#RedWing Police Respond After #NuclearPowerPlant Reports #Drones

Andy Brownell
Published: January 9, 2025

#RedWingMinnesota (KROC-AM News) - "A southeastern Minnesota law enforcement agency is reporting an encounter with mysterious drones.

"A news release issued Thursday afternoon by the Red Wing Police Department indicates Goodhue County Sheriff's Office dispatchers received a report around 6:30 PM Wednesday from the #PrairieIslandNuclearPowerPlant. The report indicated four to five drones had been seen flying around the area of the #XcelEnergy facility.

"The news release says Red Wing Police and officers from the #PrairieIsland #TribalPolice Department responded to the report and observed two drones flying around the power plant and the nearby Lock and #Dam3 on the #MississippiRiver. It states that the officers monitored the drones until they were no longer seen in the area."

https://krocnews.com/red-wing-police-respond-after-nuclear-power-plant-reports-drones/
#RethinkNotRestart #NuclearPlants #NuclearPowerPlants #SecurityRisk

Red Wing Police Respond After Nuclear Power Plant Reports Drones

The responding officers were unable to locate the operator or operators of the drones.

News Talk 1340 KROC-AM

"Xcel asks for more nuclear waste storage to operate Prairie Island until 2050s"

"The waste also has caused controversy. The plant on the banks of the Mississippi River is next to the Prairie Island Indian Community."

#nuclear #NuclearPower #NuclearWaste #PrairieIsland #NuclearColonialism

https://www.startribune.com/xcel-prairie-island-plant-more-nuclear-storage/600342090/

Xcel Energy plans to store more nuclear waste at Minnesota Prairie Island plant

Keeping the plant open an extra 20 years is a crucial part of Xcel's plan for a carbon-free energy grid, but its waste storage on the banks of the Mississippi River has drawn controversy.

Star Tribune

In the shadow of a #nuclear plant, #PrairieIsland celebrates steps toward a green future

The Tribal Nation is about two years into an effort to cut its members’ energy costs with a solar field and other eco-friendly projects.

By Gustav DeMars, October 1, 2023

"Prairie island first contacted legislators in 2018 to get support for the project, Johnson said. It wasn’t until two years later in 2020 that Governor Tim Walz signed legislation greenlighting the project.

"The Prairie Island Indian Community reservation, which lies along the Mississippi and Vermillion rivers in and adjacent to Red Wing in southeastern Minnesota, is home to descendants of the Mdewakanton Band of Eastern Dakota.

"Johnson’s family had no electricity or running water until 1968, when the federal government built 12 homes in the community. Tribal members now live in about 150 homes. The reservation operates the Treasure Island Casino, which has operated since the 1980s.

"As the community has grown, so has the need for energy. Now built atop what was once an unused pile of sand dredged from the Mississippi is a mostly complete 5.4-megawatt field of #solar panels that Prairie Island leaders hope will be a step toward what they call 'energy sovereignty.'

"The solar field is not currently in operation; it’s expected to be up and running in early 2024.

"Energy has long been a topic of conversation for Prairie Island’s community, which sits in the shadow of one of Minnesota’s two nuclear power plants. In 1973, the federal government authorized construction of the facility less than a mile from the reservation.

"Over the years, many Prairie Island tribal members have voiced dismay that the plant and #NuclearWaste storage are so close to their reservation. In March, Xcel Energy agreed to increase its annual payment to the community from $2.5 million to $10 million to compensate it for storing spent nuclear waste near its land."

#RenewablesNow #PrairieIslandIndianCommunity #EnergySovereignty #SolarFields #NoNukes #NoNewNukes

Full article:
https://sahanjournal.com/climate-environment/prairie-island-indian-community-celebrates-green-future/

In the shadow of a nuclear plant, Prairie Island celebrates steps toward a green future

The Prairie Island Indian Community is building a solar field and geothermal storage wells to help residents cut energy use and costs.

Sahan Journal