Legislature(2021 - 2022)BARNES 124

05/09/2022 01:00 PM House RESOURCES

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* first hearing in first committee of referral
+ teleconferenced
= bill was previously heard/scheduled
-- Recessed to 5/10/22 at 8:00 am --
+ SJR 23 SUPPORTING NAMING MTN AFTER GAIL PHILLIPS TELECONFERENCED
Moved SJR 23 Out of Committee
-- Invited & Public Testimony --
+ SB 177 MICROREACTORS TELECONFERENCED
Heard & Held
-- Invited & Public Testimony --
+= HB 120 STATE LAND SALES AND LEASES; RIVERS TELECONFERENCED
Heard & Held
+ Bills Previously Heard/Scheduled TELECONFERENCED
                      SB 177-MICROREACTORS                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
1:29:17 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR PATKOTAK  announced that the  next order of  business would                                                               
be CS FOR  SENATE BILL NO. 177(RES), "An Act  relating to nuclear                                                               
facility siting permits; and relating to microreactors."                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR PATKOTAK noted  that this is the committee's  first time to                                                               
hear CSSB  177(RES) but  that the committee  has twice  heard the                                                               
companion bill, HB 299, and taken public testimony on HB 299.                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
1:29:49 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CHRISTINA CARPENTER, Director,  Division of Environmental Health,                                                               
Department of  Environmental Conservation (DEC),  introduced CSSB
177(RES)  on  behalf  of the  Senate  Rules  Standing  Committee,                                                               
sponsor  by request  of the  governor.   She explained  that CSSB
177(RES)  would define  a microreactor  according to  the federal                                                               
definition  and  would  create  a  specific  carve-out  from  the                                                               
ongoing study  and legislative siting requirements.   She related                                                               
that  Senator Jesse  Kiehl worked  with DEC  on language  for two                                                               
amendments that  were incorporated  into the  bill by  the Senate                                                               
Resources Standing Committee.  She  explained that in lieu of the                                                               
current ongoing  study requirements for six  state agencies, CSSB
177(RES) would direct DEC to  coordinate and submit comments from                                                               
those agencies to the U.S.  Nuclear Regulatory Commission when an                                                               
Alaska  sited microreactor  license application  is put  forward.                                                               
She  said a  second amendment  added  language to  the bill  that                                                               
explicitly  obtains legislative  siting approval  for unorganized                                                               
boroughs.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
MS.  CARPENTER  deferred to  Mr.  Travis  Million of  the  Copper                                                               
Valley Electric  Association (CFEA) to provide  further testimony                                                               
on  CSSB  177(RES).   She  noted  that  CVEA is  an  electrically                                                               
isolated  electric  cooperative   in  Interior  and  Southcentral                                                               
Alaska, serving  Valdez, Glennallen,  and the  surrounding Copper                                                               
River  Basin, a  vast service  territory  of 160  miles north  to                                                               
south and  100 miles east  to west.   She said CVEA  is currently                                                               
conducting  a feasibility  study of  micro modular  reactor (MMR)                                                               
technology with the Ultra Safe Nuclear Corporation (USNC).                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
1:32:37 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
TRAVIS MILLION,  CEO, Copper Valley Electric  Association (CVEA),                                                               
provided  a PowerPoint  presentation [hard  copy included  in the                                                               
committee packet],  titled "Looking into Nuclear."   He displayed                                                               
the second slide,  "AGENDA," and said he will review  why CVEA is                                                               
looking at nuclear, what MMR  is and isn't, the environmental and                                                               
safety concerns,  the feasibility study,  and what CVEA  is doing                                                               
thus far for stakeholder engagement.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
MR.  MILLION proceeded  to the  third slide,  "WHY NUCLEAR."   He                                                               
stated that in  June [2021] the CVEA board  developed a strategic                                                               
plan for the cooperative, with one  of the five major goals being                                                               
to develop a plan to reduce  the cooperative's use of diesel fuel                                                               
for power  generation on  its system.   He  related that  CVEA is                                                               
nearly  100 percent  hydropower  in the  summer,  with an  annual                                                               
average of 70  percent hydropower.  In the  winter, he continued,                                                               
CVEA must rely  on diesel fuel at its generation  plants that use                                                               
either diesel or  a fossil fuel called light  straight run (LSR),                                                               
which comes from the Petro Star  Refinery, and which puts CVEA at                                                               
the whim of what fuel prices do.   He pointed out that in January                                                               
2021 CVEA  paid under $2  per gallon for  fuel and that  in March                                                               
2022 CVEA  paid nearly $4.50 per  gallon, plus at times  the fuel                                                               
cost spiked  to over $5 per  gallon for delivery to  CVEA's power                                                               
plants.   Mr.  Million noted  that this  year winter  came early,                                                               
resulting in CVEA  going from an average 30  percent hydro spread                                                               
over the winter to 20 percent  hydro, causing some of the biggest                                                               
increases  seen in  CVEA's history;  normally the  rate is  about                                                               
$0.19 per kilowatt hour in the  summer when on hydropower, but it                                                               
spiked to over $0.42 per kilowatt  hour this winter.  He said the                                                               
CVEA board wants to develop a plan  to get off diesel fuel and to                                                               
find ways  to get  rid of  the fluctuation of  fuel cost  so that                                                               
long term energy cost is stable for  many years to come.  He also                                                               
noted that reducing emissions from  fossil fuel power plants is a                                                               
major concern of  the CVEA board.  The CVEA  board has considered                                                               
wind  power, he  continued, but  the CVEA  service territory  has                                                               
marginal  Class 2  winds with  high turbulence,  so wind  doesn't                                                               
work.   Mr. Million said solar  power works great in  the summer,                                                               
but CVEA is already 100  percent hydropower then and that doesn't                                                               
solve  the cooperative's  wintertime issues.   He  said CVEA  has                                                               
looked at  geothermal, biomass, every  hydro asset that  could be                                                               
available  in  its  region,  and   interties  like  the  Railbelt                                                               
Intertie project.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
1:36:02 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. MILLION  addressed the two  photographs on the  fourth slide,                                                               
"MICRO MODULAR REACTOR (MMR)?"   He said the light water reactors                                                               
depicted in  these photos are  currently deployed  throughout the                                                               
U.S.  and the  world  and they  are typical  in  the gigawatt  or                                                               
thousands of  megawatt range.   But, he continued, these  are not                                                               
what is being talked about with micro modular reactors.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
MR. MILLION moved to the fifth  slide, "MMR SIZE COMPARISON."  He                                                               
explained that  the upper left  picture shows the footprint  of a                                                               
standard light water reactor, typically  about a gigawatt in size                                                               
and taking up 50-plus acres.   The reactor building, he added, is                                                               
the red  cylindrical building in the  middle of the picture.   He                                                               
then drew attention to the blue  rectangle on the lower right and                                                               
explained that  it is  the footprint of  a micro  modular reactor                                                               
like  the one  CVEA  is  looking at  through  Ultra Safe  Nuclear                                                               
Corporation (USNC)  and which takes up  approximately five acres.                                                               
He  said the  yellow square  is  the reactor  building, which  is                                                               
about  the size  of  a  40-foot Conex  buried  vertically in  the                                                               
ground.   To provide a size  comparison, he noted that  the green                                                               
rectangle to  the left of the  MMR is a football  field, and that                                                               
the MMR is essentially the size of two football fields.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
MR. MILLION  turned to the  sixth slide, "What is  a microreactor                                                               
and why?"   He stated CVEA is looking at  this technology because                                                               
it fits the cooperative's system very  well, which is about a 20-                                                               
megawatt summertime  load, peaking at  about 15 megawatts  in the                                                               
wintertime.   With CVEA's  little bit  of hydro,  he said,  a 10-                                                               
megawatt reactor would be about the  perfect size to take care of                                                               
wintertime  needs.   A second  benefit in  addition to  producing                                                               
electricity, he noted, is the  microreactor's process heat, which                                                               
could be  utilized for  industrial applications,  specifically in                                                               
the Valdez area.   He specified that a  microreactor meets CVEA's                                                               
needs by reducing carbon emissions  from its diesel power plants,                                                               
by addressing safety with this  newer technology, and by having a                                                               
long-time stable cost because the  design that CVEA is looking at                                                               
has between 20 and 40 years between needing to refuel.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
1:38:54 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. MILLION continued  to the seventh slide,  "Ultra Safe Nuclear                                                               
FCM Fuel,"  and stated  that this  microreactor uses  TRISO fuel.                                                               
He explained  that the blue dots  in the picture are  the uranium                                                               
pellets, which are  about the size of a poppy  seed.  These poppy                                                               
seed pieces of  uranium are triple coated in  silicon carbide, he                                                               
continued, and  then they  are set  in an array  as shown  in the                                                               
picture where they  are again coated in more  silicon carbide and                                                               
graphite.   He  said  this  keeps all  the  radiation intact  and                                                               
prevents it from  leaking out and from  thermally "running away";                                                               
it keeps the temperature from coming  up.  It is called "walkaway                                                               
safe,"  he  continued, because  if  there  is  a failure  to  the                                                               
cooling system,  personnel can walk  away since by physics  it is                                                               
going to  keep its temperature regulated  on its own and  that is                                                               
one  of the  nice  things with  this fuel  design.   Mr.  Million                                                               
further  noted  that this  fuel  design  was implemented  in  the                                                               
1970s, so it's not new technology.   What is new, he said, is the                                                               
manufacturing  technologies  and the  three-dimensional  printing                                                               
that now allow mass production of this fuel.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
                                             TM                                                                                 
MR. MILLION displayed  the eighth slide, "MMR   Energy System REM                                                               
2-Unit Layout for Remote Energy  Management."  He stated that the                                                               
diagrammatic represents  a generic layout of  a two-reactor plant                                                               
of about 10  megawatts, like what CVEA  is currently considering.                                                               
Regarding water  used for steam generation  becoming radioactive,                                                               
he said  it's a closed water  system.  He specified  that the two                                                               
reactors depicted on  the left are cooled with  helium, and since                                                               
helium is an inert gas, it  cannot absorb any radiation.  Heat is                                                               
taken from the reactor to a  heat exchanger where one side of the                                                               
heat  exchanger has  helium and  the  other has  molten salt,  he                                                               
continued.  The molten salt heats  up from that reaction, then it                                                               
goes  through another  heat exchanger  where the  other side  has                                                               
water or steam.  Through  this process, Mr. Million stated, there                                                               
is no  way for the radiation  to propagate down and  get into the                                                               
water  source.   This closed  loop totally  contained system,  he                                                               
added, doesn't require a river or any body of water for cooling.                                                                
                                                                                                                                
MR.   MILLION   discussed   the   ninth   slide,   "Projects   in                                                               
Development."  He  advised that if CVEA's  feasibility study goes                                                               
through, the cooperative will not be  the first one given USNC is                                                               
currently working  on a  project set  to come  online in  2026 at                                                               
Chalk River in Canada.  He said  USNC also has a project in place                                                               
with the University of Illinois where  a test reactor will be put                                                               
in the  middle of  campus where  it will  be utilized  and tested                                                               
through  the  university's radiological  engineering  department.                                                               
So, he  continued, if  it pencils  out for  CVEA to  move forward                                                               
with this project,  the cooperative would be number  three of the                                                               
USNC deployed reactors.  However,  he noted, the project would be                                                               
the first  commercial reactor potentially  within the  nation and                                                               
within USNC's fleet.                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
1:42:53 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR.  MILLION   moved  to  the   tenth  slide,   "CVEA/USNC  Joint                                                               
Feasibility  Study."   He related  that  the economics  is a  big                                                               
driver as  to whether  this will  work; it won't  be as  cheap as                                                               
CVEA's hydropower,  but it would  be far  less than what  CVEA is                                                               
presently paying for  diesel.  So, he said, CVEA  is shooting for                                                               
something  in   between  that   will  balance   generation  costs                                                               
throughout  the  year to  be  the  same  rate  year round.    The                                                               
feasibility study is looking at  potential locations to determine                                                               
whether there is a mix that  could work well there, he continued.                                                               
The  only downfall,  he  noted,  is that  there  is presently  no                                                               
industrial  application for  the heat  in the  Copper Basin.   He                                                               
related  that  the  feasibility study  is  looking  at  benefits,                                                               
concerns, and issues for the  community.  He explained that given                                                               
USNC is  the manufacturer  of this  technology and  involved with                                                               
the feasibility  study, CVEA brought in  an Anchorage engineering                                                               
firm, Electric Power Systems (EPS),  a firm that works with every                                                               
utility  in Alaska,  primarily designing  generation distribution                                                               
transmission as well as  installing, operating, and commissioning                                                               
these  things.   He said  EPS is  doing most  of the  feasibility                                                               
study from  the standpoint  of integration and  cost, as  well as                                                               
some of the  environmental impact, and USNC  is looking primarily                                                               
at  the nuclear  side  of  the feasibility  study.   Mr.  Million                                                               
estimated that  the feasibility study  would be completed  by the                                                               
end of  summer [2022],  at which  time the  CVEA board  will take                                                               
public comment and then decide whether to move forward.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
MR.  MILLION  continued  to  the eleventh  slide,  "CVEA  &  USNC                                                               
Engagement," and discussed stakeholder  engagement.  He explained                                                               
that CVEA normally  wouldn't start talking to the  public until a                                                               
feasibility  study had  been conducted  and the  results were  in                                                               
hand; however,  given the word  "nuclear" can be a  trigger point                                                               
for people,  he said CVEA  wanted to get  out front and  hear the                                                               
concerns  of communities  and what  opportunities  CVEA might  be                                                               
overlooking that could be integrated  into the feasibility study.                                                               
In Valdez presentations  have been given to the  city council, he                                                               
stated, and  open public  meetings have been  held in  Valdez and                                                               
with the  Greater Copper Basin  Chamber of Commerce.   One-on-one                                                               
meetings with individual stakeholders  have also been undertaken,                                                               
he noted.   He related  that most  of the questions  are similar,                                                               
such  as  how CVEA  is  dealing  with  the safety  concerns,  the                                                               
environmental concerns, and getting rid of the hazardous waste.                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
MR. MILLION addressed the issue of  waste.  He said CVEA has been                                                               
given a guarantee by USNC.   Refueling would occur once every 20-                                                               
40 years,  he related,  and when  the fuel comes  out it  will be                                                               
stored in a cask that is safe to  be around and which is how most                                                               
nuclear waste  is stored in the  U.S. today.  The  fuel would sit                                                               
on site  anywhere from  six months  to two years  to allow  it to                                                               
cool, he  said, and once  cooled USNC  would transport it  out of                                                               
Alaska and at  that point it is USNC's  responsibility to dispose                                                               
of the  [spent] fuel at  either an interim USNC  storage facility                                                               
or through  the U.S. Government to  dispose of it in  a long-term                                                               
storage  solution.    Mr.  Million  explained  that  the  Nuclear                                                               
Regulatory Commission requires that funding  be put in place when                                                               
licensing a nuclear  reactor like this, such that  if the company                                                               
were to go out of business  there would already be funds in place                                                               
to get rid of the nuclear fuel waste at that point in time.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
1:48:12 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE RAUSCHER thanked Mr.  Million for such an in-depth                                                               
presentation.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR PATKOTAK  inquired about  the dollar  amount that  would be                                                               
put aside at licensing for long-term fuel storage.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
MR. MILLION  replied that  CVEA isn't far  enough along  into the                                                               
feasibility study to know what those costs might be.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
1:49:04 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE GILLHAM  offered his understanding that  HB 199 is                                                               
the companion  bill to  SB 177.   He  recalled that  there wasn't                                                               
much  opposition to  HB  199,  but said  he  is  getting lots  of                                                               
opposition  to  CSSB 177(RES).    He  asked  whether there  is  a                                                               
difference  in  the  two  bills  that  is  creating  the  current                                                               
opposition that wasn't there before.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
MR. MILLION responded  he isn't sure why the  opposition would be                                                               
different  given  the bills  are  identical  except for  the  two                                                               
amendments on  the Senate side.   He said most of  the opposition                                                               
he has  heard has been  consistent on  both the House  and Senate                                                               
sides, and he personally hasn't heard any additional opposition.                                                                
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE GILLHAM stated that most  of the opposition has to                                                               
do with storage.   He related that he didn't  get this opposition                                                               
when discussing HB 199, so he is curious as to why he is now.                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
1:50:28 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE FIELDS  asked whether  CVEA is negotiating  a ramp                                                               
down in  prices with  USNC assuming that  as the  company deploys                                                               
more of these  across the U.S. it can achieve  profitability at a                                                               
lower price point than in the initial negotiation.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
MR.  MILLION answered  that this  will be  coming up  through the                                                               
feasibility  study since  CVEA is  looking at  different options,                                                               
such as whether  CVEA owns and operates or whether  USNC owns and                                                               
operates and  CVEA buys the power.   So, he continued,  CVEA will                                                               
look at  that for a long-term  contract if it buys  power through                                                               
USNC.  He allowed that Representative  Fields has a good point to                                                               
keep in mind.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
1:51:33 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE HANNAN asked whether  anything in existing statute                                                               
prevents CVEA from applying for permission and siting.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
MR. MILLION replied, "Not necessarily  anything that precludes us                                                               
from being able  to do it, but definitely some  ... hurdles."  He                                                               
said having to bring a  siting requirement to the legislature and                                                               
trying to get  that approved could be difficult  depending on who                                                               
is in the  legislature in any given year.   So, he continued, the                                                               
amendments to the  bill would make it easier  and more attractive                                                               
for the  manufacturers to  want to look  at Alaska  for deploying                                                               
these, especially in  remote communities.  While he  won't say it                                                               
is a hindrance, he added,  it could be potentially more difficult                                                               
to get siting authority as the statute is written today.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  HANNAN asked  whether  Mr. Million  can point  to                                                               
where those challenges are in  the existing statute or whether it                                                               
is something that an agency has said will be problematic.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
MR.  MILLION  responded he  has  heard  it through  agencies  and                                                               
through his  knowledge of the  process   anything  coming through                                                               
the  legislature versus  keeping it  more of  a local  control is                                                               
going to  be more time consuming  and burdensome.  He  said he is                                                               
answering the question on the  standpoint that anytime siting the                                                               
land must go through the state  or federal government it can be a                                                               
very  time-consuming  process [as  opposed  to  going through  an                                                               
agency] like DEC or U.S. Bureau of Land Management (BLM).                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  HANNAN  asked  whether  Mr. Million  was  led  to                                                               
believe  that  CVEA's project  could  not  go forward  without  a                                                               
change in statute.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
MR.  MILLION answered  no, CVEA  wasn't told  one way  or another                                                               
whether it could go through based on statute.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
1:53:38 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  HANNAN presumed  that because  CVEA's feasibility                                                               
study is  not yet  done, there  is not an  exact site  where CVEA                                                               
would want the project.   She offered her understanding, based on                                                               
current statute  and what CSSB  177(RES) attempts to do,  that if                                                               
Mr. Million were  here today with a specific  site, the committee                                                               
could  approve  it.    She  said  much  of  the  hesitation  from                                                               
legislators  and the  opposition  being heard  is  that it  would                                                               
throw out a  requirement that any specific  nuclear projects come                                                               
before the  legislature along  with the  ability for  everyone in                                                               
the  state to  engage  on  a project  and  get  answers to  their                                                               
questions  about where  the waste  will  be stored  and what  the                                                               
local hazards  are from tsunami  to earthquake, as opposed  to it                                                               
being up  to a  local government, a  utility, and  state agencies                                                               
that have had  no previous regulatory oversight  with nuclear and                                                               
no  additional dollars  through staffing  according to  their own                                                               
fiscal note.   That is the hesitation for many  people, she said,                                                               
not CVEA's individual project.   She asked whether she is correct                                                               
in understanding  that CVEA is  five to seven years  from needing                                                               
it and that  CVEA's feasibility study this summer  should lead to                                                               
a specific location.                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
MR. MILLION replied  that the feasibility study  should give CVEA                                                               
a couple  different potential locations  and CVEA would  make its                                                               
decision on whether  to go ahead based on that  and economics, as                                                               
well as other considerations.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE HANNAN said  she looks forward to  hearing about a                                                               
specific project next year.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
1:56:06 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE   FIELDS  asked   whether   the  Municipality   of                                                               
Anchorage would have local  control oversighting of microreactors                                                               
should  this bill  pass.    He further  asked  whether there  are                                                               
differences  among the  different  types  of jurisdictions  apart                                                               
from the unorganized boroughs.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
MS.  CARPENTER responded  that under  [CSSB 177(RES)],  organized                                                               
boroughs would  have the ability  to make that  siting authority,                                                               
and  if  a borough  is  unorganized  then the  legislature  would                                                               
retain that siting authority.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  FIELDS surmised  that  that  means the  Anchorage                                                               
Assembly would  have the authority  to say where such  a facility                                                               
could be sited within the Municipality of Anchorage.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
MS.  CARPENTER  answered that  is  correct,  the Municipality  of                                                               
Anchorage would be able to have that authority.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE FIELDS  requested that the committee  chair obtain                                                               
confirmation that this is also  the interpretation of Legislative                                                               
Legal  Services because  that might  provide  some assurance  for                                                               
Anchorage residents that there is a degree of public review.                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR PATKOTAK  confirmed he would do  so.  He said  he thinks it                                                               
is  like  any other  situation  that  comes up  that  unorganized                                                               
boroughs don't  have the authority  to determine  for themselves,                                                               
and it runs  through the House and Senate  Community and Regional                                                               
Affairs Standing Committees.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE HANNAN  requested that Legislative  Legal Services                                                               
advise  the committee  on  whether  first-class boroughs  without                                                               
planning and  zoning authority and  second-class cities  can have                                                               
their city councils [issue] permits.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
1:59:31 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE   GILLHAM   asked   whether  the   reason   behind                                                               
microreactors is for a more stable energy source or for cost.                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MR.  MILLION replied  that the  biggest thing  for CVEA  is lower                                                               
energy cost and long-term stability  over at least a 40-year life                                                               
of the plant.   He pointed out  that a 40-year life  of the plant                                                               
is  the life  of the  license on  a microreactor,  and it  can be                                                               
renewed after that, much like  CVEA's hydropower plants typically                                                               
have a  40- or 50-year license  and then CVEA renews  the license                                                               
to  extend  it.   Long-term,  stable,  lower-cost energy  is  the                                                               
primary driver, he added.                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  GILLHAM   asked  what  CVEA  will   do  with  its                                                               
hydropower plants.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
MR. MILLION responded that what  is nice about this technology is                                                               
it doesn't have to come on and stay  on, it can be turned off and                                                               
on as  needed.   He said  CVEA would  run 100  percent hydropower                                                               
when hydropower  is available and  bring the reactor  down either                                                               
just to  produce heat  for industrial processes  or shut  it down                                                               
until it  is needed at the  beginning of winter, then  ramp it up                                                               
with  the wintertime  generation.   Doing that,  he noted,  would                                                               
extend the  life of the  fuel even longer, so  if the fuel  has a                                                               
10-year life when run  at 100 percent for 24 hours  a day, 7 days                                                               
a week, 365 days  a year, then running it at  half the time would                                                               
get almost a 20-year life out of the fuel.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
2:01:18 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR  PATKOTAK opened  public testimony  on CSSB  177(RES), then                                                               
closed it after ascertaining that no one wished to testify.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
2:01:40 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
The committee took an at-ease from 2:01 p.m. to 2:02 p.m.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
2:02:28 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR PATKOTAK stated that the  committee would conduct potential                                                               
follow-up on CSSB 177(RES) on 5/10/22.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
[CSSB 177(RES) was held over].                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                

Document Name Date/Time Subjects
SB 177 Presentation CVEA 5.9.2022.pdf HRES 5/9/2022 1:00:00 PM
SB 177
SJR 23 Image of Family With Mountain 3.18.2022.jpg HRES 5/9/2022 1:00:00 PM
SRES 3/18/2022 3:30:00 PM
SJR 23
SJR 23 Image of Mountain Aerial 3.18.2022.jpg HRES 5/9/2022 1:00:00 PM
SRES 3/18/2022 3:30:00 PM
SJR 23
SJR 23 Image of Mountain From Deck 3.18.2022.jpg HRES 5/9/2022 1:00:00 PM
SRES 3/18/2022 3:30:00 PM
SJR 23
SJR 23 Image of Mountain Location 3.18.2022.jpg HRES 5/9/2022 1:00:00 PM
SRES 3/18/2022 3:30:00 PM
SJR 23
SJR 23 Letter of Support Cappelletti 03.16.2022.pdf HRES 5/9/2022 1:00:00 PM
SRES 3/18/2022 3:30:00 PM
SJR 23
SJR 23 Letter of Support Judy Brady 03.14.2022.pdf HRES 5/9/2022 1:00:00 PM
SRES 3/18/2022 3:30:00 PM
SJR 23
SJR 23 Letter of Support Kim Griffith 03.12.2022.pdf HRES 5/9/2022 1:00:00 PM
SRES 3/18/2022 3:30:00 PM
SJR 23
SJR 23 Letter of Support Debardelaben 03.17.2022.pdf HRES 5/9/2022 1:00:00 PM
SJR 23
SJR 23 Letter of Support Ralph Samuels 03.16.2022.pdf HRES 5/9/2022 1:00:00 PM
SRES 3/18/2022 3:30:00 PM
SJR 23
SJR 23 Sponsor Statement 3.18.2022.pdf HRES 5/9/2022 1:00:00 PM
SRES 3/18/2022 3:30:00 PM
SJR 23
SJR 23 Letter of Support DeBardelaben 3.18.2022.pdf HRES 5/9/2022 1:00:00 PM
SRES 3/18/2022 3:30:00 PM
SJR 23
SB 177 Sectional Analysis 5.9.2022.pdf HRES 5/9/2022 1:00:00 PM
SB 177
SB 177 Explanation of Changes Version B 5.9.2022.pdf HRES 5/9/2022 1:00:00 PM
SB 177
HB 120 Amendment Fields G.2 5.9.2022.pdf HRES 5/9/2022 1:00:00 PM
HB 120
HB 120 Amendment Fields G.3 5.9.2022.pdf HRES 5/9/2022 1:00:00 PM
HB 120
HB 120 Testimony Packet Three 5.9.2022.pdf HRES 5/9/2022 1:00:00 PM
HB 120
HB 120 Amendment Hannan G.7 5.9.22.pdf HRES 5/9/2022 1:00:00 PM
HB 120