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Is nuclear power attractive or risky? In Minnesota, it’s both.

Usually, this boat landing in a park along the Mississippi River is a popular spot to fish for bass and walleye.  

But after a nearby nuclear plant announced that radioactive material had leaked twice from a faulty pipe since November, some locals here in Monticello, Minnesota, say they’re worried about what’s in the water. 

Why We Wrote This

In the Minnesota legislature, views on nuclear power once cleaved largely along party lines. Now climate change is shifting that pattern, but a radioactive leak has rekindled public concerns about safety.

“I’ll definitely be fishing upstream this year,” says Chuck, a resident whose father worked at the plant. 

Building public trust is a key challenge for advocates of nuclear energy here and across the nation. With the exception of one next-generation plant in Georgia, the U.S. reactor fleet is of a similar generation to the one involved in Japan’s Fukushima disaster.

But as more states adopt ambitious clean-energy goals – Minnesota’s is to be 100% carbon-free on electricity by 2040 – many leaders say they can’t get there without nuclear power as part of the solution. One bipartisan bill here would fund research into the use of advanced nuclear reactor designs.

“As we’re looking at how you build a low- or zero-carbon economy, nuclear seems like an essential tool,” says Kevin Pranis of the Minnesota and North Dakota branch of Laborers’ International Union of North America, which represents over 12,000 workers. 

At a clearing in the brush, a clunky wooden dock is still pulled onshore for the season amid piles of dirty snow. Usually, this boat landing at the Montissippi Regional Park is a popular spot for amateurs to fish bass and walleye from the Mississippi River.  

But after the Xcel Energy nuclear plant – just half a mile away – announced in March that radioactive material had leaked twice from a faulty pipe since November, some locals say they’re worried about what’s in the water. 

“I’m more reluctant to put my line in the river now. I don’t know if it’s safe,” says Chuck, a Monticello resident who came to the park to play disc golf with friends. Chuck’s father worked at the nuclear plant for decades before leaving on bad terms (and for this reason, the son declines to give his last name). “I haven’t taken the boat out yet this season, but I’ll definitely be fishing upstream this year.” 

Why We Wrote This

In the Minnesota legislature, views on nuclear power once cleaved largely along party lines. Now climate change is shifting that pattern, but a radioactive leak has rekindled public concerns about safety.

The Minnesota Pollution Control Agency and Minnesota Department of Health say the risks to the public from the leaks of water contaminated with tritium – totaling a little more than 400,000 gallons – are minimal and have not affected public drinking water. Xcel Energy powered down its Monticello plant in mid-March for maintenance, once the second leak had been discovered. 

That has done little to assuage the fears of local residents, however, who say the utility company should have notified the public earlier about the leak. 

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