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Leonard Lloyd
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Leonard Lloyd
@LLLloyd1
FATHER INTL NEGOTIATOR FACILITATING RESEARCH FOR ADVANCE STRATEGIES & SECURITY 105 COUNTRIES NAVY VET FUTURIST @leonardlloyd .bsky.social
WORLDWIDE LYON VENICE HAWAII Katılım Ekim 2012
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‘Get on the F—- Ground!’: Florida Police Tackle and Break Black Teen’s Arm While Searching for White Runaway They Had Just Seen in a Photo—Now One Officer Has Resigned
atlantablackstar.com/2026/07/15/flo…
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In 1973, Public Service Indiana began building two Westinghouse reactors beside the Ohio River near Madison.
By the time Marble Hill was cancelled, the containment buildings were already standing and the project had consumed more money than any construction project in Indiana history.
The site had reactor vessels, containment structures, turbine buildings and a construction workforce that at its peak numbered in the thousands. When the utility stopped work in 1984, the plant was often described as roughly 70 percent complete, though major systems still remained unfinished.
More than $2.5 billion had been committed before the utility abandoned the project, and none of the investment ever entered Indiana’s electrical grid.
The unfinished plant left Public Service Indiana carrying costs for a generating station it could neither complete nor operate, helping force a financial restructuring that eventually produced Cinergy.
Marble Hill wasn’t an isolated failure. It became one of the projects utilities, regulators and investors pointed to when confidence in large-scale nuclear construction collapsed across the United States. Dozens of reactors were cancelled during the same era as inflation, rising interest rates, changing safety requirements after Three Mile Island, and runaway construction costs reshaped the industry’s future.
Even the massive containment domes that defined Marble Hill’s skyline didn’t survive. They were demolished between 2005 and 2011, erasing one of the largest unfinished nuclear plants in America.
Today, if you drive past the site, there’s remarkably little left to suggest Indiana almost joined the nuclear age on one of the biggest construction sites the state had ever seen.

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