SACRAMENTO — Preparing for months of battle over who should pay the
estimated $4.1-billion cost of permanently shutting down the San Onofre
nuclear power plant, which closed in June, Southern California Edison has launched a public relations campaign suggesting that ratepayers pick up part of the cost.
Who pays — ratepayers, stockholders, equipment
manufacturers or insurers — is expected to be a long and thorny dispute
before state and federal regulatory agencies as well as in the courts.
On the eve of legislative hearings Tuesday on the issue, the utility
offered its 4.9 million customers a preview of its point of view in an
advertisement published in the Los Angeles Times.
Closing the power plant is in
the "best interests" of customers, it said, and ratepayers should be
prepared to pitch in. The company discovered that hundreds of new steam
generating tubes were wearing out, and it determined that keeping the
plant open till the problem was resolved would be too costly.
"[I]f a utility asset must be retired before the end of its expected
life, the utility recovers from customers its reasonable investment
costs," Edison wrote.
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