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The Enrico Fermi Nuclear Generating Station is a nuclear power plant on the shore of Lake Erie near Monroe, in Frenchtown Charter Township, Michigan on approximately 1,000 acres (400 ha). All units of the plant are operated by the DTE Energy Electric Company and owned (100 percent) by parent company DTE Energy .
Illinois also has two counties named after the same person, New York governor DeWitt Clinton (DeWitt County, and Clinton County). Information on the FIPS county code , county seat , year of establishment, origin, etymology , population, area and map of each county is included in the table below.
Illinois electricity production by type This is a list of electricity-generating power stations in the U.S. state of Illinois , sorted by type and name. In 2022, Illinois had a total summer capacity of 44,163 MW and a net generation of 185,223 GWh through all of its power plants. [ 2 ]
Fermi 2, a 1,205-megawatt nuclear power plant, is owned and operated by DTE Energy. This article originally appeared on The Monroe News: Fermi conducting scheduled maintenance, refueling Show comments
The fire was contained by the fire department, but the extent of the injuries have yet to be disclosed
Sodium cooling system malfunctions at Enrico Fermi demonstration breeder reactor causing partial core meltdown: 0: 19: July 16, 1971: Cordova, Illinois, USA: An electrician is electrocuted by a live cable at the Quad Cities Unit 1 reactor on the Mississippi River: 1: 1: April 21, 1973: Pacific Ocean, 370 miles from Puget Sound
Locally, Sangamon County saw a decrease from July 1 of 2020 to 2023 of 196,144 to 193,491, or 1.35% of the county's population was lost. An aerial view of Springfield is seen on Monday, April 1, 2024.
Meanwhile, the Sodium Reactor Experiment, which suffered a partial meltdown in 1959 for almost exactly the same reasons as Fermi, is not mentioned at all. [72] Fermi 1 remains a touchstone for anti-nuclear activists, who marked the 50th anniversary of the event in 2016 by characterizing it as "the narrow aversion of a cataclysmic disaster." [68]