Commodities April 23, 2026 04:45 PM

Duke Energy’s Robinson Nuclear Plant Cleared to Run Through 2050

NRC extends operating license by 20 years for Hartsville facility, preserving generation capacity and regional economic benefits

By Avery Klein
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The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission has renewed the operating license for Duke Energy’s Robinson Nuclear Plant for an additional 20 years, allowing the Hartsville, South Carolina plant to continue generating electricity until 2050. The facility supplies power equivalent to around 570,000 homes and represents roughly half of Duke Energy’s customer energy mix in the Carolinas, with the license extension expected to support cost savings for customers and sustained local economic activity.

Duke Energy’s Robinson Nuclear Plant Cleared to Run Through 2050
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Key Points

  • NRC renewed Robinson Nuclear Plant’s operating license for 20 years, authorizing operations through 2050.
  • The Hartsville facility produces enough electricity to serve about 570,000 homes and supplies roughly 51% of Duke Energy customers’ energy in the Carolinas.
  • Duke Energy says the extension will sustain regional economic benefits and yield cost savings for customers over time; it also supports grid reliability amid rising electricity demand.

Summary: The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission has approved a 20-year extension of the operating license for Duke Energy’s Robinson Nuclear Plant in Hartsville, South Carolina, enabling the plant to remain in service through 2050. The renewal preserves existing generation capacity that supplies energy equivalent to about 570,000 homes and accounts for approximately 51% of Duke Energy’s customers’ energy needs in the Carolinas.


The renewed license maintains the plant as a core component of Duke Energy’s nuclear fleet. Company statements indicate the decision will extend the use of current generation assets and is expected to produce cost savings for customers over time. Local officials and company representatives have also cited ongoing economic benefits for Darlington County and the broader Pee Dee region tied to the plant’s continued operation.

Robinson’s extended authorization arrives against a backdrop of rising regional electricity demand. The plant’s operators and Duke Energy characterize the facility as an important contributor to grid reliability and to keeping energy affordable for the company’s customer base in the Carolinas.

With the license now set to run through 2050, Duke Energy can continue to rely on Robinson’s installed capacity as part of its nuclear portfolio. The renewal prolongs the operational life of existing infrastructure rather than adding new generation assets, and the company has positioned that outcome as a pathway to lower costs for customers over an extended timeframe.

Local economic impacts are expected to be sustained by the plant’s ongoing operations. Duke Energy has pointed to continued employment, tax contributions, and other regional financial activity linked to Robinson as elements that will remain in place while the facility operates under the renewed license.

Overall, the NRC decision preserves an established source of electricity in the Carolinas, while aligning with Duke Energy’s stated goals of using existing nuclear capacity to support reliability and affordability as regional demand grows.

Risks

  • Future electricity demand growth is cited as a factor in the plant’s role, creating uncertainty around the scale and timing of that demand and how it will affect system needs - impacts utilities and energy markets.
  • The license renewal preserves existing generation capacity rather than adding new capacity, so long-term changes in regional energy needs or policy could affect cost and reliability outcomes - impacts utilities and local economic stakeholders.

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