In general, with the entire nuclear fleet, there are several factors at play (in no particular order):
Less electricity demand from loss of manufacturing
Cheaper electricity from natural gas
Unrealistic INPO indicators that continually raise the bar for no reason other than to raise it. Which increases the cost per Mw
Knee jerk reactions from NRC to alter the design basis of nuclear plants. Having an extra 150 security officers, and $400 million in security upgrades post 911, Fukushima mods...
How many OSHA recordable injuries do you think your local home depot has in a year? around 45
The best way to measure apples to apples is "Total Incident Rate" which averages OSHA's to hours worked.
Nursing 12
Construction 8.2
Utilities 4.8
Source: http://www.bls.gov/news.release/archives/osh_10292015.htmLast year, if our Total incident rate was <0.4 (Still 12 times lower than the utility industry) we were good to go.
This year, if my nuclear plant is >0.18, we are a failure in the eyes of INPO -- Why this change? Because too many nuke plants achieve the unrealistic goal.
How much money do you think we spend to reach that number? Do you think that makes us "Too cheap to meter"?
And how many injuries are being under reported as report only or first aids?
https://www.justice.gov/usao-edtn/pr/former-shaw-group-safety-manager-tva-nuclear-sites-sentenced-78-months-prison-major