Colorado residents pay off nuclear plant decommission bill
DENVER, COLORADO - Colorado residents have finished paying off the bill to decommission the former Fort St. Vrain nuclear power plant northeast of Denver near Platteville.
In 1989, Public Service Co. closed Fort St. Vrain because of ongoing operational problems. The plant had opened 13 years earlier as the country's first gas-cooled nuclear power plant.
The state Public Utilities Commission allowed Public Service in 1993 to charge customers $1 per month to cover the $125 million cost of decommissioning the plant. The payoff was complete in August.
Xcel Energy, which now owns Public Service, reopened Fort St. Vrain in 2001 after spending $283 million to convert it to a natural- gas-fired power plant.
Mark Stutz, an Xcel Energy spokesman, said the conversion was a good use of existing assets.
"All in all, it's a very reliable facility and the cornerstone of our fleet of plants," he said.
The plant generates enough power to serve 750,000 families and is the biggest power plant in Colorado.
As natural-gas prices have risen, proponents of alternative energy, including President Bush, are talking again about nuclear energy as a viable power source.
But when it comes to building any new power plant, much less a nuclear one, Americans say "no way," said Frank Barnes, head of a new utility engineering and management master's degree program at the University of Colorado at Boulder.
"Nobody wants a power plant next to them - that's a major problem," he said.
Stutz said Xcel is seeking bids to add another 750 megawatts of renewable energy to its daily power generation to meet peak customer demand, which has risen 60 percent in the last decade. The number of Xcel customers is up 20 percent over the same time.
Related News

B.C. ordered to pay $10M for denying Squamish power project
VANCOUVER - A B.C. Supreme Court judge has ordered the provincial government to pay $10.125 million after it denied permits to a company that wanted to build a run-of-the river power project near Squamish.
In his Oct. 10 decision, Justice Kevin Loo said the plaintiff, Greengen Holdings Ltd., “lost an opportunity to achieve a completed and profitable hydro-electric project” after government representatives wrongfully exercised their legal authority, a transgression described in the ruling as “misfeasance.”
Between 2003 and 2009, the company sought to develop a hydro-electric project on and around Fries Creek, which sits opposite the Brackendale neighbourhood on the other side…