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Marvin Fertel, President and CEO, Nuclear Energy Institute

Biography provided by participant

Fertel has 35 years of experience consulting for electric utilities on issues related to designing, siting, licensing and managing both fossil and nuclear plants.

He has worked in executive positions with such organizations as Ebasco, Management Analysis Company and Tenera. In November 1990, he joined the U.S. Council for Energy Awareness as vice president of Technical Programs. With the formation of NEI in 1994, he became NEI’s vice president of Nuclear Economics and Fuel Supply. He assumed his current position as head of the Nuclear Generation Division at NEI in March 2003. In November 2008, he was named acting president and chief executive officer.

Fertel is responsible for leading NEI’s programs related to ensuring an effective and safety-focused regulatory process. He also directs industrywide efforts to ensure adequate security is provided at nuclear power plants and addresses generic technical issues related to commercial nuclear facilities.

He is responsible for programmatic activities that support the development of new commercial nuclear projects. He oversees NEI’s activities related to the management of used nuclear fuel, including achieving success in the U.S. government's program for the storage and ultimate disposal of used nuclear fuel.

Recent Responses

January 11, 2010 08:02 AM

RE: Should Taxpayers Back New Nuclear?

Benefits Outweigh Costs A large expansion of nuclear energy will be necessary to meet aggressive carbon reduction targets. Should Congress do more to accelerate deployment of new nuclear power plants, and other low- or zero-carbon technologies? Only if we want to meet growing electricity demand, sustain economic expansion, create jobs, rebuild our manufacturing infrastructure, and reduce the electric sector's carbon footprint. The U.S. electric industry faces a formidable investment challenge. Consensus estimates show that the electric sector must invest between $1.5 trillion and $2 trillion over the next 20 years in new power plants, transmission and distribution, and environmental controls…  Read more
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