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The state Public Utilities Commission has ordered PG&E to pay $43.2 million back to customers for mismanaging the troubled ...
The Diablo Canyon nuclear power plant has a new lease on life – thanks to $1.4 billion in taxpayer financed loans – but oversight officials and critics worry about the massive backlog of ...
Diablo Canyon nuclear power plant is the last of its kind in California, seen here in a photo on Oct. 25, 2022. Diablo Canyon Nuclear Power Plant on June 1, 2023.
California’s only nuclear power plant can stay open past 2025, possibly as much as another 20 years, the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission said Thursday in a critical decision for the state’s ...
He continues to support shuttering Diablo Canyon "in the long term." The debate over the plant comes as the long-struggling nuclear industry sees climate change as a reason for optimism.
The Diablo Canyon Nuclear Power Plant, south of Los Osos, Calif., is seen in this undated photo. Its life has been extended to 2030.
PG&E and a panel of community members focused on matters related to the Diablo Canyon Nuclear Power Plant are hosting a public meeting next week on potential plant repurposing opportunities.
The petitioners say there is an “unacceptable risk of a seismically induced severe accident” should California’s last remaining nuclear power plant remain open.
The always controversial Diablo Canyon nuclear power plant has always been late. But never when lining up for handouts. So why should this year be different?
The Diablo Canyon Power Plant, located in San Luis Obispo County, was scheduled to close by 2025 after PG&E reached a settlement with environmental and labor groups seeking its closure in 2016.
The Nuclear Regulatory Commission will allow PG&E to operate Diablo Canyon Power Plant in San Luis Obispo, California, past its scheduled closure.