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California Just Saved Its Last Nuclear Plant. All 3 Democrats Vying For Senate Want To Kill It.

All three Democrats vying to be California’s next U.S. senator expressed support for closing the state’s last nuclear power station at this week’s final televised debate before next month’s primary election.

Rep. Adam Schiff, the current front-runner in the nonpartisan primary to replace the late Sen. Dianne Feinstein, said he supports nuclear energy but wants to see the Diablo Canyon Power Plant closed by the end of the decade.

Fellow Democratic Reps. Katie Porter and Barbara Lee ― who are trailing in third and fourth place, respectively ― took hard-line stances against atomic power during Tuesday’s debate. Republican Steve Garvey, the second-place contender in the .

In December, federal regulators accepted Diablo Canyon’s license renewal. Last month, the Biden administration unveiled a $1.1 billion aid package to keep the plant.

Nonprofits like the Environmental Working Group, which previously promoted debunked studies linking vaccines to autism, have called keeping the plant open “dangerous.”

At this week’s debate broadcast on NBC’s Los Angeles affiliate, moderator Conan Nolan teed up the four candidates with a question that rattled off the benefits of nuclear power, which he noted was supported by the president, the governor and scientists calling for a phase out of fossil fuels.

“It runs rain or shine. It’s not weather dependent. It doesn’t contribute to global warming. It takes up a fraction of the space of the massive wind and solar farms you’ve advocated,” said Nolan, NBC4’s chief political reporter. “Do you support the extension of Diablo Canyon and does nuclear have a role in fighting climate change?”

Candidates (from left) Democratic Reps. Barbara Lee, Adam Schiff and Katie Porter, and former baseball player Steve Garvey, stand on stage during an earlier televised debate for candidates in the Senate race to succeed the late California Sen. Dianne Feinstein.
Candidates (from left) Democratic Reps. Barbara Lee, Adam Schiff and Katie Porter, and former baseball player Steve Garvey, stand on stage during an earlier televised debate for candidates in the Senate race to succeed the late California Sen. Dianne Feinstein.

via Associated Press

Porter answered first.

“Diablo Canyon needs to be safely decommissioned,” she said. “I would close Diablo Canyon.”

Schiff said “nuclear energy has a role to play in our energy portfolio,” at least on the national level, but said he supports the current plan to shut down Diablo Canyon at the end of the decade.

“I support the governor’s plan to decommission the plant,” he said. “We’re going to need to move to renewable energy. We’re going to need to move to wind and solar.”

Lee, the progressive stalwart in fourth place, said she did not even support extending Diablo Canyon’s life by another five years.

“I don’t support nuclear power,” she said. “I fully support decommissioning.”

Garvey, a former professional baseball star, expressed support for nuclear energy generally, but trailed off on diatribe about the value of oil and gas, and said “the people will decide” which energy sources are best.

PG&E did not return a call Thursday requesting comment on the Senate hopefuls’ statements.

With California’s infrastructure already heaving under the effects of climate change, blackouts are becoming more common, cutting off anyone who can’t afford expensive batteries or generators from the primary resource needed for everything from communication and transportation to cooking and medicine.

“There’s going to be a lot of money to be made helping rich Californians become as insulated as possible from the effects of their own policy choices while moralizing to poor Californians that maybe they can’t just expect electricity in a time of climate crisis,” Mark Nelson, a nuclear engineer and co-founder of the consultancy Radiant Energy, told HuffPost.

With nearly half of Democratic voters nationwide in support of atomic energy, the debate, he said, showed that “Democrats still don’t take energy seriously enough to match their base’s shift on nuclear.”

“We’re still in this era where you can talk about climate knowing nothing about energy,” Nelson said. “It’s unacceptable.”

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