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The Nuclear Option Revisited
Too expensive and unacceptably risky, nuclear power was
declared dead long ago. So why would we resurrect it?
By AMORY B. LOVINS, L. HUNTER LOVINS
SNOWMASS,
Colo.--Buoyed by a supportive White House, growing climate
concerns, temporarily high gas prices, and California's electricity mess,
the nuclear industry is running an all-out public-relations campaign to
resuscitate its product. This attempt ignores one crucial fact: Nuclear
power already died of an incurable attack of market forces. Once touted as
"too cheap to meter," nuclear power, as The Economist recently concluded,
now looks "too costly to matter."
Overwhelmed by huge construction and
repair costs around the world, nuclear plants ended up achieving less than
10% of the capacity and 1% of the new orders (all from countries with
centrally planned energy systems) forecast a quarter-century ago. The
industry has suffered the greatest collapse of any enterprise in
industrial history. Beyond the hard
economic facts, about which more later, the nuclear industry is dismissing
legitimate public concerns about the risks of a technology so unforgiving
that, as Nobel physicist Hannes Alfven wrote, "No acts of God can be
permitted." Each nuclear plant, through accident or malice, could release
enough radioactivity to hazard a continent. This is presented by the
industry as extremely unlikely, but many citizens aren't reassured. They
have seen too many highly improbable events, including terrorism. And if
nuclear power plants are so safe, why would the industry build and run
them only if the federal government passed a law limiting operators'
liability in major accidents? Why should the nuclear industry enjoy a
liability cap that reduces its incentive for safety, distorts choices with
a vast subsidy and is unavailable to any other industry? Why can't nuclear
operators self-insure and put their money where their mouths are, or buy
insurance at market prices like everyone else? The liability law's
expiration in 2002 presents an awkward dilemma for advocates of both
nuclear power and free markets.
Scientists still haven't developed
reliable ways to handle nuclear wastes and decommissioned plants, which
remain dangerously radioactive for far longer than societies last or
geological foresight extends. And experts feel nuclear power's gravest
risk is that power plants can provide ingredients and innocent-seeming
civilian cover for the development of nuclear bombs, as was the case in
India and elsewhere. Now the White House proposes to revive nuclear-fuel
reprocessing after decades of proof that it's unprofitable, unnecessary, a
complication to nuclear waste management and a source of vast amounts of
bomb material. Market economics provides
an even more basic argument: "If a thing is not worth doing," said
economist John Maynard Keynes, "it is not worth doing well." Leaving aside
bomb-proliferation, waste, sabotage and uninsurable accidents, nuclear
power is simply uncompetitive and unnecessary. After a trillion-dollar
taxpayer investment, it delivers little more energy in the U.S. than wood.
Globally, it produces severalfold less energy than renewable sources. The
market prefers other options. In the 1990s, global nuclear capacity rose
by 1% a year, compared with 17% for solar cells (24% last year) and 24%
for wind power--which has lately added about 5,000 megawatts a year
worldwide, as compared with the 3,100 new megawatts nuclear power averaged
annually in the 1990s. The decentralized generators California added in
the 1990s have more capacity than its two giant nuclear plants--whose
debts triggered the restructuring that created the state's current utility
mess. Enthusiasts claim new-style
reactors might deliver a kilowatt-hour to your meter for 5 cents, compared
with 10 to 15 cents for post-1980 nuclear plants worldwide. (Of that, 10
to 15 cents, nearly 3 cents pays for delivery, about 2 cents for running
the plant, and the rest for its construction and for occasional major
repairs.) But on the same accounting basis, superefficient gas plants or
wind farms cost only 5 to 6 cents per kilowatt-hour, cogeneration of heat
and power often 1 to 5 cents, and efficient lights, motors and other
electricity-saving devices under 2 cents, often under 1 cent. Cogeneration
and efficiency are especially cheap because they occur at the site where
the energy is consumed and thus require no delivery.
All these non-nuclear options continue
to get cheaper, as do fuel cells and solar cells. Today, a pound of
silicon can produce more electricity than a pound of nuclear fuel.
Already, Sacramento's municipal utility, which has successfully replaced
power from its ailing nuclear plant (shut down by voters) with a portfolio
emphasizing efficiency and renewables, has brought the heretofore
costliest option, solar cells, down to costs competitive with a new
nuclear plant. The PR spinners trumpet
that nuclear power costs less than power from gas plants. This is true if
you are looking only at the running cost of an average existing nuclear
plant , compared with the running costs of an old, inefficient gas-fired
plant. It does not include delivery to customers, nor the prohibitive
construction costs of a new nuclear plant. Notice, too, the ads don't
compare the costs of a new nuclear plant with the new, doubled-efficiency
gas plants that are beating the pants off nuclear and coal worldwide.
Under such realistic cost comparisons, nuclear power plummets to its
actual status as the worst buy available. You didn't understand that from
those slick ads? You weren't supposed to. The nuclear industry has a
well-earned reputation for breezy mendacity.
Lost in the debate over what kind of new
plant to build is the best option of all: more efficient use of the
electricity we already have. We've been reducing electricity use per
dollar of gross domestic product by 1.6% a year nationwide, and in
California between 1997 and 2000, by 4.4% a year. California has held its
per-capita electricity use essentially flat since the mid-1970s, yet far
more savings remain untapped--enough nationally to save four times nuclear
power's output, at one-sixth its operating cost. Our personal household
electric bill, for example, is $5 a month for a 4,000-square-foot house in
the Rocky Mountains. Passive solar design and super-efficient appliances
and lighting yielded a 90% savings on electricity and 99% on fuel. The
improvements, made in 1983, paid for themselves in 10 months. Today's
technologies are far better. An estimated three-fourths of U.S.
electricity could now be saved through efficiency techniques that cost
less than generating that power, even in existing plants.
Nor, finally, do shortages of
electricity in California justify more nuclear plants anywhere. California
did not have soaring electricity demand during the 1990s, did not stop
building power plants and is probably not even short of generating
capacity. The system that had rolling blackouts at a 28-gigawatt load last
winter is the same one that comfortably delivered 53 gigawatts two summers
ago. Half its power plants didn't suddenly evaporate. Rather, there's
apparently been adequate generating capacity--if power plants ran as
reliably as they did before utilities sold them. But in fact, since
utility maintenance contracts expired last fall, many of the sold plants
have been calling in sick--often, some evidence suggests, because their
new owners earn far more profit by selling less electricity at a higher
price rather than more at a lower price.
If California does have a serious
supply-demand imbalance, it should be resolved in the cheapest, fastest,
surest and safest ways. Buying more nuclear plants violates all these
criteria. It would buy less solution per dollar, making the problem worse.
That's also true of nuclear solutions to climate change.
Anyone who doubts the effectiveness of
demand-side solutions need only to look to California, where in the first
half of this year, with limited formal programs, Californians have
decreased their peak demand for electricity by more than 12%, reversing
the past 5 to 10 years' growth in demand.
After a half-century of nuclear power,
the verdict of the marketplace is in. Nuclear power has flunked the market
test. Nuclear salesmen scour the world for a single order, while makers of
alternatives enjoy brisk business. Let's profit from their experience.
Taking markets seriously, not propping up failed technologies at public
expense, offers a stable climate, a prosperous economy, and a cleaner and
more peaceful world.
- - - Amory B. and L. Hunter Lovins, Co-ceos of Rocky
Mountain Institute, Advise Energy Companies and Governments Worldwide
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