In the United States Court of Federal Claims
No. 14-1001C
(Filed: November 17, 2017)
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*
DUKE ENERGY PROGRESS, INC. and *
DUKE ENERGY FLORIDA, INC., *
* Spent Nuclear Fuel Case; Nuclear Waste
Plaintiffs, * Policy Act of 1982; Damages for Partial
* Breach of DOE’s Standard Contract;
v. * Plaintiff’s Burden to Prove Causation;
* Government Claim for Reduction of
THE UNITED STATES, * Damages.
*
Defendant. *
*
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Brad Fagg, with whom were Paul M. Bessette and Jane T. Accomando, Morgan, Lewis &
Bockius LLP, Washington, D.C., and Lara Nichols, Duke Energy Corporation, Charlotte,
North Carolina, Of Counsel, for Plaintiffs.
Jimmy S. McBirney, with whom were Chad A. Readler, Acting Assistant Attorney General,
Robert E. Kirschman, Jr., Director, Allison Kidd-Miller, Assistant Director, Christopher
L. Harlow and Kristin B. McGrory, Trial Attorneys, Commercial Litigation Branch, Civil
Division, U.S. Department of Justice, Washington, D.C., and Jane K. Taylor, U.S.
Department of Energy, Of Counsel, for Defendant.
OPINION AND ORDER
WHEELER, Judge.
This round three spent nuclear fuel (“SNF”) case is before the Court following the
partial breach by the Department of Energy (“DOE”) of the 1983 Standard Contract for
Disposal of Spent Nuclear Fuel (“Standard Contract”).1
1 See Indiana Michigan Power Co. v. United States, 422 F.3d 1369, 1378 (Fed. Cir. 2005) (holding that
utilities are required to file successive actions for damages related to the DOE’s breach of the Standard
Contract within six years of incurring such damages).
Round one of this series of cases involved Plaintiffs’ claims for damages incurred
through 2005. See Carolina Power & Light Co. v. United States, 82 Fed. Cl. 23 (2008);
Carolina Power & Light Co. v. United States, 573 F.3d 1271 (Fed. Cir. 2009) (addressing
the government’s appeal); Carolina Power & Light Co. v. United States, 98 Fed. Cl. 785
(2011). Round two dealt with Plaintiffs’ claims for damages incurred through 2010.
Carolina Power & Light Co. v. United States, 115 Fed. Cl. 57 (2014). This round three
case involves the same nuclear plant sites in Florida, South Carolina, and North Carolina
as rounds one and two: the Crystal River, Robinson, Brunswick, and Harris plants.2
In this proceeding, Duke Energy Progress, Inc. and Duke Energy Florida, Inc.
(collectively “Duke”) seek damages sustained for the period January 1, 2011 through
December 31, 2013. The Court held trial during June 5-7, 2017. The parties completed
post-trial briefing on August 11, 2017. The Court heard closing arguments on September
13, 2017.
Duke claims a total of $71,587,534 in damages, of which only $3,440,861 remain
in dispute.3 The disputed items are as follows: (1) Crystal River dry storage system and
contract termination costs ($565,443); (2) Crystal River Auxiliary Building modifications
($1,263,185); (3) Crystal River FHCR-3 crane modification costs ($1,235,642); (4) costs
to modify the transfer cask pedestal at Crystal River ($64,837); (5) Robinson fuel assembly
inspection and debris removal ($22,905); (6) costs of Robinson spent fuel cavity lights
($8,248); (7) Robinson electronic dosimeter costs ($11,750); (8) Brunswick handheld radio
costs ($6,246); (9) Brunswick torque wrench costs ($14,458); (10) Brunswick lead blanket
costs ($42,790); (11) Brunswick costs for spent fuel pool lamps and cameras ($3,495); and
(12) IF-300 equipment disposal and transshipment costs ($201,862). The Government
contends that these disputed costs would have been incurred by Duke regardless of DOE’s
partial breach and delay.
As explained below, the Court grants claims 5-12, but not claims 1-4. In total, the
Court awards damages to Duke in the amount of $68,458,425. In addition, the Government
asserts a $1,529,654 damages reduction claim due to the state ratemaking practices in North
and South Carolina. Essentially, the Government claims that it paid for various Duke assets
through prior damage awards, which North and South Carolina included in Duke’s asset
base in setting permissible utility prices. The Government argues that it should receive a
credit for the revenues Duke realized on these Government-funded assets. This claim is
denied.
2 Plaintiff Duke is the successor of the nuclear plant sites at issue in this series of cases.
3 While the sum of disputed items equals $3,440,861, the difference between the total damages claim
($71,587,534) and uncontested amount ($68,146,671) is $3,440,863. The parties’ briefs also list differing
amounts for this disputed figure. There is no apparent explanation for this $2.00 discrepancy.
2
Background4
Duke Energy Progress, LLC, formerly known as Carolina Power and Light
Company, is the sole or majority owner of the Harris, Brunswick, and Robinson plants and
qualifies as a purchaser of DOE disposal services under Standard Contract No. DE-CR01-
83NE44481. Stip. ¶¶ 1, 2. In 2015, the original named Plaintiff, Duke Energy Progress,
Inc., was converted into a North Carolina limited liability company and changed its name
to Duke Energy Progress, LLC (“DEP”). Stip. ¶ 1. Duke Energy Florida, LLC, formerly
known as Florida Power Corporation, is the majority owner of the Crystal River Unit 3
plant and qualifies as a purchaser of DOE disposal services under Standard Contract No.
DE-CR01-83NE44382. Stip. ¶¶ 3, 4. In 2015, the original named Plaintiff, Duke Florida,
Inc., was converted into a Florida limited liability company, and changed its named to
Duke Energy Florida, LLC (“DEF”). Stip. ¶ 3.
On February 24, 2015, the Court directed the parties to perform a comprehensive
pretrial accounting review process to determine the costs associated with Duke’s mitigation
efforts resulting from the Government’s partial breach. Pretrial Order on Damages, Dkt.
No. 11. From this accounting review, the Government acknowledges that Duke incurred
$71,587,534 in costs from January 1, 2011 through December 31, 2013 and concedes
$68,146,671 of this amount. The following facts are relevant to the disputed cost items in
this case.
A. The Nuclear Waste Policy Act and the Standard Contract
In 1983, Congress enacted the Nuclear Waste Policy Act of 1982 (“NWPA”) in an
attempt to address spent fuel disposal issues in the United States, recognizing the potential
risks created by radioactive waste. 42 U.S.C. §§ 10101-10270 (1982). Congress
determined that while the Federal Government is responsible for providing the permanent
disposal of SNF in order to protect the environment, the costs of such disposal should be
the responsibility of the generators and owners of such SNF. See § 10131(a)(4). The
NWPA specified that the generators and owners of spent fuel would pay the cost of interim
storage of such fuel until the waste and fuel were accepted by the DOE. See § 10131(a)(5).
Under the NWPA, utilities would pay fees into the Nuclear Waste Fund in exchange for
the Government’s performance of spent fuel disposal services. Id.
In February 1983, DOE published the proposed terms for the “Standard Contract
for Disposal of Spent Nuclear Fuel and/or High Level Radioactive Waste” in the Federal
Register. 48 Fed. Reg. 5458 (Feb. 4, 1983) (codified at 10 C.F.R. § 961.11). Nuclear plant
owners and operators were required to enter into DOE’s Standard Contract as a condition
4
The Court refers to the trial transcript by witness and page as “Name, Tr. __” and to trial exhibits as “PX
__” for the Plaintiffs’ exhibits and “DX __” for Defendant’s exhibits. The parties’ stipulations of fact, filed
on May 22, 2017, are referred to as “Stip. ¶ __.”
3
to renewing their operating licenses. Indiana Michigan Power Co. v. United States, 422
F.3d 1369, 1372 (Fed. Cir. 2005) (citing 42 U.S.C. § 10222(a)(1)); see also Entergy
Nuclear Indian Point 2, LLC v. United States, 128 Fed. Cl. 526, 531-32 (2016) (detailing
the Standard Contract and the history of the DOE program). According to the Standard
Contract, DOE was required to provide transportation for spent nuclear fuel and high level
waste to the DOE facility; arrange for and provide casks and necessary transportation of
the spent nuclear fuel and waste to the DOE facility; provide casks that meet regulatory
requirements; and provide pertinent information regarding activities such as cask handling
and loading in addition to technical information necessary for cask maintenance. 10 C.F.R.
§ 961.11 (Article IV.B). The Standard Contract assigned duties to the utility as well. The
utility was required to arrange for and provide all preparation, packaging, necessary
inspections, and loading activities required for the transportation of spent nuclear fuel and
high level waste to the DOE facility. 10 C.F.R. § 961.11.
Under the Standard Contract, DOE was required to begin accepting spent nuclear
fuel no later than January 31, 1998. Id. Now, nearly twenty years later, DOE has yet to
collect, accept, or dispose of any spent nuclear fuel from any Standard Contract signatory.
B. DOE’s Partial Breach of the Standard Contract with Duke
Pursuant to the NWPA, in June 1983, Duke executed Standard Contracts with DOE,
covering the Harris, Brunswick, Robinson, and Crystal River nuclear plants. See PX 3003,
3004. As required, Duke has paid all quarterly fees based on electricity production from
nuclear fuel in accordance with the contracts. Stip. ¶ 5. Through December 2013, Duke
paid approximately $904 million in fees for the disposal of spent fuel under the contracts.
Stip. ¶ 6. To date, DOE has not provided the transportation of SNF from Duke’s sites to a
DOE facility. Duke intends to hold DOE to its obligation to perform, thus making DOE’s
delay a partial breach of the contract. See, e.g., Indiana Michigan, 422 F.3d at 1374-75.
C. Crystal River Nuclear Plant
The Crystal River 3 Nuclear Power Plant (“Crystal River”) is a single unit
pressurized water reaction (“PWR”) plant near Crystal River, Florida. Stip. ¶ 7. The plant
began commercial operation in 1977 and was shut down for a scheduled maintenance and
refueling outage in October 2009. Stip. ¶¶ 8, 9. Crystal River remained shut down after
the discovery of delamination, or concrete separation, in the containment building
surrounding the reactor vessel. Plaintiffs’ Pre-Trial Memorandum of Contentions of Law
and Fact, Dkt. No. 36 (Pl. Br.) at 9. In February 2013, Duke announced the retirement of
the Crystal River plant. Stip. ¶ 10.
Crystal River has two interconnected spent fuel pools, A and B. Stip. ¶ 11. Duke
increased the capacity of these spent fuel pools in 1978 and 1991 by replacing the existing
storage racks with higher density racks. Stip. ¶12. After the 1991 re-rack project, Crystal
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River’s licensed capacity was 1,357 spent fuel assemblies. Duke performed another re-
rack in 2001, increasing Crystal River’s spent fuel pools to 1,474 spaces; this project also
replaced the neutron absorbing material in the original racks, thereby resolving a spent fuel
pool water chemistry issue. Stip. ¶ 13. Duke eventually decided to construct an
Independent Spent Fuel Storage Installation (“ISFSI”) pad at Crystal River. Stip. ¶ 14.
Duke selected the AREVA-Transnuclear NUHOMS 32PTH1 dry storage cask system,
which holds 32 PWR spent fuel assemblies. Stip. ¶ 15. Further, due to the small size of
the Crystal River plant, the ISFSI plant was to be constructed in the center of the site, near
the Auxiliary Building. See PX 3107; Edwards, Tr. 90-91.
Between 2011 and 2013, Duke purchased twelve horizontal storage modules
(“HSMs”) and ten dry storage canisters (“DSCs”). Duke also purchased fourteen steel
containers in which to store the DSCs. Stip. ¶¶ 16, 18. In preparation of the ISFSI pad,
Duke relocated temporary buildings and trailers; transferred underground utilities; installed
a perimeter intrusion detection system post; and replaced the FHCR-5 cask-handling crane.
See generally PX 3071 (summarizing project costs). Duke also modified the Crystal River
Auxiliary Building to support the dry storage system. Edwards, Tr. 97.
D. Robinson Nuclear Plant
The H.B. Robinson Nuclear Plant (“Robinson”) is a single unit site located near
Hartsville, South Carolina; it is licensed to operate through 2030. Stip. ¶¶ 38, 39. In the
past, to increase the Robinson spent fuel pool capacity and alleviate pool capacity
constraints, Duke re-racked the Robinson pool, shipped Robinson fuel to Brunswick and
Harris, and built an ISFSI. Stip. ¶ 46; Edwards, Tr. 158. As a result of DOE’s partial
breach, Duke continued to ship fuel from Robinson to Harris and built a second ISFSI.
Stip. ¶ 46. Duke permanently suspended its transshipment program in 2008, but it
recovered costs pertaining to those actions in rounds one and two. See Carolina Power, 82
Fed. Cl. at 35; Carolina Power, 98 Fed. Cl. at 792; Carolina Power, 115 Fed. Cl. at 60.
Between January 1, 2011 and December 31, 2013, Duke procured ten dry storage
containers and ten horizontal storage modules, made initial payments for a total of twenty
additional DSCs and HSMs, and loaded six 24PTH canisters onto the Robinson dry storage
pad. Stip. ¶ 51. The Government does not dispute that the dry storage costs are a result of
its breach; it does, however, contend that specific equipment used during dry storage cask
loading would have been necessary to load DOE-supplied transportation casks, regardless
of the breach. Maret, Tr. 441-46.
E. Brunswick Nuclear Plant
The Brunswick Nuclear Plant (“Brunswick”) is a two-unit boiling water reaction
(“BWR”) plant near Southport, North Carolina. Stip. ¶ 57. The Brunswick units
(“Brunswick 1” and “Brunswick 2”) have separate spent fuel pools and are licensed to
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operate through 2036 and 2034, respectively. Stip. ¶¶ 58, 59. To increase capacity at
Brunswick, Duke re-racked, transshipped spent fuel assemblies from Brunswick to Harris,
and built a dry cask storage facility. Stip. ¶¶ 60, 61, 62. In rounds one and two, Duke
recovered costs for the transshipment program, the feasibility study for the Brunswick
ISFSI, the Brunswick dry storage facility, and the initial dry cask loading campaign. See
Carolina Power, 82 Fed. Cl. at 34; Carolina Power, 98 Fed. Cl. at 792; Carolina Power,
115 Fed. 59-60.
During the round three claim period, Duke procured sixteen DSCs and twenty
HSMs. Stip. ¶ 64. Duke also loaded four DSCs in 2011 and eight DSCs in 2013. Stip. ¶
64. The Government does not argue that the ISFSI would not have been necessary absent
the Government’s breach; it does, however, dispute whether specific equipment used
during dry storage cask loading would have been necessary regardless of the breach.
F. Harris Nuclear Plant
The Shearon Harris Nuclear Power Plant (“Harris”) is a single unit plant located
near New Hill, North Carolina; it is currently licensed to operate through 2046. Stip. ¶¶
28, 29. Harris was originally intended to accommodate four nuclear units (Units 1, 2, 3,
and 4), with Units 1 and 4 sharing spent fuel pools A and B, and Units 2 and 3 sharing
spent fuel pools C and D. Stip. ¶¶ 30, 31. During construction, plans changed, and pools
A and B were completed for use by the single unit reactor, while pools C and D were
partially completed. Stip. ¶ 32. When spent fuel from the Brunswick and Robinson plants
were shipped to Harris, racks were added to the A and B pools. Stip. ¶¶ 33, 34. Duke
eventually had to activate pools C and D as a result of DOE’s breach. Stip. ¶ 35. Duke
recovered costs for these actions in rounds one and two. See Carolina Power, 82 Fed. Cl.
at 34-35 (covering the activation of pools C and D); Carolina Power, 115 Fed. Cl. at 60
(pertaining to the additional racks in the Harris C pool).
During the round three period, Duke continued to incur costs at the Harris site. Duke
installed three additional racks to spent fuel pool C and ordered a study of long-term spent
fuel storage options, as a result of the DOE breach. Stip. ¶ 37. The Government does not
dispute any of the round three costs claimed regarding the Harris site. Couchman, Tr. 664.
G. IF-300 Equipment Disposal Costs and Transshipments
Transshipment is the process of shipping spent fuel from one location to another.
IF-300 casks are rail casks used for transshipments. Stip. ¶ 43. Prior to 2011, Duke owned
two of these casks, the IF-303 and the IF-304. Edwards, Tr. 160-61. In 2001, Duke
purchased two other IF-300 casks, designated as IF-301 and IF-302. PX 3020; Edwards,
Tr. 160-61. When IF-301 and IF-302 were purchased, they were placed in storage in South
Carolina, and the applicable equipment and spare parts were placed in Sealand containers
and transported to Harris to be stored. Edwards, Tr. 163. Duke later decided to dispose of
6
the spare parts and equipment. The IF-303 and IF-304 equipment is stored in a warehouse
and is still in Duke’s possession. Edwards, Tr. 163-66. This case solely pertains to disposal
costs of equipment related to the IF-301 and IF-302 casks.
H. Duke’s Uncontested Damages Claims
Duke is claiming $71,587,534 in damages. Stip. ¶ 71. The Government is not
challenging $68,146,671 of Duke’s claimed damages. Defendant’s Proposed Findings of
Fact and Conclusions of Law, Dkt. No. 61 (Def. Post Trial Br.) at 7.
Discussion
The remedy for a partial breach of contract is “damages sufficient to place the
injured party in as good a position as it would have been had the breaching party fully
performed.” Indiana Michigan, 422 F.3d at 1373 (citing San Carlos Irrigation & Drainage
Dist. v. United States, 111 F.3d 1557, 1562 (Fed. Cir. 1997)). Available damages include
the non-breaching party’s mitigation expenses, specifically its costs of arranging
alternatives to the breaching party’s required performance. See Restatement (Second) of
Contracts (1981) § 347, cmt. a, b; Hughes Commc’ns Galaxy, Inc. v. United States, 271
F.3d 1060, 1067-68 (Fed. Cir. 2001). “Mitigation is appropriate where a reasonable person,
in light of the known facts and circumstances, would have taken steps to avoid damage.”
Indiana Michigan, 422 F.3d at 1375. Mitigation damages are to be awarded to “reimburse
a non-breaching party to a contract for the expense it incurred in attempting to rectify the
injury the breach caused it.” Citizens Federal Bank v. United States, 474 F.3d 1314, 1320
(Fed. Cir. 2007) (citing Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 347 cmt. c (1981)). Upon
receiving notice that one party to a contract does not intend to perform, the other party is
required to mitigate damages, meaning that it must take reasonable efforts to avoid further
losses from the breach. Indiana Michigan, 422 F.3d at 1375 (citing Restatement (Second)
of Contracts §350 cmt. b (1981)).
A. Elements of Burden of Proof
In order to recover damages, Duke must show by a preponderance of the evidence
that: (1) the damages were reasonably foreseeable by the breaching party at the time of
contracting; (2) the breach is a substantial causal factor for the damages; and (3) the
damages are shown with reasonable certainty. Indiana Michigan, 422 F.3d at 1373 (citing
Energy Capital Corp. v. United States, 302 F.3d 1314, 1320 (Fed. Cir. 2002)). See also
Entergy Nuclear Indian Point 2, 128 Fed. Cl. at 534.
1. Foreseeability
Damages must be foreseeable “as a probable result of the breach,” meaning that the
damages “follow[ed] from the breach (a) in the ordinary course of events, or (b) as a result
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of special circumstances, beyond the ordinary course of events, that the party in breach had
reason to know.” Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 351(2). This requirement “reflects
the principle that a breaching party should not be liable for the damages that ‘it did not at
the time of contracting have reason to foresee as a probable result of such a breach.’”
Citizens Federal Bank, 474 F.3d at 1321 (quoting Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 351
cmt. a).
The non-breaching party must demonstrate that both the magnitude and type of
damages or injury were foreseeable at the time of contract formation. See Landmark Land
Co. v. FDIC, 256 F.3d 1365, 1378 (Fed. Cir. 2001). The loss must be more than a “merely
remote or possible” consequence of the breach. Old Stone Corp. v. United States, 450 F.3d
1360, 1375 (Fed. Cir. 2006) (quoting National Controls Corp. v. National Semiconductor
Corp., 833 F.2d 491, 496 (3d Cir. 1987)). It is foreseeable that DOE’s non-performance
under the Standard Contract would result in nuclear power plants incurring storage
expenses. See, e.g., Consolidated Edison Co. of N.Y. v. United States, 676 F.3d 1331 (Fed.
Cir. 2012); System Fuels, Inc. v. United States, 79 Fed. Cl. 37, 59 (2007).
2. Causation
The breach of contract must also cause the damage. Causation is a question of fact.
Bluebonnet Savings Bank, F.S.B. v. United States, 266 F.3d 1348, 1356 (Fed. Cir. 2001).
Causation must be “definitely established,” but the breach need not be the sole cause of the
damages. California Federal Bank v. United States, 395 F.3d 1263, 1267-68 (Fed. Cir.
2005). According to the Federal Circuit’s “but-for” test, the breaching party is liable for
those damages that it directly and entirely caused. See Citizens Federal Bank, 474 F.3d at
1318; Yankee Atomic Electric Co. v. United States, 536 F.3d 1268, 1272 (Fed. Cir. 2008).
The plaintiff bears the burden of showing that but for the breach, the purported damages
would not have occurred by “submit[ting] a hypothetical model establishing what its costs
would have been in the absence of breach.” Vermont Yankee Nuclear Power Corp. v.
United States, 683 F.3d 1330, 1350 (Fed. Cir. 2012) (quoting Energy Northwest v. United
States, 641 F.3d 1300, 1305 (Fed. Cir. 2011)).
3. Reasonable Certainty
Plaintiffs can only recover those damages that they can establish with reasonable
certainty. Indiana Michigan, 422 F.3d at 1373; see also Restatement (Second) of Contracts
§ 352 cmt. a. “[W]here responsibility for damages is clear, it is not essential that the
amount thereof be ascertainable with absolute exactness or mathematical precision . . . .”
San Carlos Irrigation & Drainage Dist., 111 F.3d at 1563 (citing Electronic & Missile
Facilities, Inc. v. United States, 189 Ct. Cl. 237, 416 F.2d 1345, 1358 (1969)). A fair and
reasonable approximation of damages is sufficient. See, e.g., Energy Capital Corp., 302
F.3d at 1329; Hughes, 271 F.3d at 1067-68. Speculative damages, however, cannot be
8
recovered. San Carlos Irrigation & Drainage Dist., 111 F.3d at 1563; see also Indiana
Michigan, 422 F.3d at 1373.
4. Government’s Burden of Proof
After the plaintiff has met its three-part burden, if the Government seeks reductions
in claimed damages, it “bears the burden of showing that [plaintiff’s] mitigation efforts
were unreasonable.” Tennessee Valley Authority v. United States, 69 Fed. Cl. 515, 523
(2006). The breaching party thus bears the burden of establishing that plaintiff’s damages
claims should be reduced or denied. See Home Savings of America, F.S.B. v. United
States, 399 F.3d 1341, 1353 (Fed. Cir. 2005).
B. Legal Principles
In addition to determining if the parties have met their respective burdens, the Court
must consider two principles that are integral to this case: (1) the definition and recovery
of “loading costs;” and (2) the effect of a particular activity’s potential repetition upon
DOE’s performance.
1. Loading Costs Related to Storage Casks
The Government vigorously contests certain costs for loading dry cask storage
canisters. The Federal Circuit has held that loading costs pertaining to storage casks are
fully recoverable, as the costs to load such casks would be non-existent in a non-breach
world. System Fuels, Inc. v. United States, 818 F.3d 1302, 1306 (Fed. Cir. 2016). In
System Fuels, the utility appealed the Court’s finding that it was not entitled to the costs
incurred to load spent nuclear fuel into storage casks stored at two sites. System Fuels, 818
F.3d at 1305. The Federal Circuit explained that while the utility is responsible for the
loading costs associated with DOE-supplied transportation casks, it is not responsible for
the storage cask costs. Id. at 1306 (emphasis added).
Under the existing Standard Contracts, DOE will not accept the currently loaded
storage casks; therefore, the utility must unload the spent nuclear fuel from the storage
casks, and reload that fuel into DOE-supplied transportation casks whenever DOE
performs. Id. The Federal Circuit held that the costs of loading transportation casks is
irrelevant to the utility’s recovery for expenses incurred for loading storage casks, as
loading costs are those expenses incurred “entirely for storage due to the Government’s
breach.” Id.
2. Repetition of Mitigation Activity
Also relevant to this case, the Federal Circuit has held that if a trial court concludes
a particular activity will have to be “re-done” upon eventual DOE performance, then the
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costs associated with the utility’s reasonable mitigation efforts are recoverable. Energy
Northwest, 641 F.3d at 1307. In Energy Northwest, the utility argued that there was a
“90% likelihood” that the utility would have to modify a specific plant when the DOE
eventually performs, therefore entitling it to damages. Id. The Federal Circuit remanded
the matter, stating that the trial court applied the wrong test regarding deferred versus
avoided costs, but it did not dispute that the claimed costs may be recoverable if likely of
repetition upon DOE’s performance. Id.
C. Disputed Costs
1. Crystal River
a. Dry Storage Systems and Contract Termination Costs at Crystal River
are Not Recoverable.
Duke claims $565,443 for costs associated with dry storage systems and contract
termination at Crystal River: Duke claims $216,000 in horizontal storage module fees;
$131,611 in the purchase of dry storage canisters at Brunswick pending completion of the
Crystal River ISFSI; and $217,832 in contract termination costs related to the general
contractor in the ISFSI project. Stip. ¶¶ 22, 23, 24.
The AREVA-Transnuclear NUHOMS 32PTH1 dry storage system, which Duke
selected at Crystal River, holds 32 PWR assemblies and weighs over 100 tons when loaded.
Stip. ¶ 15; Edwards, Tr. 65. Duke purchased twelve NUHOMS HSMs and ten NUHOMS
DSCs between 2011 and 2013. Stip. ¶ 16. Since the ISFSI pad construction was not
complete, Duke stored the HSMs at Bayshore Concrete Projects in Virginia and the DSCs
at Brunswick. Stip. ¶¶ 17, 18; see also Edwards, Tr. 145-46. In addition to dry storage
costs, Duke seeks recovery for contract termination costs related to the ISFSI project with
general contractor Brasfield and Gorrie. Brasfield and Gorrie provided management and
labor support for the ISFSI project, but Duke ultimately terminated its contract due to the
suspension of the ISFSI project. Edwards, Tr. 148-50.
Further, in an effort to increase Crystal River’s power production capability, Duke
began a scheduled outage at the site in 2009. Stip. ¶ 9. Duke intended to refuel the reactor
and replace steam generators during the outage. Edwards, Tr. 206. While it was customary
for nuclear plants to retain professional consulting firms to manage similar upgrades, Duke
did not do so. Edwards, Tr. 200-02. Rather, Duke self-managed the work, a feat no other
utility had successfully attempted. Id. Although Duke chose to self-manage the outage
project, Sargent & Lundy, an expert engineering firm recommended releasing the tension
of approximately 95 steel tendons at Crystal River in order to relieve stress on the concrete
structure and later suggested releasing 65 tendons. Maret, Tr. 413. Bechtel, a separate,
independent engineering firm, also recommended the release of 65 tendons. Id. Duke
decided to release only 27 tendons, causing an insufficient relief of stress in the concrete
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which resulted in delamination in the containment building surrounding the reactor vessel.
Maret, Tr. 414. Following the delamination problem, Duke decided to suspend work on
its ISFSI project. Edwards, Tr. 204-06.
Duke argues that the dry storage system and contract termination costs are
recoverable, claiming that in a non-breach world, it would not have pursued dry storage on
an ISFSI and that there would have been no need for HSMs and DSCs. Edwards, Tr. 145-
48. The Government does not accept responsibility for any of these costs, claiming its
partial breach was not a cause of the damages. Rather, the Government contends that
Duke’s delamination problem at Crystal River, something for which Duke was solely
responsible, caused these damages.
Duke has not met its threshold burden of showing that the cost incurred was
foreseeable “as a probable result of the breach,” meaning the damages resulted from action
in the ordinary course of events or due to special circumstances that the breaching party
had reason to know. Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 351(2). While it may be argued
that additional spent fuel storage, i.e. the ISFSI pad, was required as a direct result of
DOE’s breach, this claim is not for the ISFSI pad. In fact, Duke recovered costs pertaining
to the design and preliminary construction for an ISFSI in round two of this case. See
Carolina Power, 115 Fed. Cl. at 65. Instead, the damages at issue involve dry storage
systems and contract termination costs.
While DOE’s breach undoubtedly caused Duke to incur considerable costs, Duke’s
decision to self-manage the steam generator replacement project and the eventual
delamination were not foreseeable results of this breach. Based on prior, similar projects,
if Duke had retained a professional firm to assist in the engineering aspects of the project,
it is likely that delamination problems would not have happened. Edwards, Tr. 199-201.
Duke acknowledges that the delamination was specific to the steam generation
replacement project and explicitly states that DOE’s performance had nothing to do with
this project or the resulting delamination. Edwards, Tr. 205-06 (stating “we had no
discussions prior to [the delamination] of stopping the [ISFSI] project.” If the delamination
had not occurred, work on the Crystal River storage installation would not have been
interrupted, negating the continued need for dry storage. Edwards, Tr. 206, 209.
Suspending the dry storage project resulted in the storage and contract termination costs
that Duke claims. As this suspension was a result of the delamination and DOE had no
involvement in the events leading to the delamination, these expenses are solely
attributable to Duke.
b. Costs for Auxiliary Building Modifications are not Recoverable.
Duke claims $1,263,185 for modifications made to the Crystal River Auxiliary
Building in order to support the NUHOMS 32PTH1 dry storage system. As stated, Duke
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selected the NUHOMS 32PTH1 storage system due to its ability to accommodate the spent
fuel at Crystal River. In choosing this system, Duke evaluated the Auxiliary Building’s
ability to process the NUHOMS 32PTH1 and identified necessary modifications to be
made to the Auxiliary Building. Edwards, Tr. 97. Engineering Change (“EC”) 73474
explains the changes to be made, such as pedestal installations, alterations to electrical
power, and modification of the electrical, service air, and HVAC systems. See PX 3001.
Duke argues that if the Government had not breached the Standard Contract, dry storage
at Crystal River would not have been necessary. Stip. ¶ 73. Duke further contends that
because all of the modifications outlined in EC 73474 support loading spent fuel into
NUHOMS 32PTH1, these costs are fully recoverable under System Fuels. See System
Fuels, 818 F.3d at 1302.
To recover these costs, Duke must meet its burden and show that the breach of
contract caused the contested damages. Additionally, as acknowledged by the Federal
Circuit, the plaintiff must provide a hypothetical model establishing what its costs would
have been absent a breach. Vermont Yankee, 683 F.3d at 1350. The Government argues
that Duke does not explain how these costs are related to the breach.
At trial, Duke’s experts did not distinguish between the costs that were attributable
to the delay and those that would have been incurred in a non-breach world. See Edwards,
Tr. 186-87 (admitting that even if DOE had timely performed, some of the modifications
would have been made). Further, Duke explained that some modifications at the Auxiliary
Building, such as installation of a cask pedestal in the decontamination pit, were the type
that may have been necessary for any cask, again failing to show a causal relationship
between specific modifications and DOE’s partial breach. See Westcott, Tr. 376-79.
Similarly, costs related to a decontamination pit work platform, which was installed for
safety purposes, were claimed as an Auxiliary Building modification but would have been
necessary absent a breach. Westcott, Tr. 387-88. The Government’s experts confirmed
that many of the Auxiliary Building activities would have been required in a non-breach
world. See, e.g., Maret, Tr. 433-35.
While EC 73474 explains the changes necessary to accommodate the selected dry
storage system at Crystal River, it does not adequately isolate the costs and explain how
the partial breach led to each modification. Duke’s simply stating its need for recovery is
not enough. Duke also does not provide a hypothetical model confirming whether any
modifications would have been necessary absent DOE’s breach, thereby failing to meet an
important component of its three-part burden. While the Court acknowledges that some of
the costs may indeed be attributable to DOE’s partial breach, the Court is not responsible
for separating these costs. Duke has failed to demonstrate which costs are attributable to
DOE’s breach, and therefore the argument claiming these Auxiliary Building
modifications cannot succeed.
12
c. FHCR-3 Crane Modification Costs are not Recoverable.
Duke claims recovery of $1,235,642 for costs related to the Crystal River FHCR-3
crane modification. Stip. ¶ 25. The original grapple mechanism at Crystal River used
fingers to engage a fuel assembly’s upper end fitting from the outside, and once the fuel
assembly was loaded into the dry shielded canister, sufficient clearance to unlatch the fuel
and raise the grapple would be necessary. Edwards, Tr. 125. This is similar to “picking
up a drinking glass from the top with your hand” and once loaded, “[you] remove your
fingers from the glass to release it.” Plaintiffs’ Proposed Findings of Fact and Conclusions
of Law, Dkt. 60 (Pl. Post Trial Br.) at 35. This method differs from the new design, which
operates from the inside-out. In the new system, the fuel assembly is fully inserted into the
dry shielded canister fuel cell, allowing the grapple to unlatch the fuel while fully inside
the cell. See PX 3002 (Figure 4); Edwards, Tr. 129-31.
Duke claims crane modification costs, arguing that the modification was needed to
(1) access peripheral locations of the spent fuel pool in order to gain additional fuel storage
space, and (2) load fuel into the NUHOMS 32PTH1 system due to its height and the
inability of the pre-existing crane to release fuel within the new system. See PX 3002.
Duke alleges that both these reasons are directly related to DOE’s partial breach. The
Government contests these claims, stating that even absent a breach, Duke would have
been required to upgrade the FHCR-3 crane. Maret, Tr. 428.
The casks that DOE considered for use at Crystal River and other plants were high
capacity casks that would not have been compatible with the original grapple system.
Maret, Tr. 426. This would be the case in a non-breach world as well. Also, during the
claim period, there were no licensed PWR canisters or casks that would have been
compatible with the original grapple mechanism, and no such canister exists today. Maret,
Tr. 424-25. As a result, the crane modification would have been necessary to load any type
of cask, not just the NUHOMS cask at Crystal River.
Duke also argues that the original FHCR-3 grapple would have been sufficient
without modification if the Government had provided Crystal River with a suitable
transport cask like that at the Brunswick site. Edwards, Tr. 140-41. The Government
explains that the Brunswick system, a BWR cask system with a removable top grid, is not
comparable to the system at hand, as the Crystal River system is a PWR system, and no
such system exists for PWR casks. Maret, Tr. 424-25. The Court agrees; based on the
evidence presented, the crane modification costs at Crystal River were not attributable to
the Government’s breach, and these costs would have been incurred even in the event of
DOE performance. Accordingly, these costs are not recoverable.
13
d. Costs to Modify the Transfer Cask Pedestal are not Recoverable.
Duke claims $64,837 in costs related to redesigning the transfer cask pedestal at
Crystal River. Stip. ¶ 26. Duke installed a pedestal in an effort to lift the transfer cask,
making it more accessible. Edwards, Tr. 152-53. The parties agree that Duke initially
decided to design the pedestal in a square shape but later improved the design by making
it round. Edwards, Tr. 154-55. This redesign reduced a tripping hazard, as there could
have been corners sticking out from the square pedestal. Edwards, Tr. 154. Duke attributes
this redesign cost to the Government because the need for a cask pedestal depends on the
cask design and there is a possibility that a DOE-supplied transportation cask would not
have needed a pedestal. Edwards, Tr. 153-54. Duke also claims that whenever the
Government performs, Duke may need a different pedestal, arguing it may have to “re-do”
these activities upon DOE performance. Edwards, Tr. 156-57.
However, in the Court’s assessment, Duke offers insufficient proof of its claims.
Duke’s decision to redesign a circular pedestal that it initially chose to be square is not
related to the Government’s breach. Duke’s safety concerns are certainly reasonable, but
they are not unique to the specific NUHOMS cask. Lastly, Duke’s stating that when DOE
performs Duke may need a different pedestal is not adequate under the Energy Northwest
standard; a mere possibility does not prove repetition of mitigation efforts. Therefore, the
pedestal redesign costs are not attributable to the Government’s delay, and Duke may not
recover these costs.
2. Robinson
a. The Costs Associated with Fuel Assembly Inspection and Debris
Removal at Robinson are Recoverable.
Duke claims $22,905 for costs associated with fuel assembly inspection and debris
removal at Robinson; $15,000 relate to labor costs, and $7,905 are associated with the
purchase of underwater cameras and masts used for fuel inspection and debris removal.
Stip. ¶¶ 52, 53, 54; Smith, Tr. 274. Fuel is inspected for debris prior to being loaded,
because Transnuclear NUHOMS Technical Specifications require that only fuel, with no
excess materials, be inserted into dry shielded canisters. Smith, Tr. 272- 73.
Duke purchased underwater cameras and masts for the purposes of fuel inspection
and debris removal. Stip. ¶53. These purchases and compliance with the technical
specifications are mandatory under storage cask loading specifications. Smith, Tr. 272-73.
Duke claims that this equipment has a finite life span, requiring future repurchase and
preventing repeat usage many years from now. Smith, Tr. 274.
The Government argues that fuel inspection expenses would have been incurred
absent a breach, because the Standard Contract requires inspection of fuel assemblies.
14
Maret, Tr. 443-44. The Government also asserts that there is no evidence that the same
type of inspections and debris removal will need to be repeated at a future date, arguing
that future inspections would be narrower. Maret, Tr. 446; DX 3065 at 17. As a result, the
Government claims these costs are unrecoverable, as they are not attributed to DOE’s
delay.
Similar to System Fuels and Entergy Nuclear Indian Point 2, in which the Court
held that the plaintiffs were allowed costs of loading spent fuel to storage casks, Duke may
recover these costs as well. See System Fuels, 818 F.3d at 1305-06; see also Entergy
Nuclear Indian Point 2, 128 Fed. Cl. at 543. In Entergy Nuclear Indian Point 2, the plaintiff
incurred costs caused by DOE’s breach when it was required to inspect and characterize
fuel in order to load spent fuel to storage casks, activities that would have to be repeated
upon DOE performance. Entergy Nuclear Indian Point 2 at 543. Using System Fuels as a
standard, the Court explained that because fuel could not be transported to DOE in its
current canisters, and because of the uncertainty about specific requirements for
transportation casks when DOE finally performs, the plaintiff was entitled to recover. Id.
The fuel inspection and debris removal activities at hand were incurred as part of
storage cask loading, not transportation cask loading. As such, Duke will be required to
fulfill transportation cask loading obligations once DOE performs. Further, as the
inspection and debris removal equipment may only be used for a finite period of time, it
will likely need to be replaced for future activities. The Government’s argument that future
inspections would be more narrow is purely speculation. What is certain, however, is that
Duke will need to perform these activities again whenever DOE finally performs.
Therefore, the inspection and debris removal costs at Robinson are directly attributable to
the Government, entitling Duke to recover damages of $22,905.
b. Costs of Spent Fuel Cavity Lights at Robinson are Recoverable.
Duke claims $8,248 for the purchase and installation of spent fuel cavity lights at
Robinson. Stip. ¶ 55. The lights are permanent fixtures used for dry cask loading and are
necessary to illuminate the pool area and provide increased visibility during inspections.
Smith, Tr. 276.
Duke explains that new lights were necessary because the general areas of the pool
that were already lit were also full of fuel, making inspections difficult without additional
lighting. Smith, Tr. 277.
The Government argues that the need for lighting was not caused by DOE’s partial
breach, explaining lighting is required in order to maintain a safe working environment,
which is a necessity regardless of DOE performance. Maret, Tr. 442; see also DX 3065 at
15. The Government also contends that fuel inspections are performed in an area of the
pool largely devoid of fuel, so existing fuel in the pool does not affect the need for
15
additional lighting. Maret, Tr. 443. The Government admits, however, that these types of
light fixtures have a finite life, making future repurchase inevitable. Maret, Tr. 502.
The parties agree that these lights are necessary. Similar to the aforementioned fuel
inspection costs, the additional fuel cavity lights were purchased for storage cask loading
because the prior lit areas of the pool were already full. Smith, Tr. 276-77. If the
Government had performed in a timely fashion, the storage casks would not have been
necessary and the pools would not have been as full—potentially extinguishing the need
for additional lights at Robinson. Further, since it is unknown when DOE will perform, it
is likely that the lights will need to be replaced at that time. Therefore, the Government is
liable for these costs, and Duke is entitled to recover $8,248 for this expense.
c. Electronic Dosimeter Costs at Robinson are Recoverable.
Duke claims $11,750 for electronic dosimeters, devices that measure neutron
radiation, at Robinson. Stip. ¶ 56; Smith, Tr. 286. Radiation exposure is always a concern
in the nuclear industry, and utilities aim to ensure the lowest possible exposure to
employees. Smith, Tr. 296. During dry cask loading, workers are exposed to a neutron
dose when the cask is removed from the water. Smith, Tr. 286; Edwards, Tr. 167.
Duke purchased electronic dosimeters to protect employees while loading dry
storage casks. Smith, Tr. 296, 298. Dosimeters were necessary at Robinson due to the
amount of time personnel spent on top of the storage canisters during cask closure
operations. Edwards, Tr. 169-70. Also, experts state that the dosimeters have a finite life.
Edwards, Tr. 170; Smith. Tr. 287. Additionally, dosimetry technology is constantly
improving, and there is no guarantee that the purchased dosimeters will remain adequate
when DOE finally performs. Smith, Tr. 287-88. As a necessity, they would need to be
replaced during DOE’s performance.
The Government does not dispute the necessity of electronic dosimeters. Maret, Tr.
441. In fact, it states that Duke’s decision to purchase the dosimeters was reasonable.
Maret, Tr. 441-42. The Government instead argues that Duke would have purchased the
same dosimeters even in a non-breach world. Maret, Tr. 442; DX 3065 at 18-19.
As the parties agree, Duke reasonably purchased electronic dosimeters for employee
safety during storage cask loading, an activity that would not have been necessary absent
DOE’s partial breach. Duke notes that a transportation cask, unlike a storage cask, would
have been bolted shut, limiting the amount of time personnel spent on top of the canister
and eliminating the need for an electronic dosimeter. See Edwards, Tr. 168-70. As Duke
needed these dosimeters for storage cask loading, they are directly attributable to the
Government’s breach. Due to their nature, the electronic dosimeters will likely be replaced
when DOE performs in the future. As a result, Duke is entitled to the full costs related to
the electronic dosimeters at Robinson.
16
3. Brunswick
a. Handheld Radio Costs at Brunswick are Recoverable.
Duke claims $6,246 for handheld radios used for the cask loading process, and
inserting the DSC into the horizontal module at Brunswick. Stip. ¶ 65; Smith, Tr. 290; see
also Edwards, Tr. 179-80. Personnel at Brunswick use these devices to communicate
during the loading process and to ensure that all personnel are aware of the cask position.
Smith, Tr. 290; Edwards, Tr. 179. The handheld radios, which have a finite life, consist of
headsets worn under hard hats, microphones, and battery packs worn on belts. Smith, Tr.
290; see also Maret, Tr. 502.
Duke purchased and used these handheld radios for the expected purposes. Duke
asserts that the equipment was dedicated to Brunswick dry storage and was not available
for use on the general site. Smith, Tr. 291.
The Government argues that Duke’s use of radios would be necessary to safely load
any cask at Brunswick. Maret, Tr. 448-49. It asserts that although Duke used the handheld
radios while loading the dry storage casks, there is nothing unique about the NUHOMS
storage casks that requires use of these radios compared to any other cask loading. Id. Due
to this fact, the Government disputes whether the radios were purchased as a result of its
partial breach.
Duke used the claimed handheld radios solely for the purpose of dry storage loading.
Smith, Tr. 291. The Government does not dispute this fact. Maret, Tr. 495. Duke used
the radios for a loading purpose directly related to DOE’s breach, which allows them to
recover these costs under System Fuels. Additionally, the radios, which have a finite life,
will need to be replaced whenever DOE performs in the future, entitling Duke to recover.
b. Torque Wrench Costs at Brunswick are Recoverable.
Duke claims $14,458 for the purchase of a manual torque wrench and a battery-
operated torque wrench. Stip. ¶ 66; see PX 3045 and 3043, respectively. Torque wrenches
are used for tightening the cask restraint once the cask is loaded with fuel and removed
from the spent fuel pool. Edwards, Tr. 176; Smith, Tr. 280. The restraint keeps the cask
from tipping over in the event of a seismic event, by ensuring the cask has a larger footprint
at the bottom. Smith, Tr. 281. The cask system at Brunswick, NUHOMS 61BTH, requires
the use of the seismic restraint. Smith, Tr. 283.
In compliance with the NUHOMS Technical Specifications, Duke first purchased a
manual torque wrench. Smith, Tr. 281. The battery operated wrench was later purchased
due to the increased amount of time workers spent using the manual wrench to tighten the
17
bolts on the dry cask system. Id. Duke explains that both wrenches are still used and are
earmarked and kept for dry fuel storage. Smith, Tr. 281-82, 285.
The Government claims that the torque wrench purchases are not attributable to its
partial breach, because torque wrenches are standard plant equipment. Maret, Tr. 452-53.
The Government also asserts that even though Duke labeled the wrenches for dry fuel
storage purposes, they are standard equipment used to tighten any bolts. Maret, Tr. 452.
The Government further argues that absent a breach, Duke would still need to comply with
the seismic requirements—leading to the purchase of torque wrenches.
While torque wrenches may have been necessary despite a breach, the Government
does not offer evidence or meet its burden of showing the purchase was unreasonable.
Further, the Government claims that the same or similar wrenches would have to be
purchased in a non-breach world, but there is no support to suggest this is the case. At
trial, the Government expressed uncertainty about whether the same wrenches could indeed
be used for a DOE-supplied transportation cask. Maret, Tr. 501-02. In fact, the IF-300
transportation cask at Brunswick did not require a seismic restraint, although the dry cask
storage resulting from the DOE breach did. Smith, Tr. 283; Edwards, Tr. 177. Lastly,
similar to the handheld radios, the fact that the wrenches could have been used for
transportation does not negate the reality that they were purchased and used for dry cask
loading—an activity directly attributable to DOE’s breach. For these reasons, Duke may
recover $14,458 for the torque wrench costs at Brunswick.
c. Lead Blanket Costs at Brunswick are Recoverable.
Duke claims $42,790 for lead blankets purchased to provide shielding during dry
storage cask closure activities at Brunswick. Stip. ¶ 67. Similar to the electronic
dosimeters at Robinson, lead blankets at Brunswick are used for radiation protection. The
blankets are hung over the cask platform while the cask sits on the refueling floor, and they
shield workers close to the cask. Smith, Tr. 288-89. The parties agree that these blankets
are vulnerable to wear and tear. Smith, Tr. 289; see also Maret, Tr. 455. Duke purchased
lead blankets which were dedicated to the dry storage project, labeled as such, and stored
with dry fuel storage equipment. Smith, Tr. 289.
The Government does not dispute the necessity or reasonableness of the purchase,
but again claims that Duke would have purchased the same blankets in a non-breach world.
Maret, Tr. 454-55. The Government even states that Duke likely would have incurred more
significant costs absent the breach, because a greater quantity of smaller DOE casks would
increase the wear and tear on its lead blanket supply compared to larger NUHOMS storage
casks. Maret, Tr. 455-56.
The Court rejects the Government’s argument. As the Government acknowledges,
the lead blankets in question were purchased specifically for the dry storage cask. Maret,
18
Tr. 454. Since Duke needed and purchased these blankets for storage cask loading, they
are directly attributable to the Government’s delay. Duke is entitled to the full costs related
to the lead blankets at Brunswick.
d. Costs for Spent Fuel Pool Lamps and Cameras at Brunswick are
Recoverable.
Duke claims $3,495 for the purchase of underwater spent fuel lamps and cameras at
Brunswick, $1,085 and $2,410, respectively. Stip. ¶¶ 68, 69. Both the lamps and cameras
facilitate the cask loading process by providing better underwater visibility and they have
a finite life. Smith, Tr. 278, 302; see also Maret, Tr. 502. Duke purchased this equipment
for storage cask loading purposes, but the Government again argues that these items would
have been necessary to load a DOE-supplied transportation cask absent DOE’s delay.
It is clear that Duke purchased and used the spent fuel lamps and cameras to transfer
the casks to dry storage, an activity caused by DOE’s delay. Duke is entitled to recover
these costs.
4. Costs Associated with IF-300 Equipment Disposal and Transshipments
are Recoverable.
Duke claims $201,862 in disposal costs related to the IF-301 and IF-302 casks. Stip.
¶ 70. These casks were purchased in 2001 for transshipment, due to DOE’s delay.
Edwards, Tr. 161-64. When the IF-301 and IF-302 were purchased, they were in storage
in South Carolina; the parts and handling equipment were placed in Sealand containers and
transported to the Harris plant in North Carolina. Edwards, Tr. 163. Duke ultimately
disposed of the parts.
In his deposition, Mr. Edwards, Manager of Spent Fuel Management at Duke
Energy, inadvertently testified that the disposal costs at issue were associated with the IF-
303 and IF-304 casks. Edwards, Tr. 162. Mr. Edwards corrected this statement at trial,
explaining that the current dispute actually involves the IF-301 and IF-302 casks. Edwards,
Tr. 163.
The Government makes alternative arguments regarding the disposal of two of the
IF-300 casks. First, the Government claims that the deposition testimony, which states the
relevant equipment as the IF-303 and IF-304 casks, should be binding. Def. Post Trial Br.
at 48 (citing Dairyland Power Coop. vs. United States, 79 Fed. Cl. 709, 714 (2007)). The
Government asserts that these admissions, which were not corrected until trial, should
stand. As a result, Duke should be barred from recovery because the IF-303 and IF-304
have not incurred disposal costs and were purchased prior to the Government’s breach.
19
In the alternative, the Government argues that even if the deposition testimony is
not binding, it should be considered more seriously than the trial testimony. The
Government contends that Mr. Edwards’ deposition testimony was more credible, mainly
because, at the time of the deposition, he did not understand that the IF-303 and IF-304
transfer casks had been used prior to the Government’s partial breach, unlike Mr. Edwards’
state of mind at the time of trial. Def. Post Trial Br. at 49. Therefore, he did not have an
incentive to avoid associating the disposal costs with those casks. Id. The Government
also claims that Mr. Edwards’ changed testimony at trial was not supported by any
documentation to resolve the difference.
The Government’s final argument concerning the IF-301 and the IF-302 cask
disposal is that the DOE did not cause the cost in question, because Duke did not provide
evidence that the utility needed this equipment due to the delay. It therefore argues that
Duke did not meet its burden of showing this purchase was a reasonable mitigation effort.
Def. Post Trial Br. at 50-51.
The Government’s first two arguments focus on the inadvertent error that Mr.
Edwards made in his deposition. The fact that an error was made is irrelevant, as it does
not speak to Duke’s burden. Further, an error that was later corrected should not bar
recovery when the fact in dispute was adequately proven with testimony and
documentation. See PX 3047 (referring to the IF-301 and IF-302 equipment, which was
stored in the aforementioned containers); see also Edwards, Tr. 163-66. While Duke
initially erred by confusing the canisters at issue, this error should not ultimately bar
recovery.
Further, in round one of this spent nuclear fuel case, the Court found that in a non-
breach world, Duke would not have needed to transship fuel from Brunswick and Robinson
to Harris. Carolina Power, 98 Fed. Cl. at 792. Absent a breach, Duke would not have had
to purchase the IF-301 and IF-302 casks. Edwards, Tr. 161. The Government does not
dispute its responsibility for these casks. Instead, it focuses on a minor issue that the Court
deems immaterial. Duke met its three-part burden and has proven that the Government’s
breach led to the contested equipment disposal costs, thereby allowing them recovery for
the IF-300 transshipment and disposal costs.
D. The Government’s Damages Reduction Claim for State Ratemaking Practices is
Denied.
The Government seeks a damages reduction of $1,529,654, claiming that Duke
received a financial benefit as a result of DOE’s breach. The Government’s offset claim
stems from regulatory ratemaking procedures in North Carolina and South Carolina.
Government counsel deserves some credit for creativity, but this claim is too far removed
from DOE’s breach to result in an offset recovery. Indeed, no existing case law supports
the Government’s claim.
20
Duke is in the business of selling the electricity that it generates. Unlike other
products and services, electricity cannot be sold to retail customers in North and South
Carolina at whatever price the utility wants, or whatever price the market will bear. In
these states, the Public Utility Commissions set the prices that can be charged for
electricity. The regulatory process is called “ratemaking.” The Government contends that
it is entitled to a reduction in Duke’s damages because some of the assets the Government
paid for in the past as breach damages are included in Duke’s base. The Government says
that it should receive a pro rata portion of Duke’s revenue, as if the Government was some
sort of business partner with Duke. In making this novel argument, the Government twists
its prior payment of damages to Duke as a kind of investment in the company, where it
could sit back and share in Duke’s revenue.5
The factual evidence at trial on the ratemaking issue consisted of relevant
documents and the testimony of one fact witness, Ms. Carol Shrum. Ms. Shrum has worked
for Duke for 36 years, the last eleven as Managing Director of Rates and Regulatory
Strategy for the Carolinas. Shrum, Tr. 315. Ms. Shrum reports directly to the President of
the North Carolina utility. Shrum, Tr. 316. The Court found her to be a highly credible
and knowledgeable witness, whose testimony was not effectively rebutted by the
Government.
“Ratemaking” is the process a utility goes through to determine the prices that the
utility can “charge the customers to recover the revenue it needs.” Shrum, Tr. 320. The
process involves an application by a utility, and is “usually initiated by the company.”
Shrum, Tr. 322. A company typically initiates a rate case when, based upon its assessment
of earnings, it determines that “the revenues [the company is] currently collecting do not
appear sufficient to cover the costs it is incurring.” Shrum, Tr. 322-23. The goal of the
company in a rate case is to “adjust the prices of electricity that [the company] charges to
its customers in order to increase revenues to cover costs.” Shrum, Tr. 323. A proceeding,
called a “rate case,” is held before the state utility commission, here, the North Carolina
Utilities Commission, or the South Carolina Public Service Commission. Shrum, Tr. 320.
Such proceedings typically involve a “lot of testimony of company and expert witnesses
as well as a lot of financial information that explains the need to adjust those rates.” Shrum,
Tr. 323. Companies can go for many years between rate cases. For Duke, there was no
rate case in North Carolina between 1988 and 2013, and none in South Carolina between
1988 and 2016. Shrum, Tr. 322. For those entire periods, “the base rates did not change.”
Id.
An important component of a rate case is the company’s “rate base.” The rate base
is composed of the “investments that the company has made over time to provide or
construct assets that will help with the delivery of electricity or assist in delivering
5
In all of the SNF cases previously brought, the Court is not aware of any other case where the Government
has asserted this type of damages reduction argument.
21
electricity.” Shrum, Tr. 323. Capital costs are accumulated and, at the time the asset is
determined to be used and useful, the costs, reflecting the value of the asset, are placed into
the rate base. Shrum, Tr. 325-26. At the “snapshot point in time” of a rate case, the rate
base is a “key component of what we call our revenue requirements in a rate case.” Shrum,
Tr. 326. The rate base is used to calculate the allowed price of electricity: “[I]n that rate
case, the company is entitled to earn a fair return on the rate base . . . at that point in time,
and so that becomes part of the price we charge to customers.” Shrum, Tr. 327. Thereafter,
the rate base is “literally changing on a daily basis.” Shrum, Tr. 327-28.
Another aspect of a rate case is the “authorized rate of return,” which is the cost of
capital that is set in a rate case. “It is determined by the state commission, and it is what
they deem to be an appropriate rate of return for the utility to include in its rates.” Shrum,
Tr. 328. A synonymous term for “authorized rate of return” is “weighted average cost of
capital.” Shrum, Tr. 328. The weighted average cost of capital is a “component that’s used
in determining the revenue requirements that the company is seeking to base rates on in
the rate case.” Shrum, Tr. 329. It is part of the formula used by the public utility
commission to set the allowed price for electricity, in a rate case proceeding. Id.
Duke does not automatically receive the authorized rate of return. Shrum, Tr. 330.
During the years in question in this case (2011-2013), Duke never received the authorized
rate of return or weighted average cost of capital. See PX 3041 at 10; PX 3048 at 10; PX
3056 at 10; Shrum, Tr. 330-31. Rather, “the company earns what it earns between rate
cases.” Shrum, Tr. 330. Duke is not guaranteed to earn the regulatory weighted average
cost of capital or authorized rate of return. Shrum, Tr. 330-31. “Actual rate of return is
varying month by month, year by year.” Shrum, Tr. 331. What a utility actually earns can
depend upon a variety of uncontrollable factors, including “extreme weather,” or “unusual
O&M costs or if you have outage costs in one period and not another.” Shrum, Tr. 331.
“[A]ny change in revenue or expenses or your rate bases is affecting your actual rate of
return.” Shrum, Tr. 331. In any given year, if the authorized rate of return is higher than
the actual rate of return, “nothing happens,” although if it became a pattern, it could lead
to the initiation of a rate case. Shrum, Tr. 332. Conversely, if the company actually earns
more than the authorized rate of return, nothing automatically happens in North Carolina,
although it could lead to action by the commission if it became a pattern. Shrum, Tr. 332-
33. South Carolina would impose a refund or credit in such circumstances. Shrum, Tr.
334.
For its offset defense, the Government bears the burden of establishing the damages
reduction that it seeks. Entergy Nuclear Indian Point 2, 128 Fed. Cl. at 534 (“The breaching
party thus bears the burden of establishing that plaintiff’s damages claims should be
reduced or denied.”) citing Home Savings of America, 399 F.3d at 1353. The Government
mainly relies upon the principle that “the non-breaching party should not be placed in a
better position through the award of damages than if there had been no breach.”
Bluebonnet Savings Bank, F.S.B. v. United States, 339 F.3d 1341, 1345 (Fed. Cir. 2003).
22
The general Bluebonnet principle has its limits, and cannot be applied to support the
Government’s argument here. For example, cases and authorities applying the “no benefit”
rule in “cover” situations, where the non-breaching party procures substitute performance
upon terms as favorable, or more favorable, than the original contract are inapplicable here.
This case does not involve any substitute performance, as no “cover” is available for the
acceptance and disposal of spent nuclear fuel. See Indiana Michigan, 422 F.3d at 1374
(“the NWPA provided that DOE was exclusively responsible for SNF collection and
disposal in the United States, thereby prohibiting [plaintiff] or any other nuclear utility
from seeking alternate disposal means.”) Similarly, damage projections where the courts
attempt to ascertain competing investment or other impacts in the “would have been” world
(such as many Winstar cases, including Bluebonnet) are quite different from this partial
breach, actual-expenditure damages case.
In this case, the Court must focus upon the proximity or remoteness of the damages
in relation to the breach. See Hughes Commc’ns Galaxy, Inc. v. United State, 38 Fed. Cl.
578, 582 (1997); see also Wisconsin Electric Power Co. v. United States, 90 Fed. Cl. 714,
794 (2009) (explaining that an injured party’s recovery from third parties does not decrease
the breaching party’s liability). Whatever prices Duke charges for the electricity that it
sells, or whatever prices it was allowed to charge by the state public utility commissions,
are legally irrelevant to the recovery of the mitigation damages claimed in this case.
In Hughes, the plaintiff sought relief for damages allegedly incurred as a result of
the Government’s breach of a satellite launch agreement. As a result of the breach, the
plaintiff entered into alternate agreements to launch its satellites. 38 Fed. Cl. at 580. The
Government attempted to reduce the damages claimed by the amounts secured in these
alternate transactions. Id. The Court rejected the Government’s argument and held that
such alternate transactions are “not relevant to limit damages” and that “there are certain
damages that, as a matter of law, the courts will find too remote.” Id. at 582. Downstream
effects, or those that go beyond the first step of the breach, are too distant to allow an offset
type of recovery. Id.
The Court in Hughes properly noted the applicability of the Supreme Court’s
admonition in Southern Pacific Co. v. Darnell Taenzer Lumber Co., 245 U.S. 531, 533-34
(1918): “The general tendency in the law, in regard to damages at least, is not to go beyond
the first step. As it does not attribute remote consequences to a defendant so it holds him
liable if the plaintiff has suffered a loss.” Similarly, the applicability of intervening causes
that preclude courts from inquiring into subsidiary transactions in the antitrust context was
observed by the Court to be applicable to breach of contract claims. Hughes, 38 Fed. Cl.
at 582 (citing Hanover Shoe, Inc. v. United Shoe Machinery Corp., 392 U.S. 481, 493
(1968)). On a motion in limine, the court precluded the Government from attempting to
adduce evidence in support of its argued damages reduction.
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In Hughes, the Federal Circuit affirmed. 271 F.3d at 1072. In addition to ratifying
this Court’s analysis and reliance on Southern Pacific and Hanover Shoe, the Federal
Circuit held that allowing the Government’s argued damages reduction “would destroy
symmetry between reduction and escalation of damages.”
The Government invokes a Winstar case, LaSalle Talman Bank, F.S.B. v. United
States, 317 F.3d 1363 (Fed. Cir. 2003), and urges that the damage reductions approved in
that case are more on point here than the reductions disallowed in Hughes. Properly read,
however, LaSalle Talman Bank requires rejection of the Government’s position here.
LaSalle Talman Bank actually cited and reaffirmed Hughes, as well as the general rule “not
to go beyond the first step” stated by Justice Holmes in Southern Pacific, upon which these
issues turn. LaSalle Talman Bank, 317 F.3d at 1373. Alleged benefits arising from
transactions and investments not “directly related” to efforts to mitigate the Government’s
breach in that Winstar case were held not to be properly considered in connection with
damages calculations. Id. As the Federal Circuit noted, “precedent distinguishes between
remote consequences of contract breach, whether favorable or unfavorable to the non-
breaching party, and those that are directly related to or direct consequences of the breach.”
Id. The reductions allowed in LaSalle Talman Bank were specifically limited to those
arising from a “substitute transaction.” As the Federal Circuit has held, no “substitute
transaction” is, or would have been, possible here. Indiana Michigan, 422 F.3d at 1374.
The Government’s offset argument here depends upon the result of “lengthy,”
“challenging,” and contested state agency proceedings, involving “a lot of testimony of
company and expert witnesses as well as a lot of financial information.” McCullough, Tr.
566; Shrum, Tr. 323. The argument, for these purposes, is like the collateral undertakings
in Hughes and the remote commercial activities in LaSalle Talman Bank, that the Federal
Circuit has held do not properly provide legal bases for damages reductions.
For these reasons, the Court denies the Government’s damages reduction claim of
$1,529,654.
Conclusion
Of the $3,440,861 contested by the Government, the Court awards Duke the
following damages:
(1) Robinson Fuel Assembly Inspection and Debris Removal $22,905
(2) Robinson Spent Fuel Cavity Lights $8,248
(3) Robinson Electronic Dosimeter Costs $11,750
(4) Brunswick Handheld Radio Costs $6,246
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(5) Brunswick Torque Wrench Costs $14,458
(6) Brunswick Lead Blanket Costs $42,790
(7) Brunswick Spent Fuel Pool Lamps and Cameras $3,495
(8) IF-300 Equipment Disposal and Transshipment Costs $201,862
Total $311,754
The Court also awards Duke its uncontested damages of $68,146,671. In total, the
Court awards Duke damages of $68,458,425. The Clerk is directed to enter final judgment
against the Government in this amount. No costs.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
s/Thomas C. Wheeler
THOMAS C. WHEELER
Judge
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