Seabrook Station construction The
Public Service Company of New Hampshire (PSNH) initially sought plans for building a nuclear power plant in 1966. PSNH initially planned for building the plant in
Newington, but the construction permit was denied after concerns of the proposed site being too close to
Pease Air Force Base. After the new location of
Seabrook was selected, construction plans were finalized in 1972. PSNH and the state Public Utilities Commission expected little opposition in constructing Seabrook Station, and even the
Union Leader reported, "Management of Public Service does not anticipate difficulties in obtaining the necessary licenses and permits for the Seabrook site because it is not near an air base [as was Newington, its first choice for a site], and condenser cooling water can be discharged directly to deep water in the Atlantic Ocean." When the construction and operation plans were presented to the town of Seabrook, the plans "were met with an enthusiastic response" and were unanimously approved. At the time, this was the fourth
largest bankruptcy in United States corporate history. The construction of Seabrook Station was completed ten years later than expected, with a cost approaching $7 billion. The NRC described its own regulatory oversight of Seabrook as "a paradigm of fragmented and uncoordinated government decision making," and "a system strangling itself and the economy in red tape."
NextEra Energy and recent history The plant was originally owned by more than 10 separate utility companies serving five New England states. In 2002, most sold their shares to FPL Energy (a subsidiary of FPL Group), later known as
NextEra Energy Resources, for a controlling 88.2% share of Seabrook Station at a total cost of $836.6 million. The remaining portion is owned by municipal utilities in Massachusetts. The station is one of five nuclear generating facilities operated by parent company
NextEra Energy. The other four are
St. Lucie Nuclear Power Plant and
Turkey Point Nuclear Generating Station operated by sister company
Florida Power & Light (a regulated utility), and the
Duane Arnold Energy Center and
Point Beach Nuclear Generating Station operated by NextEra Energy Resources. During the
2008 presidential election, Republican nominee
John McCain mentioned the possibility of building the once-planned second reactor at Seabrook. The idea drew cautious support from some officials, but would be difficult due to financial and regulatory reasons. In 2009, the name of the nuclear power plant was officially changed to NextEra Energy Seabrook, but the plant is still widely known and referred to as Seabrook Station. In 2017, due to the steady drop in value of nuclear power plants including Seabrook Station, the town of
Seabrook enacted a 9.9 percent tax increase to offset the decrease in tax revenue collected from the plant's owner,
NextEra Energy. In 2019, the
New Hampshire House of Representatives introduced House Bill 1661 that would have removed Seabrook Station's property tax exemption for components used to mitigate air and water pollution. In 2020, House Bill 1661 failed to proceed out of the NH House of Representatives. In April 2020,
Massachusetts members of the
U.S. Congress that included U.S. Senators
Elizabeth Warren and
Ed Markey and Congressman
Seth Moulton called on the
Nuclear Regulatory Commission and
NextEra Energy to release the pandemic plan for Seabrook Station in response to
COVID-19. The letter was submitted in response to the ongoing refueling outage bringing hundreds of workers on site with concerns over safety procedures and plant staffing. Seabrook Station was also granted regulatory exemptions from the
Nuclear Regulatory Commission to aid in its preventative efforts against the spread of
COVID-19 including loosening work-hour controls and deferring certain inspections. Beginning in the early 2020s, NextEra Energy has been involved in an ongoing dispute with utility company
Avangrid over the New England Clean Energy Connect (NECEC) power line being constructed in Maine, which is aimed at bringing
hydropower from Canada to the New England power grid. Before being interconnected to the New England electric grid, the additional power delivery would require upgrades to Seabrook Station's main generator breaker, which is being litigated over the cost of the upgrade and which party or parties would be responsible for those costs. In February 2023, the
Federal Energy Regulatory Commission ordered NextEra Energy Resources to proceed with upgrades to the main generator breaker, which is expected to occur during the fall 2024 refueling outage. ==Relicensing==