
In the meantime, the New York company isn’t just waiting around.
New documents show that NorthStar has begun performing engineering and design work at Vermont Yankee under a separate โpre-closingโ contract with plant owner Entergy. NorthStar contractor AREVA also has started similar work.
Entergy says these preliminary projects will prove valuable no matter who ends up decommissioning Vermont Yankee. But if NorthStar does get the job, the company expects to reap big benefits from getting a head start.
โShould the (sale) proceed, the pre-closing work will provide approximately $12 million in savings for the decommissioning,โ NorthStar Chief Executive Officer Scott State wrote in testimony filed with the Vermont Public Utility Commission.
The utility commission and the federal Nuclear Regulatory Commission are considering whether NorthStar can buy and decommission Vermont Yankee, where power production stopped at the end of 2014.
NorthStar says it can clean up most of the site by 2030 at the latest, providing redevelopment opportunities decades sooner than Entergy had been planning.
But some have questioned the company’s ability to follow through, and it will fall to state and federal officials to weigh such concerns.

But in response to a discovery question submitted by the Brattleboro anti-nuclear group New England Coalition, State detailed the extent to which his company already is involved with the Vermont Yankee property.
NorthStar’s โpre-closingโ contract includes engineering work to support decommissioning; designing special tools needed to take apart the plant’s reactor; and buying โlong lead timeโ materials for plant cleanup, State wrote.
The contract also includes upgrading a rail spur that’s outside Vermont Yankee’s protected area, though those plans โhave not been finalized at this time,โ State wrote.
He added that the company has two employees at Vermont Yankee full time: Daniel Jordan, a health physics and waste operations director, and Mitchell Walker, a general superintendent.
NorthStar also has engaged Massachusetts-based environmental consultant Haley & Aldrich Inc. โto evaluate the site with respect to (Vermont Agency of Natural Resources) regulations,โ State said.
Additionally, AREVA Nuclear Materials is involved in pre-closing work.
The Washington, D.C.-based company is NorthStar’s proposed contractor for segmenting Vermont Yankee’s reactor. But even before the plant sale is finalized, State said AREVA is โperforming detailed engineering analysisโ associated with reactor work and is procuring casks that would transport low-level radioactive waste from Vernon to Texas.
Joe Lynch, Entergy’s senior government affairs manager for decommissioning, said the pre-closing contract with NorthStar is โseparate from the proposed sale transaction.โ
โThis work being done by NorthStar and its subcontractor AREVA will advance decontamination and dismantlement of the site, regardless of when those activities take place,โ Lynch said.

In an interview, State said it’s a simple matter of laying groundwork for an accelerated decommissioning job.
NorthStar and Entergy want the sale to close by the end of 2018. If NorthStar werenโt working at the site this year and next, โwe would have 18 months of doing this (preliminary) work and not other work,โ State said.
The $12 million in projected savings due to pre-closing work, he said, โis really driven by how quickly we can start decommissioning.โ
State said, however, that NorthStar is performing โa fairly limited amount of that workโ in 2017. The bulk of the pre-closing project is scheduled for next year.
By that time, Entergy and NorthStar are hoping to have a better idea of whether the sale will be approved. If at that point there is still โa high degree of risk or uncertainty โฆ that’s where this will get tricky,โ State said.
The tight timing of NorthStar’s plans is emphasized by another of State’s recent discovery filings with Vermont’s utility commission.
In response to a Vermont Public Service Department question about โescalation clausesโ in decommissioning contracts, State said the recently inked NorthStar-AREVA contract โdoes escalate certain costs of the contract if the AREVA work does not begin in 2018 as currently scheduled.โ
He also said NorthStar’s contract with Texas-based Waste Control Specialists โ which is supposed to dispose of Vermont Yankee’s low-level radioactive material โ allows for different rates if the plant’s decommissioning schedule changes.
โThus, delayed delivery of waste could mean that higher rates apply โ for example, if waste is received in 2022 instead of 2021,โ State wrote.
In a follow-up interview, State said such contractual provisions underscore the importance of getting the Vermont Yankee deal done by the end of next year.
โEverything on this project has been costed to an expected start date,โ State said. โIf we defer starting the project on time, the whole project becomes more costly.โ
