Power industry moves to block N.Y. nuclear subsidies via Environment & Energy Publishing

The power industry has launched its first legal challenge against New York’s ambitious renewable-energy program.

NRG Energy Inc. and a group representing competitive power generators filed suit yesterday in federal court to block a key part of the state’s Clean Energy Standard: its subsidies to nuclear power plants.

They said the subsidies give nuclear an unfair leg up against other competitive generators and, in so doing, violate federal jurisdiction over wholesale power markets.

In a complaint filed in the Southern District of New York, the companies asked the court to invalidate the nuclear part of the program.

Audrey Zibelman, who chairs the state’s Public Service Commission, said she’s confident New York will win in court.

“The frivolous lawsuit is right out of [the] fossil fuel industry’s playbook to deny and thwart actions to combat climate change,” she said in a statement. “The Supreme Court has repeatedly upheld the rights of states to protect their environment for the welfare [of] citizens.”

“To call it frivolous is to make light of it, which is unfortunate because it’s a serious matter,” said John Shelk, president and CEO of the Electric Power Supply Association, which is a plaintiff. “I wouldn’t be surprised if it goes to the Supreme Court.”

[…]
A critical, and controversial, part of that plan was to give subsidies to three nuclear power facilities to keep them open. Most imminently, the James A. FitzPatrick plant was slated to close by next year.

Without these subsidies, Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D) said, the plants would shut down and the state would lose ground on its greenhouse gas goals.

Keeping the nuclear and adding renewables would add less than $2 per month to the average residential power bill, officials said.

But critics, including environmental groups, said it amounted to a massive handout to Exelon Corp., which owns two of the state’s nuclear facilities and is trying to buy FitzPatrick (EnergyWire, Sept. 6).

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