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Could Be Used to Attract New Businesses or Increase Employment in the State
MONTPELIER, Vt. – The Vermont Yankee
power plant today offered to provide the state with 25 megawatts of sharply
reduced cost electricity during the first three years after the plant’s renewed
operating license takes effect in 2012.
The offer – an addition to the
post-license renewal Purchase Power Agreement that VY proposed last December–
would provide the electricity at a special price of $40 a megawatt (or 4 cents
per kilowatt) between March 22, 2012 and March 21, 2015. It could be used as the
state government determines, including as an incentive to attract economic
development or new jobs at existing workplaces.
The offer was announced at a news
conference here by Curt Hébert, Jr., executive vice president of Entergy
Corporation, Vermont Yankee’s owner.
Under the terms of the offer, the 25
megawatts of low-cost electricity would be provided if:
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Vermont Yankee receives its
proposed 20-year license renewal from the federal Nuclear Regulatory
Commission on or before the contract commences.
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The Vermont Public Service Board
approves the required Certificate of Public Good to permit VY to continue
operating for the additional 20 years.
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The credit terms in the existing
Purchase Power Agreement between Vermont Yankee and the utilities it serves
will be replicated in the new PPA, which takes effect after license renewal.
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Central Vermont Public Service and
Green Mountain Power, the state’s two largest utilities, enter into a 20-year
PPA with Entergy and VY under essentially the same terms as those that VY
proposed on December 18, 2009.
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entergy-nuclear.com
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