Nuclear Illinois senator proposes plan that lifts state’s nuclear moratorium and requires new oversight rules Associated Press 11.8.2023 Share By JOHN O’CONNOR AP Political Writer SPRINGFIELD, Ill. (AP) — A Republican Illinois senator proposed fresh legislation Nov. 7 lifting a moratorium on new nuclear reactors and calls for new rules governing them, one of the concerns raised in a gubernatorial veto of a previous version of the legislation. Sen. Sue Rezin, of Morris, won overwhelming legislative support last spring to end the 1987 prohibition on new nuclear operations in favor of small modular reactors. Democratic Gov. J.B. Pritzker sided with environmentalists and, citing concerns about outdated regulations and the long-running problem of waste disposal, vetoed it. Previous coverage: Illinois grapples with decades-old moratorium on new nuclear construction Instead of seeking a vote to override the veto during this week’s final three days of legislative session for the year, Rezin floated the new plan which would reduce the allowable size of small modular reactors and produce modernized rules to handle them. The reactors are designed not to produce electricity to be widespread across the power grid, but to provide electricity to a single site where it’s installed, such as a large factory. Rezin acknowledged they still must undergo the federal permitting process lasting as long as eight years that traditional plants must undergo “All we’re trying to do is lift the moratorium to say that Illinois is in fact looking at this new advanced nuclear technology as part of its future energy portfolio,” Rezin said. Pritzker signed a law two years ago requiring Illinois to produce nothing but carbon-free power by 2045. It provides for heavy investment in wind and solar power but also tosses in $700 million to keep two of the state’s nuclear fleet open in Byron and Morris. To Rezin, that’s proof that nuclear must be included in the carbon-free future. Environmentalists disagree and persuaded Pritzker’s veto. To answer the governor’s concerns, the latest plant instructs the Illinois Emergency Management Agency to develop guidelines on decommissioning reactors, environmental monitoring and emergency preparedness by Jan. 1, 2026. It also reduces the allowable maximum size of each small modular reactor to 300 megawatts, down from 345. The Senate Executive Committee heard Rezin’s measure Nov. 7 but did not take a vote. Mark Denzler, president and CEO of the Illinois Manufacturers’ Association, testified in favor of the measure, explaining that manufacturers use one-third of all the nation’s energy and need reliable sources to keep the lights on. Many plants, particularly corn and soybean processors, use steam power, Denzler said. “You can’t generate steam from wind or solar,” he said. Environmental advocates did not appear before the committee. Jack Darin, director of the Illinois chapter of the Sierra Club, called the debate “largely rhetorical” because construction of a reactor could be a decade or more away. He said lifting the moratorium before conducting studies to develop new rules is backward. “Those are the studies we should be doing before lifting a moratorium,” Darin said. “So we’re saying, ‘Go ahead and build them, if anybody wants to’ — and nobody does right now — ‘and we’ll start thinking about different ways these could be problematic.'” Related Articles Washington state lawmakers allocate $25 million to advance SMR development DOE releases $1.6 billion budget for nuclear energy office: Here’s how it would be spent Oklo and Argonne claim milestone in fast fission test Conditions inside Fukushima’s melted nuclear reactors still unclear 13 years after disaster struck