Nuke Plant Accelerates Radioactive Teardown Green Light
Published Date: 2/17/2026
Notice
Summary
Constellation Energy wants to use some money from their nuclear cleanup fund to quickly get rid of old radioactive parts and tear down the building storing them at Dresden Nuclear Power Station in Illinois. The Nuclear Regulatory Commission checked it out and says this plan won’t harm the environment. This means cleanup can move faster without extra costs or delays.
Analyzed Economic Effects
3 provisions identified: 2 benefits, 1 costs, 0 mixed.
Allow $20M-per-Unit DTF Withdrawals
The NRC is considering exemptions that would let Constellation Energy withdraw funds from the Dresden units' decommissioning trust funds up to $20 million per unit to dispose of certain retired major radioactive components and to demolish and dispose of the mausoleum that stores them. The licensee requested this by letter dated January 31, 2025, supplemented January 20, 2026, and the application would accelerate withdrawals that otherwise would occur after permanent cessation of operations.
Denial Could Delay Disposal or Cause New Storage
If the NRC denied the exemptions, the licensee would likely postpone disposal activities until permanent cessation of operations, use other funds, or build a new long-term onsite storage facility at Dresden; the NRC states building a new storage facility would have environmental impacts greater than the requested exemptions. The denial alternative was considered in the EA as having similar or additional environmental impacts compared to granting the exemptions.
NRC Finds No Significant Impact
The NRC prepared an Environmental Assessment and issued a Finding of No Significant Impact (FONSI) for the requested exemptions, concluding there would be no significant radiological or non-radiological environmental impacts and no decrease in safety. The EA and FONSI are available on February 17, 2026.
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