1971–1994 On December 6, 1971,
Houston Lighting & Power Co. (HL&P), the City of
Austin, the City of
San Antonio, and the Central Power and Light Co. (CPL) initiated a
feasibility study of constructing a jointly owned nuclear plant. The initial cost estimate for the plant was $974 million (equivalent to approximately $ in 2015 dollars). By mid-1973, HL&P and CPL had chosen Bay City as the site for the project and San Antonio had signed on as a partner in the project.
Brown and Root was selected as the architect and construction company. On November 17, 1973, voters in Austin narrowly approved their city's participation and the city signed onto the project on December 1. Austin held several more referendums through the years on whether to stay in the project or not. An application for plant construction permits was submitted to the Atomic Energy Commission, now the
Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC), in May 1974 and the NRC issued the permits on December 22, 1975. Construction started on December 22, 1975. By 1978, the South Texas Project was two years behind schedule and had substantial cost overruns. A new management team had been put in place by HL&P in late 1978 to deal with the cost overruns, schedule delays and other challenges. However, events at Three Mile Island in March 1979 had a substantial impact on the nuclear industry including STNP. The new team again moved forward with developing a new budget and schedule. Brown and Root revised their completion schedule to June 1989 and the cost estimate to $4.4–$4.8 billion. HL&P executives consulted with its own project manager and concluded that Brown and Root was not making satisfactory progress and a decision was reached to terminate their role as architect/engineer but retain them as constructor. Brown and Root was relieved as architect/engineer in September 1981 and
Bechtel Corporation contracted to replace them. Less than two months later, Brown and Root withdrew as the construction contractor and
Ebasco Constructors was hired to replace them in February 1982 as constructor. Austin voters authorized the city council on November 3, 1981, to sell the city's 16 percent interest in the STP. No buyers were found. Unit 1 reached initial
criticality on March 8, 1988, and went into commercial operation on August 25. Unit 2 reached initial criticality on March 12, 1989, and went into commercial operation on June 19. In February 1993, both units had to be taken offline to resolve issues with the steam-driven auxiliary feedwater pumps. They were not back in service until March (Unit 1) and May (Unit 2) of 1994. The history of STNP is somewhat unusual since most nuclear plants that were in the early stages of engineering construction at the time of the Three Mile Island event were never completed.
2006–present On June 19, 2006,
NRG Energy filed a
letter of intent with the NRC to build two 1,358-MWe
advanced boiling water reactors (ABWRs) at the South Texas Nuclear Project site. South Texas Nuclear Project Partners CPS Energy and Austin Energy were not involved in the initial letter of intent and development plans. On September 24, 2007, NRG Energy filed an application with the NRC to build two
Toshiba ABWRs at the South Texas Nuclear Project site. The total estimated cost of constructing the two reactors is $10 billion, or $13 billion with financing, according to Steve Bartley, interim general manager at CPS Energy. In October 2009, main contractor Toshiba had informed CPS Energy that the cost would be "substantially greater," possibly up to $4 billion more. As a result of the escalating cost estimates for units 3 and 4, in 2010 CPS Energy reached an agreement with NRG Energy to reduce CPS's stake in the new units from 50% to 7.625%. To that point, CPS Energy had invested $370 million in the expanded plant. CPS Energy's withdrawal from the project put the expansion into jeopardy. In October 2010, the South Texas Project announced that the
Tokyo Electric Power Company (TEPCO) had entered into an agreement with Nuclear Innovation North America (a joint venture between the reactor manufacturer, Toshiba, and plant partner NRG Energy) which was the largest of the two stakeholders in the proposed reactors, to purchase an initial 9.2375% stake in the expansion for $125 million, and $30 million for an option to purchase an additional stake in the new units for $125 million more (resulting in approximately 18% ownership by TEPCO, or 500 MW of generation capacity). The agreement was made conditional upon STNP securing construction loan guarantees from the United States Department of Energy. On 19 April 2011, NRG announced in a conference call with shareholders, that they had decided to abandon the permitting process on the two new units due to the ongoing expense of planning and slow permitting process. Anti-nuclear campaigners alleged that the financial situation of new partner TEPCO, combined with the ongoing
Fukushima nuclear accident were also key factors in the decision. NRG has written off its investment of $331 million in the project. Despite the April 2011 NRG announcement of the reactor's cancellation, the NRC continued the combined licensing process for the new reactors in October 2011. It was unclear at the time why the reactor license application was proceeding. During early 2015 some pre-construction activities were performed on site and initial NRC documents listed the original targeted commercial operational dates as March 2015 for unit 3 and a year later for the other unit. On February 9, 2016, the NRC approved the combined license. Due to market conditions, no construction events occurred at that time. The two planned units do not currently have a planned construction date. On February 15, 2021, during a
major power outage that impacted much of the state of Texas, an automatic reactor trip shut South Texas Nuclear Generation Station Unit 1 due to low steam generator levels. According to a Nuclear Regulatory Commission report, the low steam generator levels were due to loss of feedwater pumps 11 and 13. However, Unit 2 and both units at the
Comanche Peak Nuclear Power Plant remained online during the power outage. == Electricity production ==