NY regulators clear way for cleanup of Indian Point nuclear power plant

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Indian Point nuclear plant site sold

The Indian Point nuclear power plant site has officially been sold to a company called Holtec, who agreed to dismantle and clean up the facility.

State regulators approved a deal Wednesday that clears the way for decommissioning the recently idled Indian Point nuclear power plant north of New York City.

The state Public Service Commission approved the transfer of the plant from Entergy Corp. to Holtec International subsidiaries, according to Gov. Andrew Cuomo.

Decommissioning of the site along the Hudson River is projected to cost $2.3 billion and to take at least 12 years.

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Cuomo and other opponents had fought for years to close the plant, which they claimed was a safety threat to the millions of people living in the surrounding suburbs and the city 25 miles (40 kilometers) away.

"This is a win for the health and safety of New Yorkers, and the protection of our environment," Cuomo said in a prepared release.

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After Indian Point

When a nuclear power plant is in your neighborhood, you tend to know it. The first Indian Point reactor opened in 1962 and despite one of the best safety records in the country, it was a target. Gov. Andrew Cuomo has called it a "ticking time bomb." Indian Point will stop ticking in April 2021. And the ripple effects of its closure will hit neighboring towns hard. Entergy, which owns Indian Point, pays millions to the village of Buchanan and the surrounding area and has 1,000 employees. Local businesses depend on the massive industry for their livelihood.

Indian Point Energy Center’s Unit 3 reactor was shut down April 30 under the terms of a 2017 agreement involving the state. The plant’s Unit 2 reactor was shut down a year ago under the agreement.

Entergy has said low wholesale energy prices and operating costs factored into its decision to close Indian Point.

The two reactors, which went online two years apart in the mid-1970s, were once an important source of electricity in New York City and the lower Hudson Valley. The first reactor at the site went online in 1962 and was retired in 1974.

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