Basic Facts:
- Location: Avila Beach, California
- Owner: PG&E Corporation
- Operator: Pacific Gas & Electric Company
- Construction Cost: $14B (2018$)
- Plant Output: 2,250 MW
- Property Size: 1,000 acres
- Scheduled Shut Down: Unit 1 (2024) and Unit 2 (2025)
- Employees: 1,300
- Current DTF Balance: $2.9B (2018$)
- DTF Balance Prior to Decommissioning: $4.5B (2018$)
- Decommissioning Cost Estimate: $1.0B (2018$)
- Spent Nuclear Fuel On Site: 1,388 tons
Background
Diablo Canyon 1 and 2 are both pressurized water reactors coming online in 1985 and 1986 respectively. In 2016, PG&E announced that the operating licenses would not be renewed when they expire in 2024 (for Unit 1) and in 2025 (for Unit 2). Additional information on Diablo Canyon’s decommissioning planning efforts may be found here.
Socioeconomics
Diablo Canyon is located within San Luis Obispo County, California. As of 2016:
- Population: 280,000
- Per Capita Annual Income: $51,400
- Unemployment rate (not seasonally adjusted): 3.6%
Annual tax payments (approximately $15M) from Diablo Canyon account for approximately 6% of the county’s annual budget.
Contact Information
Economic Development Administration Representative:
- Wilfred Marshall, Los Angeles Regional Office, t: (310) 348-5386, e: [email protected]
Nuclear Regulatory Commission
- Victor Dricks, Sr. Public Affairs Officer, t: (817) 200-1128, e: [email protected]
- Diablo Canyon 1, Diablo Canyon 2
Unless specific costing information has been provided, decommissioning costs were derived from 2017 Decommissioning Funding Status Report.
Information herein obtained from public sources. Corrections are welcome and may be directed to [email protected].
Additional Information
Bi-partisan coalition discusses the use of Diablo Canyon Power Plant after decommissioning
Bi-partisan coalition discusses the use of Diablo Canyon Power Plant after decommissioningThe Diablo Canyon Nuclear Power Plant is scheduled to be shutdown by 2025 and decommissioned in the following years, but the future use of the land is still up in the air. REACH, a Central Coast economic impact non-profit, is forming a bipartisan coalition […]
Read MoreCoalition of local leaders announce partnership to help plan future use of Diablo Canyon
Coalition of local leaders announce partnership to help plan future use of Diablo Canyon | NewsChannel 3-12 SAN LUIS OBISPO, Calif. — A coalition of Central Coast leaders announced a broad-based partnership that will help plan the future transformation of the Diablo Canyon property once the nuclear power plant is closed in 2025.
Read MoreCould Diablo Canyon become a green energy hub? ‘Grand vision’ includes eco-tourism, research
Could Diablo Canyon become a green energy hub? ‘Grand vision’ includes eco-tourism, research There’s a new vision in the works for Diablo Canyon Power Plant. Where a pair of nuclear reactors currently sit on a cliff overlooking the Pacific Ocean, imagine instead a research facility filled with college students and scientists studying marine life.
Read MoreOfficials and community groups envision future use of Diablo Canyon site
Officials and community groups envision future use of Diablo Canyon Parcel P site Leaders from federal, state, and county government, Cal Poly, The Land Conservancy of San Luis Obispo County, the yak tityu tityu yak tiłhini Northern Chumash, and the Tri-Counties Building and Construction Trades Council have announced a new partnership under the coordination of […]
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