Santee Cooper, the big power provider in South Carolina, has tapped financial advisers to look for buyers that can restart construction on a pair of nuclear reactors that were mothballed years ago. The state-owned utility is betting interest will be strong,
Santee Cooper’s recent announcement that it is seeking private-sector proposals to complete South Carolina’s long-stalled V.C. Summer Nuclear
The utility is hoping to capitalize on the recent boom in demand from tech companies looking to use nuclear reactors to power AI data centers.
Santee Cooper plans to seek investors willing to buy the two unfinished reactors it abandoned at the V.C. Summer Nuclear Station more than seven years ago
Santee Cooper, South Carolina’s state-owned electric and water utility, has launched a Request for Proposals (RFP) to acquire and complete or propose alternatives for two partially constructed generating units at the Virgil C Summer Nuclear Power Station in Fairfield County, South Carolina.
Nuclear-related stocks finished mostly higher Wednesday after South Carolina power provider Santee Cooper said it is seeking proposals for buyers to restart construction of a pair of reactors at its V.
Efforts are underway to bring back the V.C. Summer nuclear construction project that cost ratepayers billions of dollars
South Carolina's Santee Cooper is seeking buyers to revive construction at the long-abandoned V.C. Summer Nuclear Station to address the surging energy needs of artificial intelligence.
South Carolina’s largest power provider Santee Cooper has issued a request for proposals (RFP) aimed at finding a buyer—or visionary—to take on what
The company is wagering that interest in the project at South Carolina's massive V.C. Summer Nuclear Station will be strong, particularly among technology businesses like Microsoft (NASDAQ: MSFT) and Amazon (NASDAQ: AMZN) who are hunting for power sources for the data centers that underpin their artificial intelligence ambitions, the WSJ said.
Good afternoon and Happy Wednesday readers! In today’s Daily on Energy, Callie and Maydeen take a look at how President Donald Trump’s flurry of executive orders could affect how lawmakers vote on his two energy nominees.