Construction
The construction of Zimmer was a consortium of CG&E, Columbus & Southern Ohio Electric, and DP&L. The project was announced in 1969 with a cost of $420 million to construct two 840 MW nuclear power units with completion dates set for 1975 and 1976.[1] The plant is named after William H. Zimmer, who was chairman and president of CG&E from 1962 to 1973 and was also an uncle to Major League Baseball's Don Zimmer.[1][5] Construction of the plant did not start until 1972 because the Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) demanded stricter standards to approve of nuclear plants.[6] The second proposed unit was upgraded from 840 MW to 1,170 MW in 1974. General Electric's BWRs were chosen for the plant's nuclear reactors.[7] Ultimately, the second unit was never constructed due to regulatory issues and costs.[8]
An investigation into the construction of Zimmer began in 1978. A worker charged that a welding contractor did defective work below nuclear safety standards.[8] CG&E's lawyers placed blame on the contractor for not picking up on the defective work.[9] In 1980 the Chicago Sun-Times reported accusations of a cover-up by CG&E of time-card falsifications and the installation of defective piping in one of the plant's safety systems.[10] As a result, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) fined CG&E $200,000 for a faulty quality assurance program in 1981.[11][12] The constructor was The Henry J. Kaiser Company, the construction arm of Kaiser Engineers whereas the primary owner, CG&E, did its own procurement, awarding contracts for equipment, and quality assurance requirements.[12] The NRC, under pressure from the Government Accountability Project (GAP) to reopen the investigation, eventually ordered work on the nuclear reactor to halt in 1982.[11]
CG&E, AEP and DP&L announced the cancellation of the Zimmer Nuclear Power Plant in 1983. Zimmer's total sunk costs amounted to roughly $1.6 billion; CG&E's share was $716 million, nearly 90% of the utility's 1982 net worth.[14][15] Retired Navy Admiral Joe Williams Jr. was hired to bring the plant on-line,[16] and Bechtel was retained to nuclear-qualify the plant. Bechtel came in with an estimate of more than $1.5 billion—beyond the $1.6 billion already spent—to adequately complete the plant.[14]
Conversion to Coal
Originally expected to cost $240 million for one unit, when the cost estimate soared to at least $3.1 billion, the decision was made in January 1984 to convert the mothballed plant into a coal-fired generated plant.[1][14] Sargent & Lundy, who was the architect/engineering firm, and General Electric were sued by the three utilities in July 1984. The utilities sought $400 million in damages asserting the defective equipment caused extra costs for the construction of Zimmer.[17] The lawsuit was settled in November 1987 with Sargent & Lundy agreeing to pay $27.4 million to the utilities. The utilities agreed to pay $12.7 million to Sargent & Lundy.[18]
The conversion process of Zimmer into a coal power plant began in March 1987.[19] During the conversion of the plant from nuclear to coal, the Little Indian Creek was routed through the plant to protect fish populations.[20]
Retirement
In September 2020, Vistra announced it would be retiring the Zimmer plant by year-end 2027.[29]
On July 19, 2021, Vistra announced the plant will shut down five years earlier, on May 31, 2022, because they failed to secure any capacity revenues in the May 2021 wholesale electricity market auction held by the grid operator, PJM Interconnection.[30][31][32]
The Zimmer coal-fired power plant closed on May 31, 2022.[4]