Florida Power & Light Co. v. Westinghouse Electric Corp.

597 F. Supp. 1456, 1984 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 22135
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Virginia
DecidedNovember 8, 1984
DocketCiv. A. 75-0677-R
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 597 F. Supp. 1456 (Florida Power & Light Co. v. Westinghouse Electric Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Florida Power & Light Co. v. Westinghouse Electric Corp., 597 F. Supp. 1456, 1984 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 22135 (E.D. Va. 1984).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM

MERHIGE, District Judge.

This matter was tried to the Court. • In an opinion issued June 25, 1981, the Court made extensive factual findings concluding that Westinghouse was liable for breaching its contract to remove and dispose of the spent fuel generated at Florida’s Turkey Point nuclear reactors pursuant to a fuel contract that Westinghouse had entered into with Florida in 1966.

Florida, in its suit, was seeking an award of damages for the amount it had spent to the date of trial in accommodating the spent fuel accumulating at the reactor sites through a “re-racking” .of its spent fuel storage pits at those sites, and in addition was seeking an order directing Westinghouse to specifically perform its obligation to remove the fuel. The Court, after finding Westinghouse liable, determined that rather than attempt to order a specific remedy, it would give the parties a further opportunity to attempt to negotiate a solution to the question of how Westinghouse could best fulfill its obligation to remove the spent fuel. Short of that, the parties would be given an opportunity to provide the Court certain additional information on what the possibilities were for removing the fuel, so as to assist the Court in determining the appropriate remedy.

The parties made a good faith effort to negotiate the remedy but failed. In October, 1983, the parties returned for the purpose of supplying the Court with additional information to aid the Court’s remedy determinations. Florida sought damages of *1459 roughly $87 million altogether, not including the value of certain work that Westinghouse had already agreed to do on the interim storage facilities at Turkey Point. In the meanwhile, Westinghouse had moved for a reconsideration of the Court’s 1981 liability determination.

The Court issued a decision in January of 1984 that was intended to finally resolve all the then outstanding issues in this litigation. Florida has now moved for reconsideration of the 1984 decision on a number of grounds. One is designated as “unfair surprise.”

The Court is satisfied that Florida has been well aware of the rangé of issues Westinghouse expected to be arguing in this remedy/reconsideration round and accordingly that this claim (which was not pressed at oral argument) is not well-taken.

Nevertheless, Florida has persuasively suggested that the Court’s 1984 decision was, in at least some significant regards, inconsistent with its 1981 decision and that the inconsistencies arise from errors of law in the later decision. In the hopes of .disposing of all outstanding issues, the Court has determined to grant Florida’s motion to reconsider, to fully review the evidence introduced at the 1979 liability trial and at the 1983 remedy hearing, and upon conclusion thereof to make a final determination as to the appropriate remedy.

Factual Background

The Court’s 1981 decision thoroughly set out the facts before the Court at that time. See 517 F.Supp. 440 (E.D.Va.1981). At this point the Court need only address developments since the 1981 decision, and facts that Westinghouse has cited as supporting reconsideration of the findings in the 1981 decision.

A. Developments since 1979

At the time the parties originally came before the Court on this matter, two facts hovered over the Court and the litigants in such a way as to make the remedy determination both difficult and pressing. On the one hand, Florida represented to the Court — and the Court is satisfied that it was Florida’s sincere belief — that if the spent fuel were not promptly removed from its reactor sites, the reactors would be forced to shut down, at a cost of a half-million dollars daily for substitute power. On the other hand, it appeared that there was not any means then available or likely to be available in the future whereby the spent fuel could be removed and disposed of.

These two facts had left the parties facing a dire future and the Court frustrated in its efforts to do complete justice. Fortunately the facts which were the basis for that set of circumstances are no longer accurate. First, further technological study has revealed that it is indeed possible to “re-rack” the Turkey Point spent fuel storage pits a second time, so as to provide sufficient on-site storage for all the spent fuel that the reactors will discharge over its useful life. This means that there is no chance that the reactors will be forced to shut down, and consequently no prospect that anyone will expend a half-million dollars daily on substitute power. Florida and Westinghouse have agreed that such a second re-racking at Turkey Point is in order, and Westinghouse has agreed to do the necessary work at no cost to Florida.

Second, the United States Government (“the Government”) has finally taken what appear to be firm steps toward creating a permanent disposal site for nuclear spent fuel. The Nuclear Waste Policy Act of 1982 (“NWPA”), which became law in early 1983, provides for locating and constructing a government-owned, permanent, deep-burial repository for spent fuel. 42 U.S.C. § 10101 et seq. The Act sets out a specific timetable culminating in the opening of the site for receipt of spent fuel in 1998.

The Act provides for negotiation of fixed-price contracts to be entered into currently between “owners and generators” of spent fuel and the Department of Energy (“DoE”), pursuant to which DoE agrees to take title to the spent fuel in exchange for a negotiated fixed fee. 42 U.S.C. § 10222(a)(1). The significance of having *1460 DoE take title to the spent fuel is that the contracting party can thereby rid itself of any further financial responsibility in connection therewith, and particularly of risks associated with the operation of the government repository.

The NWPA required utilities using nuclear fuel to enter into such contracts with DoE promptly as a condition to having their licenses renewed, which Florida has accordingly done. Florida actually executed at least two such contracts, one for the ten years’ worth of spent fuel that is the subject of this dispute and one for the spent fuel that Florida’s reactors will generate during their 20 years’ worth of useful life remaining after the end of the Westinghouse fuel contract. The DoE’s disposal fee for the disputed spent fuel was' fixed at roughly $70 million. The NWPA mandates that this fee be designed to cover a proportionate share of the costs of the permanent repository and no more, and no party has suggested that the $70 million is unduly high by that standard.

The NWPA abandons for the most part the federal government’s earlier policy, announced in 1977, of seeking to construct government-owned away-from reactor (“AFR”) storage facilities in which to keep spent fuel in the interim until the permanent repository becomes available. The NWPA instead encourages interim storage at the reactor sites, through the use of techniques such as re-racking, which Florida is employing at Turkey Point.

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597 F. Supp. 1456, 1984 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 22135, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/florida-power-light-co-v-westinghouse-electric-corp-vaed-1984.