Web Extra: Resident’s Views on Zion Nuclear Station Decommissioning

Web Extra: Resident’s Views on Zion Nuclear Station Decommissioning
Exelon's Zion Nuclear Power Station along the shore of Lake Michigan.
Web Extra: Resident’s Views on Zion Nuclear Station Decommissioning
Exelon's Zion Nuclear Power Station along the shore of Lake Michigan.

Web Extra: Resident’s Views on Zion Nuclear Station Decommissioning

WBEZ brings you fact-based news and information. Sign up for our newsletters to stay up to date on the stories that matter.
The town of Zion rests on the shore of Lake Michigan, just shy of the Wisconsin border. The nuclear power station that bears the town’s name hasn’t produced nuclear power since an operational mishap in 1997. Exelon officially ended operations in 1998. On March 6 of this year, Exelon invited townspeople to ask questions about a plan to speed up decommissioning of the plant, ten years ahead of schedule and possibly one hundred million dollars cheaper than originally planned. Exelon says it can accomplish this by outsourcing the decommissioning process to a new company run by Utah-based EnergySolutions, which has provided decommissioning services in six states as well as overseas. The federal Nuclear Regulatory Commission must first rule whether Exelon can temporarily transfer its license to EnergySolutions. The NRC could decide that as early as this year. By Exelon’s account, much of the site’s 257 acres could eventually be used for other purposes, but spent nuclear fuel would remain at the site until the federal government places it in permanent storage. The federal government has not yet settled where the nation’s spent nuclear fuel will reside.

This interview is with Zion Resident Chad Anderson. Anderson questions why the Exelon plan will leave behind spent nuclear fuel, when the company has other operating plants in Illinois that also store fuel.



Interviews with:
An Exelon Executive
A Federal Regulator
An Environmental Activist
A Zion Town Official