissioning
project or other positions within the company, and severance payments
upon the completion of employment. PG&E has reached agreement on these
benefits with IBEW Local 1245 and will immediately engage in bargaining
with its other labor unions to ensure appropriate benefits for
represented employees.
In addition, the joint proposal includes payments by PG&E to San Luis
Obispo County totaling nearly $50 million. The proposed payments are
designed to offset declining property taxes through 2025 in support of a
transition plan for the county.
Agreement Contingencies
The joint proposal is contingent on a number of important regulatory
actions, including:
-
Today’s approval of the lease extensions from the State Lands
Commission.
-
Approval by the CPUC of the proposed plan for replacement of Diablo
Canyon with greenhouse gas-free resources. Any resource procurement
PG&E makes will be subject to a non-bypassable cost allocation
mechanism that ensures all users of PG&E’s grid pay a fair share of
the costs.
-
CPUC confirmation that PG&E’s investment in DCPP will be recovered by
the time the plant closes in 2025.
-
CPUC approval of cost recovery for appropriate employee and community
transition benefits.
Additional Information
PG&E’s press release announcing the Joint Proposal can be read in its
entirety here.
The joint proposal can be read in its entirety here.
Additional information prepared by M.J. Bradley & Associates, a
strategic environmental consulting firm, can be accessed here.
About PG&E
Pacific Gas and Electric Company, a subsidiary of PG&E
Corporation (NYSE:PCG), is one of the largest combined natural gas
and electric utilities in the United States. Based in San Francisco,
with more than 20,000 employees, the company delivers some of the
nation’s cleanest energy to nearly 16 million people in Northern and
Central California. For more information, visit www.pge.com/
and www.pge.com/en/about/newsroom/index.page.
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Source: Pacific Gas and Electric Company