Eklund Makes Case For Nuclear Subsidy Plan, Denies Any Conflict

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Perry Nuclear Power Plant
Jerry Sharp/Shutterstock

The utility that owns Ohio’s two nuclear power sites say it needs to charge its customers more in order save the struggling plants. The senator who’s proposing a bill that would allow that to happen is accused of having a conflict of interest.

Sen. John Eklund of Chardon is an attorney with a firm that represents FirstEnergy, which owns Ohio’s nuclear power plants. Eklund’s bill would allow FirstEnergy to charge customers more to subsidize those plants, but he notes the state’s ethics commission says there shouldn’t be any concerns about conflicts.

And Eklund says saving these nuclear power plants ensures that Ohio isn’t just relying on whatever energy source is cheapest at the time, because in his words that…

“Exposes the system to the weakness of that energy source and does not take advantage of the strengths of the other energy sources.”

Manufacturers and consumer groups have said this is just another request for a bailout from FirstEnergy, which already lost a fight to help its coal plants.

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Contact Andy at achow@statehousenews.org.