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Georgia Nuclear Industry
                                         
Report Updated: November 4, 2009


Nuclear Power Plants in Georgia
Net Generation and Capacity, 2008
Plant Name Unit Number Net Capacity MW Net Generation Thousand Kwh Capacity Factor (percent) Operator/Owner
Hatch 1 876 6,434 84
Southern Nuclear Operating Company/Various 1
Hatch 2 883 7,480 96
Total   1,759 13,914 90
--
Vogtle 1 1,109 9,050 93
Southern Nuclear Operating Company/Various 2
Vogtle 2 1,127 8,727 88
Total   2,236 17,778 91
--
Source: Form EIA-860, "Annual Electric Generator Report," and Form EIA-906, "Power Plant Report."
1.  Plant Owners, Hatch, Both Units:  Georgia Power Company (50.1%), Oglethorpe Power Corporation (30%), Municipal Electrical Authority of Georgia (17.7%), and Dalton, Georgia (2.2%). 2.  Plant Owners, Vogtle, Both Units:  Georgia Power Company (45.7%), Oglethorpe Power Corporation (30%), Municipal Electrical Authority of Georgia (22.7%), and Dalton, Georgia (1.6%).  

Contribution of Nuclear Power

Nuclear power contributes slightly more than a fourth of the State's electricity output. If the Vogtle and Hatch plants had not been built, coal-fired power would have been the most likely alternative, adding to the emissions problem.

Southern Nuclear Operating Company presented a plan to the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission to bring a new reactor on line at the Vogtle site by 2015.[1] Even with the completion of one or two reactors, coal is likely to furnish most of Georgia's power until at least 2020 (and quite possibly beyond that). Increased diversity in energy supply coupled with decreased emissions rates might make nuclear's contribution especially welcome, not just in Georgia, but throughout the region.

Electricity Market in Georgia, Share of Electricity Output, by Fuel, 2004 to 2007
Year Coal Hydroelectric Natural
Gas
Nuclear Other
2007 62 2 11 22 3
2006 63 2 9 23 3
2005 64 3 7 23 3
2004 63 3 5 27 3
Source: EIA Survey 923, "Power Plant Operations Report" and Predecessor Forms.

In 2007, coal accounted for two thirds of the electricity generated by the State. The percentage of electricity generated by coal, gas, nuclear, and hydropower for each state with at least one commercial reactor is reported in the Electricity Market table.

© Georgia Southern Museum (used with permission)
When workers began construction of the Vogtle Nuclear Power Plant, they already knew they would encounter limestone. But no one anticipated they would also find history: or rather, pre-history. See photo to learn what else they encountered.

 

Georgia Nuclear Highlights

  • The Vogtle Nuclear Plant ranks 35th on the National Energy Information Center's list of the 100 Largest Utility Plants in the United States. (based on 2003 data).
  • Georgia Power, majority owner in the Hatch plant and plurality owner of Vogtle, was ranked as the 11th largest electric utility in the United States in 2003.
  • Ten southeastern States have nuclear power plants, but only five have licensed spent fuel storage facilities. These five are: Virginia, Arkansas, North and South Carolina, and Georgia (the Hatch facility).

Georgia Nuclear Industry

In 2008, the State of Georgia ranked 9th in nuclear capacity and 11th in nuclear generation. Monthly and cumulative nuclear generation and annual nuclear capacity for each State and each reactor is reported in a table elsewhere on this site.



Nuclear Power Generation in Georgia, 1960 through 2004
Million Kilowatt Hours
Sources: Energy Information Administration, Form EIA-906, Power Plant Report, and predecessor forms.


License Renewal

According to the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, the license renewal applications for Hatch 1 and Hatch 2 were approved on January 15, 2002. The Vogtle licenses will not expire until after 2020.

Information on the current status of all license renewal applications appears on the NRC web site at http://www.nrc.gov. To locate the data, select "index," then select the letter "l" and click on "License Renewal."

The following photo illustrates one of the unexpected finds during construction of the Vogtle nuclear power plant


© Georgia Southern Museum (used with permission)
Georgiacetus vogtlensis, the Vogtle whale, is now on permanent display at the Georgia Southern Museum. The creature represents a link between land mammals and whales. The skeleton is 11 feet long, the mount is exactly 8 feet tall, and the skull itself is slightly less than 3 feet long.

Air Quality in Georgia

Total greenhouse emissions for the electric power industry of each of the 50 States and the District of Columbia, are reported for the most current data year.

Of the 50 States plus the District of Columbia, the electric industry of the State of Georgia ranked 7th highest in carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions in 2007. The State's electric industry ranked 3rd highest in sulfur dioxide (SO2) emissions and 8th highest in nitrogen oxide (NOx) emissions.

Georgia Airborne Emissions, Electricity Sector, 1990-2007
Metric Tons
Year Carbon Dioxide
CO2
Sulfur Dioxide
SO2
Nitrogen Oxides
NOx
1990 66,763,881 848,506 306,264
1991 60,312,261 772,785 272,778
1992 58,777,032 753,620 246,458
1993 63,222,178 684,516 249,831
1994 65,635,961 564,266 243,492
1995 70,043,838 481,378 267,955
1996 69,191,298 512,583 178,367
1997 73,289,997 534,388 191,008
1998 75,455,306 510,116 190,102
1999 77,278,356 540,905 188,018
2000 80,462,002 544,313 193,738
2001 74,968,301 535,364 174,186
2002 81,780,927 597,715 176,051
2003 79,356,162 585,940 121,160
2004 81,495,965 584,161 115,817
2005 89,253,157 645,936 125,548
2006 89,897,929 685,373 130,118
2007 95,248,726 681,926 125,030
Source: EIA-767 and EIA-906 Survey, Energy Information Administration


Georgia Airborne Emissions,
Electricity Sector, 1989-2004 (CO2)*
*Carbon Dioxide

Georgia Airborne Emissions,
Electricity Sector, 1989-2004 (SO2)*
*Sulfur Dioxide

Georgia Airborne Emissions,
Electricity Sector, 1989-2004 (NOX)*
*Nitrogen Oxide


More Information on Georgia's Nuclear Industry

Nuclear Generation

Electricity generation by nuclear power plants is available for each reactor and each State for the following years:



_________________________________
1New nuclear could come on line in 2015 under Southern's scenario, Nucleonics Week, McGraw-Hill Companies, September 15, 2005, page 15.


Contact:



U.S. Nuclear Power Plants by State Plants
Alabama Browns Ferry
  Farley (Joseph M. Farley)
Arizona Palo Verde
Arkansas Arkansas Nuclear One
California Diablo Canyon
  San Onofre
Connecticut Millstone
Florida Crystal River 3
  St Lucie
  Turkey Point
Georgia Hatch (Edwin I. Hatch)
  Vogtle
Illinois Braidwood
  Byron
  Clinton
  Dresden
  LaSalle County
  Quad Cities
Iowa Duane Arnold
Kansas Wolf Creek
Louisiana River Bend
  Waterford
Maryland CalvertCliff
Massachusetts Pilgrim
Michigan Donald C. Cook
  Enrico Fermi (Fermi)
  Palisades
Minnesota Monticello
  Prairie Island
Mississippi Grand Gulf
Missouri Callaway
Nebraska Cooper
  Fort Calhoun
New Hampshire Seabrook
New Jersey Hope Creek
  Oyster Creek
  Salem Creek
New York Fitzpatrick (James A. Fitzpatrick)
  Indian Point
  Nile Mile Point
  R.E. Ginna (Ginna, or Robert E. Ginna)
North Carolina Brunswick
  McGuire
  Shearon-Harris(Harris)
Ohio Davis-Besse
  Perry
Pennsylvania Beaver Valley
  Limerick
  Peach Bottom
  Susquehanna
  Three Mile Island
South Carolina Catawba
  H.B. Robinson
  Oconee
  Virgil C. Summer (Summer)
Tennessee Sequoyah
  Watts Bar
Texas Comanche Peak
  South Texas
Vermont Vermont Yankee
Virginia North Anna
  Surry
Washington Columbia Generating Station
Wisconsin Kewaunee
  Point Beach


see also:
annual nuclear statistics back to 1953
projected electricity capacity to 2025
international electricity statistics