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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
February 24, 2010, Greenpeace USA
Vermont Senate Votes To Retire Vermont Yankee Nuclear Plant in Historic
Decision
Today, the Vermont State Senate voted to retire the Vermont Yankee
Nuclear plant, owned by the Louisiana based corporation Entergy. Despite
Entergy's efforts to renew the license for the 40-year-old reactor, the
Vermont Senate voted to shut down the nuclear plant as scheduled in 2012.
This vote may be followed by a vote in the House of Representatives. If
either body votes to deny an extension of a certificate of good (the
equivalent of a state license), - as the Senate has -the plant must shut
down. Vermont is unique in that it is the only state in which the
legislature has the ability to vote to shut a plant and this historic vote
will mark the first time a plant has been closed by a state legislature.
"Vermonters sent a message to President Obama and the nuclear industry
today," said Greenpeace's Nuclear Power Analyst Jim Riccio. "The nuclear
renaissance is dead on arrival. We can retire old, decrepit and leaking
reactors like Vermont Yankee and help usher in the energy revolution that
America needs."
A host of problems have plagued the Vermont nuclear plant, from missing
fuel rods to the collapse of cooling towers to the uncontrolled and
unmonitored releases of radiation into the groundwater. On Monday, the NRC
acknowledged yet another radioactive leak from the reactor in 2005. The
NRC is currently investigating allegations by Vermont Yankee employees
about radioactive leaks from underground piping.
"When American's have the choice about the kind of energy they want in
their communities, they don't want nuclear. Vermont has shut down the myth
of the so-called nuclear renaissance. Greenpeace is calling on Vermont
legislators to vote against relicensing in the house as well so that the
message to America registers loud and clear."
Despite President Obama's announcement last week of 8.3 billion dollars in
loan guarantees to build the first new nuclear plant in thirty years, the
illusion of a nuclear renaissance is going to suffer a setback with the
vote in Vermont.
"From farmers and schoolteachers to businesspeople and students, the
people of Vermont are overwhelmingly in support of a energy future that
relies on clean and safe renewables like wind and solar. The communities
living in the shadow of Vermont Yankee have had to worry for too long
about this aging reactor," said Vermont Organizer Jarred Cobb.
Contact: Molly Dorozenski, Media Officer, 917-864-3724,
mdorozen ät greenpeace.org
Jim Riccio, Nuclear Policy Analyst, 202-319-2487,
jriccio ät greenpeace.org
Jarred Cobb, Field Organizer, 603 770 8679, jcobb ät greenpeace.org
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