ATVG Winter 2024 Newsletter Published

ATVG 2024 Winter Newsletter has been published for membership.  Feel free to browse for some interesting articles provided by latest TVA press release information.  View newsletter here. 

Make sure to check out our new mailing address and agenda and registration for upcoming meeting February 6 at the Murfreesboro TN Embassy Suites.

Photo by Jason Ayers

Winter ATVG Meeting To Be Held in Murfreesboro TN

Our meeting date for the upcoming February 6, 2024 in Murfreesboro, TN is rapidly approaching and members attending will need to make your room reservations now before our ATVG room block is full.   Please call 1-800-EMBASSY as soon as possible to take advantage of special room rates.

We have an outstanding program planned which includes a TVA update and a presentation on TVA’s Payment-In-Lieu-Of-Taxes (Pilot) with projections on Pilot payments for 2024.  We will also be dining that night at a favorite ATVG location: Five Senses Restaurant and Bar.

Please make your reservations soon to join us for a great meeting.  Please visit ATVG.org for registration forms and please note our new mailing address in now ATVG, PO Box 1504, Paris, TN  38242.  Payment for registration can be mailed to our new address.  Download a copy of the Agenda and Registration Form here.

Wishing you and your family a prosperous New Year!

Mike Arms, Executive Director

ATVG

Deborah Grubbs Leaving ATVG Post

The Association of Tennessee Valley Governments will soon be saying goodbye to long time ATVG Program Director Deborah Grubbs of Clarksville, TN.  Deborah has served ATVG for 17 years and will be greatly missed.  Mike Arms, ATVG Executive Director said, “Grubbs has been the smiling face members see at each meeting and has worked hard behind the scenes with various administrative duties from meeting agenda’s, keeping the minutes, to scheduling venue space for the association.  It has been a pleasure to work with Deborah over the years.  She and Geno have become such close friends.”  Grubbs said she has enjoyed her time with the group and has made life long friendships who will always remain close.  Grubbs is looking forward to spending more time with her retired police officer husband, Geno, and her mother.

Ron Watkins of Paris, TN has been hired to replace Grubbs.  Watkins is the Emergency Management/Solid Waste Director for Henry County TN.  The association has moved their Post Office Box to Paris and the new association address is ATVG, PO Box 1504, Paris TN. 38242.

US Energy Secretary’s Visit Marks Global Significance of TVA’s Small Modular Reactors

U.S. Secretary of Energy Jennifer Granholm and Tennessee Valley Authority CEO Jeff Lyash joined forces this week at the Clinch River Nuclear Site to praise the site’s potential to answer a fundamental question of energy in the 21st century: how to make nuclear power plants smaller and more affordable. The Secretary’s visit marked the potential construction of small modular reactors at TVA’s Clinch River Nuclear Site near Oak Ridge as a project of national and global significance. Read more at Knoxville News Sentinel
Story By:
Daniel Dassow

Knoxville News Sentinel

U.S. Secretary of Energy Jennifer Granholm and Tennessee Valley Authority CEO Jeff Lyash joined forces Dec. 5 at the Clinch River Nuclear Site to praise the site’s potential to answer a fundamental question of energy in the 21st century: how to make nuclear power plants smaller and more affordable.

Her visit marked the potential construction of small modular reactors at TVA’s Clinch River Nuclear Site as a project of national and global significance. Small modular reactors are smaller and produce less power than traditional nuclear plants, but are expected to cost far less and could be built in clusters to match the output of shuttered coal-fired plants.

In the future, the small modular reactors could bring carbon-free power to hospitals and factories, cropping up across the U.S. like coal plants did a century ago.

The Biden administration’s massive investments in clean energy have placed Granholm, a former two-term governor of Michigan, among the most powerful secretaries of energy.

The Department of Energy owns much of Oak Ridge, including Oak Ridge National Laboratory and the Y-12 National Security Complex, and frequently partners with TVA.

Granholm said TVA and its partners in Oak Ridge and Knoxville are leading the way on new nuclear technology that could help the administration reach its ambitious goals of a carbon-free national electric grid by 2035 and a net-zero carbon emissions economy by 2050.

“Oak Ridge has such an important role to play in our national security and in our clean energy future,” Granholm told Knox News. “That combination makes it irresistible.”

No small modular reactors have been built in the U.S., though several are under development. In 2019, the Clinch River Nuclear Site was the first small modular reactor project to get an early site permit from the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, giving TVA the all-clear to move towards design and budgeting.

When will TVA small modular reactors be built?

The biggest question for the agency now is how to pay for the small modular reactors. Being the first to deploy the technology is always costlier, said Lyash, the TVA CEO. He expects the money to come in part from electricity sales and from outside investment, though a detailed budget is years away.

By 2026 or 2027, the agency will make a final decision on whether to build a small modular reactor at the Clinch River site, pending final design and budget models. TVA would then apply for a construction permit and operating license from the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.

If the first unit successfully comes online in the early 2030s, TVA plans to build several others at the site to demonstrate the technology can be deployed throughout the country.

In March, TVA announced it would join partners to invest $400 million to develop GE Hitachi’s 300 megawatt small modular reactor technology, which the agency plans to license and build at the Clinch River Nuclear Site.

Ontario Power in Canada and Synthos Green Energy in Poland are the other two partners. Granholm called the four partners, two in the U.S. and two in allied nations, a “magic elixir” for making small modular reactors a reality in the U.S.

The U.S. joined more than 20 countries in a declaration committing to triple their nuclear fleets by 2050 at the COP28 climate summit in Dubai on Dec. 2. That requires the U.S. to go from 100 gigawatts to 300 gigawatts of nuclear power, something Granholm said would be impossible without small modular reactors.

A gigawatt is enough to power around 750,000 homes. Hoover Dam has a power output of around two gigawatts. By 2050, the U.S. must create enough new nuclear power generation to equal 100 Hoover Dams, Granholm said.

The global clean energy technology market is expected to reach $23 trillion by 2030 and the U.S. is in a position to export that technology stamped with a “Made in America” label, Granholm said.

For her, the jobs that small modular reactors and other clean energy technologies could bring is personal. As governor of Michigan during the Great Recession, she saw thousands of auto manufacturing jobs leave her state.

“We used to stand by the side of the road and watch all these jobs leave and I was governor when I saw these factories close,” Granholm told Knox News. “We allowed China to take us to the cleaners. And we’re not doing that anymore. We’re standing up and we’re saying, no, we’re going to get those jobs and those businesses in the United States.”

A rendering shows TVA’s small modular reactor at the Clinch River Site,  about the size  of a football field, could
look like once completed.  Courtesy of Tennessee Valley Authority.

Clinch River Site could bring clean energy future

The Clinch River Nuclear Site, located on a bend of the river a few miles east of the Kingston Fossil Plant, doesn’t look like much right now. It’s a field with a few trailers as workspaces and picket fences to mark the corners of the future small modular reactor units.

It was once meant to house a breeder reactor, which would create more nuclear fuel than it used, though President Jimmy Carter opposed the expensive project and Congress pulled the plug on funding in the 1980s.

The 2020s are a different story, and small modular reactors are a different kind of technology.

President Biden authorized $369 billion of investment in clean energy projects, from EV battery manufacturing to advanced nuclear energy, in the Inflation Reduction Act, the largest single investment in clean energy in U.S. history. Some $36 billion of that money went to Department of Energy projects.

Early last year, the department created a structure to implement $62 billion for clean energy projects from the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law passed in 2021. The department has a rigorous auditing process to ensure money is used correctly by recipients, Granholm said. Funding is given in increments contingent on projects reaching critical milestones.

Even as it expands its nuclear technology and retires coal plants, Lyash said he expects nuclear will occupy the same proportion of TVA’s energy mix as it does now. In fiscal year 2023, nuclear generation made up 42% of TVA’s total power generation.

For the first time, all seven units at three plants – Browns Ferry, Sequoyah and Watts Bar – were recognized for their excellence by the Institute of Nuclear Power Operations.

Lyash said the mission of TVA, the nation’s largest public power provider, is to help the U.S. maintain its position as the world’s largest economy through 2050, a goal that will require reliable, affordable and safe nuclear technology.

Daniel Dassow is a growth and development reporter focused on technology and energy. Phone 423-637-0878. Email daniel.dassow@knoxnews.com.

Support strong local journalism by subscribing at knoxnews.com/subscribe.   

ATVG Announces 2024 Meeting Dates

ATVG Announces 2024 Meeting Dates

We have finalized our meeting dates and locations for 2024 and want you to make plans early to join us.

Our 2024 meeting dates are:

  • February 6 at the Embassy Suites in Murfreesboro, TN  (1-800-Embassy)
  • June 19 at the Marriott Shoals in Florence, AL (256-246-3600)
  • October 23 at the Courtyard Marriott in Gatlinburg, TN  (865-436-2008)

Room blocks are in place at all hotels with rooms available for the previous night for early arrivals.  Thank you for your support of ATVG!

TVA’s Plan For Growth- An Article By TVA President and CEO Jeff Lyash

Jeff Lyash is president and CEO of the Tennessee Valley Authority. He wrote this in collaboration with the Tennessee Business Forum, which provides Ten­nessee-connected business leaders with the opportunity to engage with other ex­ecutives from various industries to dis­cuss a broad range of national legisla­tive and regulatory issues. Learn more at Tennesseebusinessforum.com.  See the article here.

Stakeholder Update

TVA May 10 Board Meeting Recap

The Tennessee Valley Authority Board of Directors on Wednesday recognized the agency’s 90th-anniversary milestone and outlined the agency’s plan to double its solar energy capacity while supporting the Tennessee Valley region’s record-growing demand.

“TVA’s mission of service is just as important today as it was 90 years ago,” said TVA President and CEO Jeff Lyash. “We were created as an innovation company, and we will use that same innovative spirit and mission of service as we address today’s challenges. Our region is experiencing growth at six times the national average, which means we must invest in our current power system and build new generation so we can continue meeting our region’s demand.”

TVA’s Approach to Meeting Our Region’s Rapidly Growing Energy Needs – Highlights from CEO Jeff Lyash’s Report

TVA believes the transition to a clean energy economy requires a holistic approach that entails a strategy that must be broad and flexible and should consider the economic and environmental effects of our choices. Also, there is no “one option” that provides all the reliable, affordable, resilient and clean power needed for our future.

And the recent growth of people moving to the Valley and economic development in our region has underscored the need to provide affordable, reliable power today. We are currently building new generation that includes solar, energy storage, combustion turbines and combined-cycle natural gas. But more energy resources are needed to meet load growth, the onshoring of manufacturing, and the electrification of other sectors. TVA is aware that it takes time to study, site, permit, source, and build generation assets; and it is currently taking longer than ever before with additional risk.

To create flexibility and provide information for TVA’s decision-makers, we will begin numerous environmental studies with different near-term and long-term options. These reviews will help us prepare for the future, be more agile in execution, and continue to meet the growing needs of the Valley.

We are conducting a study of the environmental impacts of new solar facilities and additional gas sites and conducting a review of new pumped storage facilities which are needed to balance the intermittency of our growing renewable portfolio. Additionally, we are reviewing individual projects on turbines and generators to increase MWs on the existing hydro-generation fleet.

Importantly, we continue an environmental study on the possible retirement of the Kingston Fossil plant. Due to the need for firm dispatchable power and grid stability in the Eastern part of the system, gas is our preferred alternative for the site and would reduce carbon emissions by approximately 60% and serves as a bridge as other technologies are developed. The Kingston (DEIS) assesses the impacts associated with the retirement of Kingston Fossil Plant units near Kingston, Tenn., and the potential construction and operation of alternative replacement generation, including replacing retired generation with a natural gas plant. We will not make a final decision on retirement and replacement generation without public input at the conclusion of the environmental review, specifically the record of decision planned for publication in early 2024. A public comment period is scheduled from May 19 – July 3. Public comments can be submitted for this and other new studies at Get Involved, Stay Involved (tva.com).

Over the next few months, we will also be conducting other environmental studies including building a virtual power plant from our energy efficiency and demand response programs which could meet up to 40% of load growth. We will continue to study individual solar projects including the possibility of awarding up to 40 new projects that are being identified through TVA’s Clean Energy RFP and we will finalize environmental studies on providing Local Power Companies more power supply flexibility to bring online additional carbon-free resources and/or storage projects.

Along with our evaluation of the Clinch River site for a small-modular reactor, we anticipate starting environmental reviews of additional potential sites around the Valley. And we remain focused on our goal to reach net-zero.

We will also begin work on the next Integrated Resource Plan which will help us explore options to reach net-zero carbon emissions by 2050. Information about these ongoing reviews and how you can participate can be found on our TVA website throughout the summer.

Public Engagement/ Notice of Intent (NOI) – 4 NOIs are posting Friday, May 12

NOIs – announce public comment period and virtual and in-person public meeting and ask for public input on what should and should not be evaluated as part of future environmental reviews. Four NOIs – pumped storage, programmatic solar, Cheatham County, IRP and the Kingston Draft Environmental Impact Statement (DEIS) are posted for public review and comment along with scheduled public meetings. Find details at Get Involved, Stay Involved (tva.com).

TVA is building the energy system of the future to enable ongoing and future growth around the Valley, focusing on cleaner and more efficient energy generation while maintaining low rates and reliable power for the 10 million people we are privileged to serve. This effort includes evaluating all our assets to include possible retirement and replacement generation needs as outlined in TVA’s 2019 Integrated Resource Plan (IRP).

Additional News

TVA has released its 2022 Sustainability Report. Sustainability for TVA means ensuring its ability to provide the region with affordable and reliable energy, a healthy environment, and a prosperous economy. Accomplishments cited in the report include:

  • Helped attract $10.2 billion in projected capital investments – with 26,512 jobs expected to be created and 40,027 jobs retained
  • Advanced its Environmental Justice Program to help address disproportionate health, environmental, economic and climate impacts on disadvantaged communities
  • Donated more than $9 million in community contributions and disaster relief
  • Announced a partnership with the Baker Center for Public Policy at the University of Tennessee to study ways all segments of the economy can move the region toward a clean, secure energy future
  • Sponsored 449 total environmental outreach and stewardship projects across the region
  • Completed 120 biodiversity projects and initiatives
  • Prevented an estimated $3 million in flood damage along the Tennessee River

Read the full report at tva.com/reports.

If you have questions, please contact Cathy Coffey at ccoffey@tva.gov.

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Tennessee Valley Authority, 400 West Summit Hill Drive, Knoxville, TN 37902-1499