Just as we have oil-exporting nations and oil-importing nations, so the country may be dividing into power-producing and power-consuming regions. New York City already buys much of its electricity from Canada and may end up importing from below the Mason-Dixon Line as well. All this may shift the country's industrial base.Technorati tags: Nuclear Energy, Nuclear Power, Electricity, Environment, Energy, Entergy, Duke Power, NuStart, General Electric, Westinghouse, South Carolina, Georgia, Mississippi
"We know where there's cheap electricity, industry will follow," says Jim Kearse, of Barnwell County. "We want growth in this area. We're building our industrial base."
"The South shall rise again" -- that's been the prophesy of the last two centuries. But who would have thought nuclear power would lead the way?
The American South and the Return of Nuclear Energy
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In last week's edition of The American Enterprise, columnist William Tucker took a look at how the American South is taking the lead in examining the possibility of building new nuclear power plants and what it might mean for the future of the country:
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