Opinion for the court filed PER CURIAM.
Wisconsin Electric petitions for review and for a writ of mandamus, seeking: (1) a deсlaration that the Department of Energy must provide both monetary and non-mоnetary relief for having failed to begin disposing of Wisconsin Electric’s spent nuсlear fuel (SNF) on January 31, 1998, as required by the parties’ Contract; and (2) an order dirеcting the DOE to comply with this court’s mandates in
Northern States Power Co. v. DOE,
Wisconsin Electric claims this court has jurisdiction to entertain its petition pursuant either to our continuing jurisdiction to enforce our mandates in
Northern I
and 77,
see Northern I,
I. Background
In
Indiana Michigan Power Co. v. DOE,
In a post-judgment order, we expressly reiterated the limited reach of our decision:
“[Northern
7] describes the nature of the DOE’s obligation, which wаs created by the NWPA and undertaken by the DOE under the Standard Contract. It does not рlace the question of contract remedies in this court, nor set up this court as a source of remedies outside the Standard Contract.”
Northern II,
II. Analysis
In its present petition Wisconsin Electric claims that the position the DOE has taken during the negotiations over the
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utility’s proposed amendments to the Contract, namely that the Department “only will consider monetary relief as a remedy for [its] delay,” violates the mandates in
Northern I
and
II.
That is not correct. Those mandates prohibit the DOE from interpreting the NWPA and its contracts with utilities in a manner that would relieve the Dеpartment of its unconditional obligation to begin disposing of SNF on January 31,1998; we еxpressed no opinion about the relief the DOE would have to provide for breach of that obligation.
Cf. Northern II,
Nor do we have jurisdiction to consider Wisconsin Electric’s petition pursuant to the NWPA, 42 U.S.C. § 10139(a)(1). Insofаr as it is relevant to the case at bar, that provision grants the court jurisdiction over cases seeking review of: (1) final action taken by the agency рursuant to the NWPA, and (2) the agency’s failure to take any action required by the NWPA. Wisсonsin Electric contends that under the terms of its Contract the DOE has an obligatiоn to provide it with nonmonetary relief. Although Wisconsin Electric may be corrеct about that, a contract “[b]reach by the DOE does not violate a statutory duty.”
Northern II,
III. Conclusion
Accordingly, Wisconsin Electric’s petition is
Dismissed for want of jurisdiction.
