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- Building on the Wisconsin higher-ed reform model
- Wisconsin students who struggle with reading are let down by unenforced literacy reforms, say advocates
- Failure of tax-and-schools deal offers chance to do better
- Big federal bucks so far produce a paltry 21 EV charging stations in Wisconsin
- Behind the curtain, Evers administration diverts taxpayer money to fund environmental bureaucracies
- Wisconsin socialists’ dreams outstrip Sweden in price
- Socialists’ Milwaukee golden age and the light it sheds now
- Milwaukee Public Schools, facing crises, should close 25 schools, report warns
Search Results: nuclear power (33)
The owner of a now-shuttered nuclear power plant near Kewaunee announced it was seeking a license that could let it reopen the plant.
The Biden administration’s climate adviser told a “sustainability conference” this week that the president wants to reactivate decommissioned nuclear power plants.
A federal report this month is touting two Wisconsin nuclear power plant sites — one operating, one shut down — as attractive locations for installing new nuclear electric generating plants.
One of the following two things happened this month. Guess which one didn’t:
Wisconsin’s only nuclear power plant, the Point Beach Nuclear Plant, remains the biggest in the state by net generation, according to figures from the U.S. Energy Information Administration.
New nuclear measure in Wisconsin includes shifts in state’s priorities in law for ‘only way we keep lights on.’
Predictions of rising Wisconsin power demand are driven by plans for data centers, the electricity-gulping organs of the online economy.
Supporting new nuclear power in Wisconsin by supporting SJR7 / AJR6 will give energy developers an encouraging clarity.
Rep. David Steffen and Sen. Julian Bradley are circulating a joint resolution supporting expansion of nuclear energy production in Wisconsin.
Port Washington’s announcement of another billion-dollar data center project in southeastern Wisconsin is focusing attention on the challenge of meeting the voracious energy needs of this new economic opportunity.
Small nuclear modular reactors are a big deal for Wisconsin, given our developing AI economy and Gov. Evers’ Clean Energy Plan.
America’s energy grids are strained, and Michigan is reconsidering nuclear’s role in meeting consumer demand. Wisconsin, too, should take note.
In the summer of 1997, Wisconsin’s electrical generation system was in trouble. Two of the state’s nuclear generating plants were…
Wisconsin’s one nuclear power plant consistently puts out more than 90% of the maximum amount of power it’s rated for. The capacity factor for combined cycle natural gas plants was 63.2%, and for coal, 47.6%
Our vow for the year ahead is to remind the legislators who love government that they are there to serve a greater good and their hard-working neighbors — not themselves.
Data centers chug electricity like undergrads drink beer, and the advent of artificial intelligence — which uses, we’re told, about 10 times the electricity as conventional searches — makes power demand soar.
Energy Featured Analysis The cost of outlawing fossil fuel heat in Wisconsin Badger Institute statement of guiding principles on energy…
Economy & Infrastructure Toward a stronger and more economically viable state for Wisconsin businesses and families Featured Research Wisconsin’s Economy:…
The Badger State is never short on FoodShare drama. Mark Lisheron explains the latest power struggle between Gov. Evers and…
More of Wisconsin’s electricity now comes from solar panels than from wind turbines, but both produce a small amount compared to natural gas.

