A Company's Gain From Energy Report's Recommendation

March 24, 2002 

By DON VAN NATTA Jr.


 

WASHINGTON, March 23 - In Chapter 5 of Vice President Dick
Cheney's national energy report, executives of the
once-moribund nuclear power industry were probably thrilled
to read that the White House supported "the expansion of
nuclear power in the United States as a major component of
our national energy policy." 

The energy report had embraced a wide array of proposals
that the executives advanced in private meetings with Mr.
Cheney and documents submitted to members of the task force
that formulated a national energy policy. 

One such proposal was the development of a new nuclear
reactor designed to produce electricity - a gas-cooled
reactor built on tennis-ball-size graphite spheres - that
the report said "has inherent safety features." 

"The industry has an interest in this," the report said,
"and other advanced reactor designs." 

But only one company, the Exelon Corporation of Chicago,
which provided hundreds of thousands of dollars to
Republican campaigns in recent years, has an interest in
promoting the so-called pebble-bed reactor. 

Exelon, the nation's largest nuclear energy company, is the
only American corporation developing a design for the
pebble-bed reactor, which it says will lead to a new
generation of cheaper, smaller and more efficient nuclear
reactors. The company says the pebble-bed reactor will be
safer, too, though environmentalists in the United States
and in other countries have sharply disputed this, calling
the pebble-bed reactor a failed system vulnerable to
terrorist attack. 

The May 2001 national energy report is filled with dozens
of positive assessments of proposed new technologies,
including nuclear designs and wind-generated power. Most of
those assessments favor sectors of various industries, and
some undoubtedly favor individual corporations. 

But it is impossible to know how and why the task force
endorsed most of those proposals, and which corporations
they help, because Mr. Cheney has steadfastly refused to
release the names of industry executives who advised the
energy task force as it was researching and compiling its
report. 

Next week, more than 14,000 pages of documents related to
the task force will be released by the Energy Department,
which was ordered by a federal judge to make the material
public under the Freedom of Information Act. The Natural
Resources Defense Council, an environmentalist group, had
sued for the information. 

The General Accounting Office, an investigative arm of
Congress, has sued Mr. Cheney for a list of industry
executives who advised the task force. 

The administration's endorsement of Exelon's technology was
learned through interviews and documents provided to The
New York Times by the corporation itself. 

Although Exelon's name is not mentioned in the energy
report, its executives lobbied the task force on the
benefits of the pebble-bed design. 

The task force's endorsement of the reactor was contained
in a single paragraph. But a paragraph in a national energy
report, like a sentence in a State of the Union Message or
a line in a legislative bill, can be a huge boon to a
corporation. 

Don Kirchoffner, a spokesman for Exelon, said campaign
contributions had nothing to do with the pebble-bed
reactor's mention in the report. "We didn't influence
anybody," Mr. Kirchoffner said. 

Using the initials of the Pebble Bed Modular Reactor, he
added: "I don't think that it's correct to connect dots
between contributions the company made and the fact
something on P.B.M.R. appeared in the national energy
policy. The P.B.M.R. is just an example of the advanced
nuclear technology that everybody says we need." 

For Exelon, the paragraph was seen as "a good thing," Mr.
Kirchoffner said, but he insisted that the mention of the
reactor's design did not necessarily represent a boon for
the corporation. 

"A good thing for the industry and the country was the fact
that the administration came out with a recommendation for
new forms of nuclear power, and our pebble-bed modular
reactor is a byproduct of that," Mr. Kirchoffner said. "We
just happened to have it. They took a look at what we gave
them and they said this kind of makes sense." 

Exelon owns and operates about 20 percent of the nation's
nuclear capacity. Its co-chief executives, John W. Rowe and
Corbin A. McNeill Jr., who has since retired, were among a
group of about 75 energy executives who met with Mr. Cheney
in March 2001. Along with other participants of the Nuclear
Energy Institute, the industry's trade group, Mr. McNeill
also met that month with Karl Rove, President Bush's chief
strategist, and Lawrence B. Lindsey, the president's top
economic adviser. 

That information was revealed by Exelon officials, not the
White House. 

Critics of the task force have noted that many companies
represented at its meetings gave financial support to the
Bush campaign or the Republican Party in the 2000 election.
Exelon was no exception. 

Exelon, its executives and its political action committee,
gave the Republican Party a total of $564,661 in the two
years before the 2000 election. Last year, Exelon increased
its donations to the Republican Party, giving it a total of
$347,514, according to Federal Election Commission reports.


Representative Henry A. Waxman of California, a frequent
critic of the administration's energy policies, said: "The
more we learn about the Cheney task force, the easier it is
to understand why the White House is fighting so hard to
keep everything secret. The biggest donors didn't just have
the best access - it now appears they were allowed to write
specific sections of the administration's energy plan." 

Anne Womack, a spokesman for the White House, disputed the
notion that campaign contributions were responsible for the
endorsement of Exelon's reactor design. 

"Advanced reactor technology would increase our energy
supply and do it in a way that is safe and clean," Ms.
Womack said. "That benefits not only the industry but the
American people." 

Ms. Womack also said that the task force had consulted "a
broad variety of groups, including industry, unions,
environmental groups and consumer groups." 

"They all had input, and the product of all the input is in
the report," Ms. Womack said.' 

More than 400 corporations and groups sought meetings with
the energy task force last spring. About half that number
were granted access, a group that included 158 energy
companies and corporate trade associations, 22 labor
unions, 13 environmental groups and a consumer
organization, task force staff members have said. 

Some environmental groups and Congressional Democrats have
complained that industry executives - and, in particular,
executives from corporations that supported the Republican
Party - received far more time and had greater influence
than environmental groups. 

On Friday, Mr. Waxman released a study that identified 65
provisions in the energy report that he said benefit donors
to the Republican Party who had met with task force members
or Mr. Cheney last year. 

The pebble-bed reactor has attracted sharp criticism from
environmentalists as being unsafe and vulnerable to
terrorist attack. 

"There are many safety problems with this reactor," said
Carl Pope, the executive director of the Sierra Club. "It's
not safe, and it's certainly not clean. It has already
failed once, in Germany. 

"And this pebble-bed facility is not going to have a
containment shell. It will be a terrorist target just
sitting out there waiting for someone. This is just not
sensible." 

Exelon lobbied the task force on the safety and economic
benefits of its design, according to interviews and several
documents turned over to the task force. 

Exelon provided The New York Times with two documents that
the company submitted to the task force that had not been
made public by Mr. Cheney: a pamphlet describing the
pebble-bed reactor and a one-page description of the
reactor's benefits. 

The document begins, "Exelon Corporation believes that we
have found a technology that possesses the characteristics
necessary to successfully compete in a deregulated
environment in the P.B.M.R., a design under development in
South Africa." 

The document argues that the reactor is "safe, economic and
clean." 

"We provided it to them," Mr. Kirchoffner said of the
single-page document. "I can't tell you what they did with
it." 

The pebble-bed reactor would be cooled by helium, in
contrast to the water-cooled reactors now used in the
United States. The plant has fewer moving parts and
requires a smaller crew, making its operations less prone
to problems, the company said. 

Exelon has a 12.5 percent interest in the project with
Eskom, the state-owned utility in South Africa, the
Industrial Development Corporation of South Africa, a
state-owned investment firm, and B.N.F.L., the former
British Nuclear Fuels Limited. The partnership is studying
the feasibility of the pebble-bed reactor, company
officials said. 

In its papers submitted to the task force, Exelon wrote
that the technology "is an evolutionary improvement of a
proven design previously utilized in Germany." But several
environmentalists said that the Germany prototype failed. 

"When you build a design on a proven failure, you are
likely to get another failure," Mr. Pope said. 

Mr. Kirchoffner said company executives were somewhat less
enthusiastic about the pebble-bed reactor today than they
were a year ago. 

"As a result of the decrease in natural gas prices, and the
economy and the less than favorable weather, things have
changed since then," he said. "We are being very
disciplined now in our approach to looking at P.B.M.R.,
which may be a lot farther off than it was a year ago." 

But the pebble-bed design is still scheduled to be reviewed
by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission soon. This month, the
commission announced that the design was submitted for its
approval by Eskom, the South Africa utility. 


Copyright 2002 The New York Times Company