Nine mile point consists of two BWR's, operated by Constellation Energy Group. I think you will have to ask them for such commercial information.
See link below
Nuclear energy costs are high due to the large initial investment required to build a nuclear power plant, as well as ongoing costs for operation, maintenance, and decommissioning. Safety regulations and security measures also add to the overall cost of nuclear energy production.
Nuclear energy can provide cost savings by producing lower-cost electricity compared to other energy sources. This can lead to lower electricity bills for consumers. Additionally, nuclear energy can help reduce reliance on volatile fossil fuel prices, which can also contribute to cost savings for consumers.
It is difficult to estimate the exact cost as it depends on various factors such as the method of disposal, storage, and cleanup. However, dismantling a large amount of nuclear weapons can cost billions of dollars due to the complexities involved in ensuring safety, security, and proper disposal of radioactive materials.
Nuclear bombs are not legally available for sale, as they are highly regulated weapons of mass destruction. The cost to build and maintain a nuclear arsenal is extremely high, with estimates ranging from hundreds of millions to billions of dollars per weapon. The true cost includes research and development, as well as the long-term costs associated with managing and securing the weapons.
I can give you a link to a paper which discusses recent analysis of this, but I don't think it will be as good as getting the facts direct from a company which is going to build a new plant, though there are often cost overruns in actual building. See link below
The cost is approximately 98.9 Billion U.S.D. A single nuclear powerplant such as fukushima cost around 400 million to build.
The first new nuclear powerplant in 30 years in the United States has now been authorized for construction. Current estimates are that a typical 1 MW new-generation reactor will end up costing about $5 billion. This includes a large amount for regulatory compliance and other administrative costs not specifically related to building the actual reactor (estimates are that the actual construction cost of the reactor is only about 60% of that price).
billions of dollars
1 billion
6-7 billion
Current-generation U.S. nuclear submarines are likely to cost around $2 billion each to construct (after including R&D costs).
Mantis cost $12,000,000 to build. It opened on May 11, 1996.
It cost $7.5 million to make.
The generating cost is much the same overall as coal, the fuel cost is lower but the plants are more expensive to build. Most nuclear plants run on base load because the fuel cost is lower.
About four five point (million) six dollars.
Construction of the infrastructure to build them cost $2,000,000,000 but the incremental cost per bomb was much less, I doubt they cost a million a piece and the cost would have dropped with increased production.
Nuclear energy costs are high due to the large initial investment required to build a nuclear power plant, as well as ongoing costs for operation, maintenance, and decommissioning. Safety regulations and security measures also add to the overall cost of nuclear energy production.