KEY POINTS
  • Diablo Canyon nuclear power plant, located near Avila Beach in San Luis Obispo County, California, and operated by utility company PG&E, is slated to cease operations by Aug. 2025.
  • In a conversation with the LA Times' editorial board on Thursday, California Gov. Gavin Newsom said the state would pursue federal funding the Biden administration made available in its Bipartisan Infrastructure Law to keep uneconomic nuclear power plants open.
  • But any effort to extend the life of Diablo Canyon faces significant challenges, especially politically.
PG&E Corp.'s Diablo Canyon plant in California. (Joe Johnston/San Luis Obispo Tribune/Tribune News Service via Getty Images)

California governor Gavin Newsom is open to the idea of maintaining operations at the last nuclear power plant in the state, Diablo Canyon, past its planned shutdown date in 2025, but not indefinitely.

In a conversation with the LA Times' editorial board on Thursday, Newsom said the state might pursue federal funding the Biden administration made available in its Bipartisan Infrastructure Law to keep uneconomic nuclear power plants open.