News & Events

2007 Speeches and Testimony

November 6, 2007
Carol L. Berrigan, Director, Industry Infrastructure, Nuclear Energy Institute, Testimony for the Record, U.S. Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources, Washington, DC, November 6, 2007

July 27, 2007
Skip Bowman, President and Chief Executive Officer, Nuclear Energy Institute, “Clean Energy for Texas: Why Texas Needs Nuclear Energy,” Dallas Friday Group, Dallas, Texas, July 27, 2007.

May 24, 2007
John Rowe, President and Chief Executive Officer, Exelon Corp., and Chairman of the Board, Nuclear Energy Institute, “Nuclear Energy 2007: State of the Industry,” Nuclear Energy Assembly, Miami, May 24, 2007.

May 24, 2007
Skip Bowman, President and Chief Executive Officer, Nuclear Energy Institute, “The Changing Climate for Nuclear Energy,” Nuclear Energy Assembly, Miami, Florida, May 24, 2007.

April 24, 2007
Christopher Crane, Senior Vice President, Exelon Corp., President and Chief Nuclear Officer, Exelon Nuclear,  Energy and Commerce Subcommittee on Energy and Air Quality, U.S. House of Representatives, Washington, DC April 24, 2007.

February 20, 2007
Christine Todd Whitman, Clean and Safe Energy Coalition, National Association of Regulatory Utility Commissioners Winter Committee Meetings, Washington, D.C.

February 19, 2007
Thomas Farrell II, Dominion, “Averting a Potential Capital Crisis in the Power Sector,” National Association of Regulatory Utility Commissioners Roundtable Discussion, Washington, D.C.

February 12, 2007
Tony Earley, DTE Energy Co., Economic Club of Detroit, Detroit, Michigan

February 5, 2007
Angie Howard, Nuclear Energy Institute, "Achieving Excellence in Human Performance: Nuclear Energy Training and Education," American Nuclear Society Conference on Nuclear Training and Education, Jacksonville, Florida

February 7, 2007
Joe Colvin, Nuclear Energy Institute, “More Nuclear Energy: Why America Needs It Now,” Board of Governors and Trustees Luncheon, Miami Chamber of Commerce, Miami, Florida
Key Issue: New Nuclear Plants
New Plants Sidebar Demo

The U.S. Department of Energy projects that U.S. electricity demand will rise 30 percent by 2030. That means our nation will need hundreds of new power plants to provide electricity for our homes and continued economic growth.

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