Legal & Regulatory

DOE Finalizes $1.52B Palisades Loan for First-Ever U.S. Nuclear Plant Recommissioning

Marking the first-ever revival of a nuclear power plant in the U.S., the Department of Energy (DOE) on Sept. 30 finalized a $1.52 billion loan guarantee to Holtec International to support the recommissioning of the 800-MW Palisades nuclear plant in Covert Township, Michigan.

Separately, the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) awarded electric cooperative Wolverine Power Cooperative $650 million in funding under its New ERA program to purchase about 435 MW of Palisade’s power to serve its members throughout rural Michigan. Hoosier Energy received a $675 million USDA award to lower the cost of purchasing the remaining 370 MW alongside 250 MW of solar power from two projects to serve members in Illinois and Indiana.

White House and DOE officials told reporters during a briefing the loan funding will be used to bolster inspections, testing, restoration, rebuilding, and replacement of existing equipment at Palisades, which was retired by its previous owner, Entergy, in May 2022.

Holtec has told POWER it is targeting the plant’s recommissioning by the end of 2025, though that is subject to licensing at the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC). When reopened, the upgraded Combustion Engineering pressurized water reactor (PWR) could produce baseload power until 2051 as part of the Midcontinent Independent System Operator’s (MISO) resource mix.

The Palisades nuclear power plant is a single-unit pressurized water reactor nuclear station with a capacity of about 800 MW. It was closed in May 2022, then purchased by Holtec International for decommissioning. Holtec is now seeking to restart the plant. Courtesy: Wolverine Power Cooperative

A Major Step for Nuclear’s Hard-Fought Revival

The Biden administration’s loan guarantee and financing to support Palisades’ recommissioning are deliberate signals bolstering the broader revival of the U.S. nuclear industry. As experts have noted, keeping existing nuclear plants open will be as significant as building new ones, demonstrating and deploying advanced nuclear reactor technologies, and securing an adequate nuclear fuel supply. 

While nuclear power currently provides about 20% of U.S. electricity and more than 50% of the nation’s carbon-free electricity generation—more than all other carbon-free sources combined—shifting energy markets and economic pressures have already caused the early closures of 13 commercial nuclear reactors in the U.S. over the past decade.

Alongside Palisades, the DOE has championed the continued operation of Diablo Canyon Power Plant (DCPP) in California until at least 2030. In January 2024, the DOE awarded up to $1.1 billion in Civil Nuclear Credits (CNC) as part of a $6 billion federal program to prevent the premature closure of nuclear power plants. Diablo Canyon was the sole recipient of the CNC’s first round of funding, which the DOE unveiled in November 2022 under a funding mechanism designated by the November 2021–enacted Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (IIJA). The DOE did not certify applicants during the second round of funding—which it last year opened to nuclear operators at risk of closure by the end of the four-year award period. However, on Sept. 27, the DOE released a request for information seeking input and interest from potential applicants for the third cycle, for which it expects to issue up to $980 million in credits.

The DOE’s financing for new nuclear, meanwhile, have borne fruit. Earlier this year, the U.S. celebrated the commercial operation of its first new-build nuclear power plant, Vogtle 3 and 4 in Georgia, comprising two Westinghouse AP1000s, in more than 30 years. That project was bolstered with $12 billion in loan guarantees from the DOE’s Loan Programs Office (LPO), including $8.33 in conditional commitments announced in 2010 by the Obama administration and $3.7 billion in additional guarantees announced in March 2019 by the Trump administration. 

Still, for now, many of the country’s 94 operational reactors are slated to close by 2050 if they do not seek license renewal. So far, 87 of the 94 commercially operating nuclear reactors in the U.S. have garnered licenses to operate for up to 60 years. Eight reactors have so far secured subsequent license renewals (SLRs) from the NRC, which would extend their operating life to 80 years, while another 16 have applied for SLRs (with seven under active review).

These renewals extend the life of reactors to 80 years and require substantial maintenance investment—about $ 1 billion per reactor,” the DOE noted on Monday. “In the course of building Vogtle, three of the biggest challenges for the AP1000 were solved: the U.S. industry now has a complete reactor design, has restarted the nuclear supply chain, and rebuilt a trained workforce. Vogtle and projects like it have positioned the U.S. to continue to manufacture and deploy advanced nuclear technologies and support American workers.”

Momentum Driven in Part by Data Center Demand

The DOE has underscored nuclear’s role in meeting future power needs in the U.S. “Analysts now project the addition of as much as 25 GW of new data center electricity demand will be added to the U.S. electric grid by 2030,” it said. “Siting new data centers near one of the nation’s 54 existing nuclear power plants is an ideal solution for meeting growing electricity demand because it reduces the need for billions of dollars in investments in grid upgrades. Recent research from DOE demonstrates that new reactors could and should be added to many of these sites, which have the existing infrastructure needed to support about 1 GW of additional electricity load each, minimizing overall cost to the grid.”

In an update to the DOE’s Pathways to Commercial Liftoff: Advanced Nuclear, released on Monday, the DOE underscored that U.S. decarbonization modeling indicates between 700–900 GW of additional clean, firm capacity will be needed by 2050 to meet net-zero goals. Since the publication of the first Liftoff report, “a widespread surge in electricity demand after decades of stasis has increased the need for and interest in nuclear,” the agency said, attributing much of this growth to artificial intelligence (AI) and data centers, which have a “particular need for carbon-free, 24/7 generation concentrated in a limited footprint.”

The prospect has opened opportunities for a “set of customers who are willing and able to support investment in new nuclear generation assets,” the report explains. “Combined with the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) incentives, this demand has created a step change in the valuation of the existing fleet and new reactors,” it said. “In 2022, utilities were shutting down nuclear reactors; in 2024, they are extending reactor operations to 80 years, planning to uprate capacity, and restarting formerly closed reactors.”

Momentum for a nuclear revival driven by data center power demand is already beginning to crop up. As POWER reported earlier this month, Microsoft and Constellation Energy committed $1.6 billion to restart the Unit 1 reactor of the shuttered Three Mile Island in Pennsylvania by 2028. The facility, known as the Crane Clean Energy Center, could supply Microsoft’s artificial intelligence (AI)-driven data centers for at least 20 years. Amazon Web Services, similarly, last year bought a 960-MW data center campus powered by the 2,500-MW Susquehanna nuclear plant. 

However, Turk noted that the surge in electricity demand is not just from data centers and AI. Demand prospects are also growing given the”manufacturing Renaissance, including those 800 new and expanded manufacturing facilities on the clean energy side” as well as from electrification of vehicles and buildings, he said.

DOE Suggests More Restarts on the Horizon

On Monday, DOE officials hinted that additional nuclear restarts could be on the horizon. In response to a question about other potential projects, Jigar Shah, director of DOE’s Loan Programs Office (LPO), confirmed that the agency has received over $65 billion in nuclear-related loan requests across 13 states. While Shah did not provide specifics on any one loan, citing the Trade Secrets Act, he noted that both new nuclear plants and plant restarts are “being contemplated across this country, largely to help support a lot of the load growth that folks are seeing around the country.”

The $1.52 billion loan guarantee announced for the Palisades plant restart marks the first closing of a loan guarantee through the Energy Infrastructure Reinvestment (EIR) program under Title 17 Clean Energy Financing Section 1706, which Congress approved as part of the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA). As of Sept 30, 2024, $64.89 billion in Advanced Nuclear projects have submitted applications or are expected to submit applications in the next 120 days: $12.09 billion in Section 1703 projects and $52.8 billion in Section 1706 (EIR) projects, DOE officials noted. So far, LPO currently has “almost $300 billion in the pipeline for the loan program that’s not yet been made public,” Turk told reporters.

As officials underscored repeatedly, a central focus of the Biden administration’s efforts to revive nuclear power is the potential to create high-quality, union jobs. The Palisades plant restart is expected to save over 200 jobs and create 350 more, including 250 union positions that will pay prevailing wages which could be 50% higher than the average wage, they said. The administration is “investing not just in the deployment of these clean electrons, we’re actually expanding our industrial capacity to source the fuel and the reactors and the next generation of technology from shop floors here in the United States of America,” noted White House National Climate Advisor Ali Zaidi.

For Holtec, the prospect of reopening Palisades is part of a larger strategy to revitalize the site with small modular reactors (SMRs). Holtec in December 2023 kicked off a program to build its first two SMR-300 reactor units at the plant, and it says it plans to file a Construction Permit Application (CPA) with the NRC for the units in 2026, shortly after the existing Palisades plant returns to service (by the end of 2025). While not supported by the loan guarantee, Holtec’s target commissioning date for the first SMR-300 plant is mid-2030. That timeframe, however, will be subject to the NRC’s regulatory reviews and oversight.

So far, Holtec has initiated an exemption request, a license transfer request, and license amendment requests with NRC for the existing Palisades reactor’s recommissioning, that, if approved, would allow the resumption of power generation and operation until 2031. The company intends to submit a SLR request to the NRC to allow power generation from 2031 to 2051.

This loan is more than just a financial transaction: It is a signal of confidence in the vital role that nuclear energy will play in securing a clean, sustainable, and reliable energy future,” said Dr. Kris Singh, founder and CEO of Holtec International.

Sonal Patel is a POWER senior editor (@sonalcpatel@POWERmagazine).

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