UniStar Nuclear Energy announced plans to build a unit of the
Evolutionary Power Reactor (
US-EPR variant) at Calvert Cliffs. UniStar Nuclear Energy, a Delaware
limited liability company, was jointly owned by Constellation Energy (CEG) and
Électricité de France (EDF), the French builder and supplier of nuclear power plants. The proposed unit was to produce approximately twice the energy of each individual existing unit. On July 13, 2007, UniStar Nuclear Energy filed a partial application to the Nuclear Regulatory Commission to review its plans to build a new nuclear power plant, Calvert Cliffs Nuclear Power Plant 3 (CCNPP 3) based on the
AREVA US Evolutionary Power Reactor (US-EPR), Generation III+, four loop pressurized water reactor. The third reactor was intended to address a need for more baseload power generation in the Mid-Atlantic region. The unit proposed to be located south of the existing units 1 and 2, set back from the shoreline. Although only a single unit, its power plant footprint was almost twice the size of the existing units together. It was to have a closed-loop cooling system using a single hybrid mechanical draft cooling tower, incorporating plume abatement for no visible water vapor plume from the tower. Units 1 and 2 use an open-cycle heat dissipation system without cooling towers. The cooling tower of the Unit 3 reactor was to release two thirds of its waste heat to the atmosphere. The proposed EPR design was a saturated steam plant with one high-pressure turbine in tandem with three low-pressure turbines and a main generator design similar to Unit 1 and 2.
Alstom was to supply the main steam turbine and main generator. On November 13, 2007, UniStar Nuclear Energy filed an application for a certificate of public convenience and necessity with the
Maryland Public Service Commission for authority to construct CCNPP 3. This application is being considered in Case Number 9127. Opponents and supporters of the proposed third reactor at Calvert Cliffs were involved in a series of public hearings before officials of the US
Nuclear Regulatory Commission. In March 2009, Bill Peil of southern Calvert County asked the NRC to deny an emissions permit for the reactor due to health and safety concerns he asserted that the plant posed to the community. UniStar Nuclear Energy President and CEO George Vanderheyden urged the NRC to approve the air permit application. In October 2010, Constellation Energy said that it had reached an impasse in negotiations for a federal loan guarantee to build the proposed third reactor. The government sought a fee of $880 million on a guarantee of about $7.6 billion, to compensate taxpayers for the risk of default. Constellation Energy replied that such a fee would doom the project, “or the economics of any nuclear project, for that matter”. In November 2010 a deal to transfer Constellation Energy Group's stake in a nuclear development company to its French partner, EDF Group, closed, according to the
U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. A month prior, Constellation agreed to sell its 50 percent stake in UniStar Nuclear Energy to EDF for US$140 million, giving EDF sole ownership of the joint venture and its plans to develop a third unit at Calvert Cliffs in Southern Maryland. The deal called for EDF to transfer 3.5 million shares it owns, valued around US$110 million, to Constellation and give up its seat on the Constellation board. EDF designee Samuel Minzberg resigned. In April 2011 the NRC stated that UniStar is not eligible to build a third reactor, as it is not a US owned company since Constellation pulled out of the partnership in 2010. The NRC would continue to process the application, but a license would not be issued until the ownership requirements were met. The reactor was estimated to cost $9.6 billion. Constellation Energy merged into
Exelon in 2012. In 2015 Areva, struggling with internal restructuring of its corporation, withdrew from the certification process for the
US EPR reactor design, effectively putting on hold plans for the deployment of a European reactor in the US. ==Incidents==