Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Plant Vogtle Unit 3 reactor caused month long delay, spokesman says team is dedicated to bringing safe, affordable energy for next ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Gov. Brian Kemp celebrated the completion of the Plant Vogtle nuclear expansion Wednesday while acknowledging the obstacles that ...
Nuclear power currently supplies roughly 20% of U.S. electricity, but because of its reliability compared to wind and solar ...
WAYNESBORO — At the crack of dawn on Monday, dignitaries and power company executives gathered on a rural Burke County hilltop overlooking Plant Vogtle for a celebration that was years delayed. On a ...
Georgia Power has begun splitting atoms to produce heat inside the second of its two new nuclear reactors at Plant Vogtle, a key milestone toward completion of the long-delayed project. The step known ...
Georgia Power announced on Friday that Unit 4 at Plant Vogtle is generating electricity, successfully synchronizing and connecting to the electric grid for the first time. This step follows initial ...
Few issues are as divisive among American environmentalists as nuclear energy. But this well-worn debate may not actually be the one that determines the future of nuclear energy in the United States.
Hundreds of people gathered in Waynesboro, Georgia Friday to officially celebrate the completion of Vogtle Units 3 & 4. Source: Southern Nuclear. Jeff Quick has the unique distinction of being the ...
Georgia Power this week announced that Plant Vogtle Unit 4 has started hot functional testing, its next step toward reaching fuel loading. This testing is conducted to confirm the reactor is ready for ...
As part of Grist and WABE’s yearlong collaboration to demystify the Georgia Public Service Commission, we hosted a Community Reporting Fellowship — a six-week training program in which fellows learned ...
Gov. Brian Kemp celebrated the completion of the Plant Vogtle nuclear expansion Wednesday while acknowledging the obstacles that had to be overcome in building the first nuclear reactors in the U.S.