John Hopkins,The Hill
The suspension at least for now of the first two U.
S. conventional nuclear reactors under construction in more than three decades, underscores what was already painfully obvious: the future of nuclear and of clean energy broadly will rest on the backs of people who resolve to lead today.
Monday the owners of the Virgil C. Summer nuclear facility in South Carolina announced the two reactor projects would near to a halt but the news isn't a death knell (the solemn sound of a bell, often indicating a death) for nuclear energy in America.
But innovation doesn't near cheap or easy. It doesn't near out of nowhere. It takes a lot of work.
Source: realclearenergy.org