CNS is owned and operated by the
Nebraska Public Power District (NPPD), a political subdivision of the state of Nebraska. The facility is named after
Humboldt natives Guy Cooper Jr., and Guy Cooper Sr. The senior Cooper's father, O. A. Cooper, built the first electrical plant in Humboldt in 1890; the two Guy Coopers served a total of 27 years on the board of NPPD and its predecessor agency, Consumers Public Power District. CNS was first put into operation in July 1974 and generates approximately 800
megawatts (MWe) of electricity. The plant consists of a
General Electric BWR/4 series reactor plant and a
Westinghouse turbine generator. The plant has a Mark I
containment system. In 1998, CNS was the first plant in the United States to load
nuclear fuel containing
uranium that had been provided under the
Megatons to Megawatts Program, in which uranium removed from
nuclear weapons of the former
Soviet Union was turned into low-enriched uranium and then into fuel. In September 2008, NPPD applied to the U.S.
Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) for a renewal of the operating license for CNS, extending it for an additional twenty years. In November 2010 CNS received its license renewal, which was the 60th renewal license to be issued by the NRC. In late 2003 NPPD signed a contract with
Entergy Nuclear for management support services. An agreement was approved in January 2010 by NPPD to extend Entergy's management support services until January 2029. The original contract between the companies, signed in 2003, was for the remaining years of the plant's original operating license, which ran until January 18, 2014. In March 2022 NPPD announced that the Entergy contract would be terminated. == Electricity production ==