The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Kasich not backing bailout for state’s nuclear plants

- By John Seewer

OREGON » Gov. John Kasich said Monday that he can’t see supporting a proposed financial rescue that FirstEnerg­y Corp. maintains is needed to keep alive the state’s two aging nuclear plants.

He said it’s up to the utility to figure out how to keep its nuclear plants operating without a state-approved bailout.

Akron-based FirstEnerg­y wants Ohio lawmakers to sign off on an electricit­y rate increase for its customers to save the Davis-Besse and Perry plants, which sit along Lake Erie and produce 14 percent of the state’s electricit­y.

The plants are vital to the rural towns where they’re located and generate millions in tax money for schools and local government­s. But like many nuclear plants around the nation, both Davis-Besse and Perry are aging, costly to operate and maintain, and face stiff competitio­n from cheaper natural gas plants.

Kasich on Monday toured a new $800 million natural gas plant near Toledo that can produce enough electricit­y for 700,000 homes — more power than one of the nuclear plants can make.

“It’s bringing investment, competitio­n and, most important, lower prices for consumers,” Kasich said at the plant’s opening.

The governor said he hopes lawmakers understand that.

“There’s always a tendency to slip back into yesterday. This represents tomorrow,” the Republican governor said.

A proposal that could lead to $300 million a year in new charges for FirstEnerg­y customers in order to help out the nuclear plants has been stalled in the Legislatur­e since late spring.

Under the plan, FirstEnerg­y’s average residentia­l customer would pay about $5 more per month, while businesses and factories would see much larger increases if lawmakers OK the bailout.

Kasich said all forms of energy — wind, solar, coal, natural gas and nuclear — should be a part of the mix, and he added that limiting government regulation will spur investment by industries and create new jobs.

Peter Rigney, who oversaw constructi­on of the natural gas plant in suburban Toledo, said there are more plants like it on the drawing board in Ohio, if the state legislatur­e does not approve financial help for FirstEnerg­y.

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