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Despite Trump push, New York opposes reopening Indian Point nuclear power plant

By Thomson Reuters Mar 10, 2026 | 12:17 PM

By Laila Kearney and Timothy Gardner

NEW YORK, March 10 (Reuters) – New York Governor Kathy Hochul opposes the Trump administration’s campaign to restart a nuclear power plant just north of New York City, her office told Reuters this week, days after the U.S. energy secretary visited the ​plant to urge its reopening.

U.S. power demand is rising for the first time in decades ‌on the boom in AI data centers and a rush to electrify everything from industry and buildings to transportation. To help meet the demand President Donald Trump has set a goal for the U.S. to quadruple nuclear power capacity by 2050.

“The governor has emphatically stated she will not support the reopening of Indian Point and is instead pushing for a significant expansion of round-the-clock, ‌emission-free ​advanced nuclear power in upstate New York communities that want it,” said ⁠Ken Lovett, senior communications adviser on ⁠Energy and Environment for Hochul.

Without support from Hochul, a Democrat, Indian Point would likely not be able to restart.

On Friday, U.S. Energy Secretary Chris Wright held a press event at Indian Point to promote nuclear power and renewed operations at the plant. Holtec, the site’s owner, has been decommissioning the ​power plant following its closure in 2021.

Opposition to Indian Point, a potential target for attacks, increased after the September 11, 2001 attacks.

Holtec, a company that has long provided services in the nuclear industry, including shutting ⁠plants down, now wants to get into the reactor-operating business. ⁠It is in the process of attempting to restart a shut Michigan nuclear power ​plant.

Under contracts with Microsoft and Google, power companies Constellation and NextEra are also trying to resume operations at the ​former Three Mile Island nuclear power plant in Pennsylvania and a plant in Iowa.

“The ‌Trump Administration believes energy policy should focus on the American people — not politics — by expanding reliable American energy, creating more American jobs, and lowering electricity prices for every American family and business across the country,” Wright said in a statement.

While Holtec CEO Kris Singh, who was present at last week’s event, applauded the idea of ⁠restarting the plant, the company told Reuters that the effort would require buy-in from multiple political and government agencies.

“Should the political will and financial means be available that the state wants to see a repower, we would ⁠be willing to work towards that ‌goal. Otherwise, we will continue on our path to safely decommission IPEC,” a ⁠company spokesman said.

Nuclear Regulatory Commission Chair Ho Nieh told reporters on Tuesday at ​a conference: “If ‌a restart decision is made by the owners to restart the unit, ​they will come ⁠to the NRC and we will talk with them about what it would take to restart the Indian Point plant.”

Hochul has called for 5 gigawatts of new nuclear capacity to be built in New York. She has so far directed the New York Power Authority to develop and build a gigawatt of new capacity in upstate New York, farther from New York City than Indian Point.

(Reporting by Laila Kearney in New York and Tim Gardner in ​Washington; Editing by Aurora Ellis)