TALLAHASSEE, Florida — Duke Energy Florida is again considering putting a nuclear power plant on 5,000 acres it owns in Levy County, regulatory documents reviewed by POLITICO reveal, as state and federal officials encourage the expansion of nuclear energy.
Duke Energy has not publicized its plans. But documents filed with state regulators in April by the utility say that it is considering building a “next generation” nuclear plant at the site between 2038 and 2048. The proposal could revive a major fight from over a decade ago, where a plan to build a different type of nuclear plant met resistance from environmentalists and consumer advocates.
The utility’s pending decision was buried in testimony filed as part of a three-year, $818-million rate hike request filed with the Public Service Commission. The request includes a proposal to charge consumers a collective $94 million to hold the Levy County land for a future power plant.
Benjamin M.H. Borsch, the utility’s managing director of integrated resource planning and analytics, said the company is considering placing a small modular nuclear reactor on the site. “The site remains especially valuable given its access to water, transportation, and transmission,” Borsch said in written testimony.