The High Cost of Nuclear Power
Executive Summary
Nuclear power is among the most costly approaches to solving
America’s energy problems. Per dollar of investment, clean energy
solutions – such as energy efficiency and renewable resources – deliver
far more energy than nuclear power.
This fact has important implications for America’s energy policy. By
directing resources toward the most cost-effective solutions, we can
make greater progress toward a secure, reliable and safe supply of
electricity to power America’s economy.
Dollar for dollar, a clean energy portfolio can deliver more energy than nuclear power Per dollar of investment:
• Energy efficiency measures can deliver greater than five times more electricity than nuclear power.
• Combined heat and power (which generates both useful
heat and electricity for a factory, a school campus or an office
building) can generate nearly four times more energy than nuclear power.
• Wind farms can produce as much as 100 percent more electricity than nuclear power.
• A solar thermal power plant in the southwestern U.S.
– capable of storing heat to generate electricity even when the sun
isn’t shining – can deliver as much as one-third more energy than a
nuclear reactor.
Since 2005, cost estimates for building a new nuclear reactor have more than tripled.
• Estimated costs for nuclear reactors have risen
faster than for other types of generation technologies. The nuclear
industry in particular faces a shortage of qualified and experienced
engineers, manufacturers, and construction workers. For example, only
one metal foundry in the world today is capable of forging ultra-heavy
reactor vessels – and it is located in Japan.
• In June 2008, staff at the Federal Energy
Regulatory Commission estimated that building a new 1,000 megawatt (MW)
reactor could cost up to $7.5 billion. Moody’s Investor Service
estimates that at that price, reactor owners would have to sell
electricity at an average of 15 cents per kilowatt-hour (kWh) over the
life of the plant in order to earn an adequate profit.
Building all currently planned nuclear power plants could cost $300 billion.
• As of February 2009, power companies have announced
plans for 30 new nuclear reactors. Altogether, building these reactors
could cost as much as $300 billion.
• To put this amount in perspective, $300 billion is
more than double the estimated cost to repair all the roadway bridges
in the United States.
Utilities planning to build new nuclear plants are
transferring risks onto taxpayers and consumers –especially in southern
states.
• In 2005, Congress created a series of
taxpayer-financed subsidies to support the construction of new nuclear
reactors, including loan guarantees, extended liability insurance, and
a tax credit for every kilowatt-hour of nuclear electricity generated.
Altogether, the subsidies are valued at as much as 60 to 90 percent of
the levelized cost of power from a new nuclear reactor – reaching as
high as $13 billion for a single reactor.
• Many regulated utilities working to build new nuclear
capacity are charging customers up-front to finance reactor
construction – with no guarantee of final cost, or even a guarantee
that the plant will ever deliver electricity at all. For example,
Florida regulators are allowing Progress Energy to start billing
customers in 2009 for the planning, development and construction of two
nuclear power plants that will not begin delivering electricity until
2016 at the earliest. As construction proceeds, residential customers
could end up paying as much as $25 more a month to finance the nuclear
reactors.
• Other utilities planning advance charges include
Georgia Power, South Carolina Electric & Gas, Santee Cooper in
South Carolina, and Ameren in Missouri.
Investing in clean energy solutions rather than a fleet of new nuclear power plants would yield greater benefits for America.
• The United States has vast clean energy resources.
The American Council for an Energy-Efficient Economy–composed of some
of the nation’s leading experts on energy efficiency–estimates that the
United States could cost-effectively reduce its over all energy
consumption by 25 to 30 percent or more over the next 20 to 25 years.
Progress at this level would ensure that America uses less energy
several decades from now than we do today, even as our economy grows.
At the same time, America’s entire electricity needs could be met by
the wind blowing across the Great Plains or the sunlight falling on a
100 mile square patch of the desert Southwest, or a tiny fraction of
the natural heat just beneath the surface of the earth anywhere across
the country.
• Directing $300 billion into energy efficiency could
eliminate growth in America’s electricity consumption through 2030 and
save consumers more than $600 billion. Energy savings in 2030 would be
equivalent to the output of more than 80 nuclear could buy enough wind
turbines to supply on the order of 10 percent of America’s projected
electricity needs in 2030 – equivalent to the output of more than 40
nuclear reactors.
• Research by the European Renewable Energy Council
shows that clean energy resources in the United States could deliver
substantial pollution reductions at half the cost and with twice the
job creation that could be achieved with nuclear power and fossil
energy sources.
Clean energy solutions are able to meet demand for
electricity in small, modular amounts – posing far less financial risk
than nuclear power plants.
• The 2008 meltdown of the U.S. financial system and
the ensuing economic crisis could retard growth in demand for
electricity. As a result, the demand a nuclear power plant is meant to
serve may not materialize. And since nuclear power plants are large and
inflexible, this possibility poses a serious financial risk for any
utility considering a new nuclear power plant, and its customers.
Construction of a nuclear power plant cannot be halted halfway to get
half of the power output – it’s all or nothing.
• In contrast, clean energy solutions are typically
modular – they can be assembled into units tailored precisely to an
evolving need for electricity.
America should reform its energy policy to prioritize
clean energy solutions – technologies that deliver safe, reliable and
secure electricity supplies at a reasonable cost.
• State leaders should protect citizens from
unnecessary risks by requiring any company proposing to build a new
nuclear reactor to demonstrate that nuclear would be more cost
effective than other ways to meet electricity demand, including energy
efficiency, before allowing construction to proceed.
• Federal and state leaders should ensure that energy
companies and their shareholders shoulder all of the financial risk of
any new nuclear reactor project, not ratepayers or taxpayers. In
particular, regulators should not allow utilities to levy advance
charges on consumers in order to finance the construction of a new
reactor. Congress should also repeal the Price Anderson act, under
which taxpayers shoulder the lion’s share of responsibility for any
major nuclear accident.
• America should shift current federal subsidies
away from nuclear and fossil fuel energy, creating billions annually
for research, development and deployment of more effective energy
efficiency and renewable energy technologies.
• America should speed the introduction of clean energy
technologies by enacting a national energy efficiency resource standard
to require, at minimum, that all new demand for electricity be met with
energy efficiency measures; and a national renewable electricity
standard to ensure that 25 percent of America’s electricity supply
comes from renewable sources by 2025. States should also create or
expand analogous policies at the state level.
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