Atlanta-based Southern Co. talks plans for more nuclear energy

To meet higher demand for electricity as more businesses and people move to the Southeast, Southern Co. is finishing the second of two newly built U.S. nuclear reactors in decades.

Southern Co. CEO Chris Womack told Atlanta Business Chronicle it may need to build more AP1000 reactors like those at Plant Vogtle. Womack will discuss the utility’s plans on March 20 at the Chronicle’s Clean Energy Forum.

About 70% of energy generation on the utility’s grid was once from coal, Womack said. The plants provide a large amount of continuous energy at once, known as baseload energy.

Due to environmental and economic costs, Southern Co. is retiring its coal plants. To replace that energy generation, the utility is looking at other energy sources to replace that baseload source.

“There’ll be more technology, more hydrogen, more fuel cells, more wind and solar,” Womack told Atlanta Business Chronicle.

Even so, Womack said Southern Co. will also increase nuclear and natural gas plants with carbon capture technology.

Atlanta Business Chronicle

Michael Randle

Michael Randle