Utility CEO retiring following failure of nuclear project
COLUMBIA, S.C. — The CEO of South Carolina’s state-owned utility is retiring and is the first executive to leave following last month’s failure of a nuclear power project that customers have been funding since 2009.
The board of Santee Cooper announced Lonnie Carter’s resignation Friday. Carter has been CEO since 2004 and worked with the utility for 35 years.
He will stay in his job as the board looks for his replacement and will participate in any legislative hearings into why the public utility and privately owned South Carolina Electric & Gas decided July 31 to bail on the expansion of V.C. Summer Nuclear Station after jointly spending nearly $10 billion.
The abrupt end left about 6,000 people jobless and brought a backlash from lawmakers and customers, who have spent about $2 billion on the project through rate hikes. Santee Cooper’s customers paid more than half a billion of that.


