Senate votes to lift nuclear construction ban
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[March 31, 2023]
By ANDREW ADAMS
Capitol News Illinois
aadams@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – The Illinois Senate approved a measure on Thursday that
would lift a 1980s-era moratorium on nuclear power plant construction.
Senate Bill 76, sponsored by Sen. Sue Rezin, R-Morris, was approved on a
39-13 vote. The bill now goes to the House of Representatives for
consideration.
“The bill is going to come to the House with a lot of momentum,” Rezin
said in an interview after the bill passed. “The unions are out and
working their members to explain the importance of the bill and to just
explain the technology.”
Rezin said on the Senate floor that the bill would specifically allow
for the construction of small modular nuclear reactors, or SMRs. These
reactors operate at a much smaller scale than traditional nuclear
reactors and are built in factories and assembled on site. SMR
proponents say they can be deployed in places like factories, replacing
the need for things like coal-fired cogeneration plants.
“This is a large change in energy policy for the state of Illinois,”
Rezin said. “It’s important to have a robust discussion and make sure
the bill’s been vetted.”
Senate proponents of the bill, including Sens. Bill Cunningham,
D-Chicago, and Patrick Joyce, D-Essex, said that lifting the ban would
help the state attract investment in new technology.
Cunningham said the moratorium is preventing the state from “sending
signals out to the market” for investment in new energy technology,
including SMRs and using nuclear power for hydrogen generation.
“I’m here to make Illinois stay relevant, to make Illinois stay at the
table,” Joyce said. “With the moratorium in place, we’re not even part
of the conversation.”
Rezin noted during floor debate that the federal government has signaled
support for nuclear reactors and made funding available for small
modular projects. The Department of Energy has several grant programs
for the development and demonstration of SMRs.
“By lifting this ban, it allows Illinois, should they choose, to go
after federal dollars that are provided by this administration, the
Biden administration, who is embracing, supporting and investing in
advanced nuclear reactors,” Rezin said.
Sen. Ram Villivalam, D-Chicago, said the bill was “still not fully
baked,” adding that the question of what is done with nuclear waste
still doesn’t have a solution.
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Sen. Sue Rezin, R-Morris, speaks on the
Senate floor Thursday in favor of her bill to lift a statewide
moratorium on new nuclear power construction. The measure passed
with bipartisan support. (Capitol News Illinois photo by Jerry
Nowicki)
“Whether it’s one pound or a thousand pounds, it’s still nuclear waste,”
he said. “We can’t wait for a national strategy, in my opinion.”
The state’s ban went into effect in 1987 and was intended to remain in
effect until the federal government identifies a national nuclear waste
disposal strategy. In 1987, Congress identified a site in Nevada as the
nation’s repository for nuclear waste, although later opposition from
the state and the White House quashed that plan. No national disposal
site has been designated.
Some of the state’s largest environmental groups, including the Illinois
Environmental Council, oppose the measure. Jack Darin, the head of the
Illinois chapter of the Sierra Club, told Capitol News Illinois earlier
this month that his organization doesn’t believe nuclear energy is
“clean energy,” citing concerns over the environmental impact of nuclear
waste.
David Kraft, the head of the Nuclear Energy Information Service, an
anti-nuclear advocacy group based in Chicago, has said the bill will
weaken the state’s landmark energy policy, the 2021 Climate and
Equitable Jobs Act.
“Small modulars are not climate solutions, they’re not job generators
until the 2030s and they’ll generate more nuclear waste,” Kraft said in
a Thursday interview.
Kraft added he’s worried that lawmakers are not fully considering the
safety implications of SMR technology.
The federal Nuclear Regulatory Commission has approved one SMR design,
although no power plants using an SMR design are online in the United
States. China and Russia both have SMRs of other designs online.
A similar bill was introduced in the House by Rep. Mark Walker,
D-Arlington Heights. That measure, House Bill 1079, was approved in
committee with a bipartisan majority, 18-3, although it hasn’t been
heard by the full House.
Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news
service covering state government. It is distributed to more than 400
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is funded primarily by the Illinois Press Foundation and the Robert R.
McCormick Foundation. |