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Constellation to restart Three Mile Island nuclear plant in Microsoft AI power offer

Constellation Energy has signed a special deal with Microsoft to restart one of the units at the kept in mind Three Mile Island nuclear plant in Pennsylvania to power data centers for the tech giant, the business stated on Friday.

This would be the very first restart of a nuclear power plant in the U.S. after shutting, and shows how utilities are gaining from an enormous surge in demand from data-center operators wanting to ride a boom in expert system.

Shares of the company were up almost 8% at $224.4 premarket.

The offer would allow a restart of System 1 of the five-decades-old nuclear power center in Pennsylvania that was shut in 2019 due to functional reasons. System 2, which was shut after a partial crisis in 1979 - the most well-known commercial nuclear accident in U.S. history - is not going to be restarted.

Constellation, which plans to spend about $1.6 billion to reboot the plant, is waiting for permits and anticipates the center to come online by 2028.

Under the offer, disclosed on Friday, Microsoft will purchase energy from the restarted plant for a duration of 20 years.

Reuters initially reported on the potential reboot in July.

A restart is expected to be logistically challenging, but as power demand increases from tech business, the virtually carbon-free electricity source is seeing renewed support.

If the reboot is authorized, Three Mile Island would supply Microsoft with 835 megawatts of energy.

Financial information of the deal were not disclosed. Microsoft and Constellation decreased to provide more information on the agreement.

(source: Reuters)