Yes. The Palo Verde Generating Station, about 55 miles west of Phoenix, has been producing power since the mid-1980s. The ...
Arizona's big three utilities are eyeing a new nuclear power plant, but it'll be a long and complicated process. The big ...
The big three Arizona utilities are studying whether to try and build a second nuclear power plant in the state.
Three of the state’s largest utilities; APS, SRP, and Tucson Electric Power are exploring a joint venture to bring a ...
PHOENIX (AZFamily) — Seventy sirens are strategically placed within a 10-mile radius of the Palo Verde Generating Station, Arizona’s nuclear power plant, in the West Valley. “No matter where ...
Arizona Public Service, Salt River Project and Tucson Electric Power have taken the first steps by applying for a federal grant. The companies say the idea is part of them looking at multiple power ...
“To ensure a reliable and affordable electric supply for our customers, we are committed to maintaining a diverse energy mix,” said Ted Geisler, president of APS, which owns and operates the nuclear ...
When Arizona Public Service (APS) needed to replace the aging wastewater storage pond at the Palo Verde Nuclear Power Plant, one of the largest nuclear power plants in the world, plant managers ...
Arizona Public Service - operator of the Palo Verde nuclear power plant - is collaborating with Salt River Project and Tucson Electric Power to assess possible locations for new nuclear capacity, ...
Yes. The Palo Verde Generating Station, about 55 miles west of Phoenix, has been producing power since the mid-1980s. The facility, with its three-foot-thick concrete containment walls ...