No To Nukes -
It’s Tempting To Turn To
Nuclear Plants to Combat Climate Change,
But Alternatives
Are Safer and Cheaper
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Los Angeles Times Editorial - July 23,2007
Japan
sees nuclear power as a solution to global warming, but it’s paying a
price. Last week, a magnitude 6.8 earthquake caused dozens of problems at the
world’s biggest nuclear plant, leading to releases of radioactive
elements into the air and ocean and an indefinite shutdown. Government and
company officials initially downplayed the incident and stuck to the official
line that the country’s nuclear plants are earthquake-proof, but they
gave way in the face of overwhelming evidence to the contrary. Japan
has a sordid history of serious nuclear accidents or spills followed by
cover-ups.
It isn’t alone. The U.S. government allows nuclear
plants to operate under a level of secrecy usually reserved for the national
security apparatus. Last year, for example, about nine gallons of highly
enriched uranium spilled at a processing plant in Tennessee, forming a puddle a few feet from
an elevator shaft. Had it dripped into the shaft, it might have formed a
critical mass sufficient for a chain reaction, releasing enough radiation to
kill or burn workers nearby. A report on the accident from the Nuclear
Regulatory Commission was hidden from the public, and only came to light
because one of the commissioners wrote a memo on it that became part of the
public record.
The dream that nuclear power would turn atomic fission into a force for
good rather than destruction unraveled with the Three Mile Island disaster in
1979 and the Chernobyl meltdown in 1986. No U.S. utility has ordered a new
nuclear plant since 1978 (that order was later canceled), and until recently it
seemed none ever would. But rising natural gas prices and worries about global
warming have put the nuclear industry back on track. Many respected academics
and environmentalists argue that nuclear power must be part of any solution to
climate change because nuclear power plants don’t release greenhouse
gases.
They make a weak case. The enormous cost of building nuclear plants,
the reluctance of investors to fund them, community opposition and an endless
controversy over what to do with the waste ensure that ramping up the nuclear
infrastructure will be a slow process - far too slow to make a difference on global warming. That’s just
as well, because nuclear power is extremely risky. What’s more, there are
cleaner, cheaper, faster alternatives that come with none of the risks.
Glowing pains
Modern nuclear plants are much safer than the Soviet-era monstrosity at
Chernobyl. But
accidents can and frequently do happen. The Union of Concerned Scientists cites
51 cases at 41 U.S.
nuclear plants in which reactors have been shut down for more than a year as
evidence of serious and widespread safety problems.
Nuclear plants are also considered attractive terrorist targets, though
that risk too has been reduced. Provisions in the 2005 energy bill required
threat assessments at nuclear plants and background checks on workers. What
hasn’t improved much is the risk of spills or even meltdowns in the event
of natural disasters such as earthquakes, making it mystifying why anyone would
consider building reactors in seismically unstable places like Japan (or California,
which has two, one at San Onofre and the other in Morro Bay).
Weapons proliferation is an even more serious concern. The uranium used
in nuclear reactors isn’t concentrated enough for anything but a dirty
bomb, but the same labs that enrich uranium for nuclear fuel can be used to
create weapons-grade uranium. Thus any country, such as Iran, that
pursues uranium enrichment for nuclear power might also be building a bomb
factory. It would be more than a little hypocritical for the U.S. to expand its own nuclear
power capacity while forbidding countries it doesn’t like from doing the
same.
The risks increase when spent fuel is recycled. Five countries
reprocess their spent nuclear fuel, and the Bush administration is pushing
strongly to do the same in the U.S. Reprocessing involves separating plutonium
from other materials to create new fuel. Plutonium is an excellent bomb material,
and it’s much easier to steal than enriched uranium. Spent fuel is so
radioactive that it would burn a prospective thief to death, while plutonium
could be carried out of a processing center in one’s pocket. In Japan, 200 kilograms of plutonium from a waste
recycling plant have gone missing; in Britain, 30 kilograms can’t
be accounted for. These have been officially dismissed as clerical errors, but the nuclear industry
has never been noted for its truthfulness or transparency. The bomb dropped on Nagasaki contained six
kilograms.
Technology might be able to solve the recycling problem, but the
question of what to do with the waste defies answers. Even the recycling
process leaves behind highly radioactive waste that has to be disposed of. This
isn’t a temporary issue: Nuclear waste remains hazardous for tens of
thousands of years. The only way to get rid of it is to put it in containers
and bury it deep underground - and pray that geological shifts or excavations
by future generations that have forgotten where it’s buried don’t
unleash it on the surface.
No country in the world has yet built a permanent underground waste
repository, though Finland
has come the closest. In the U.S.,
Congress has been struggling for decades to build a dump at Yucca Mountain
in Nevada but
has been unable to overcome fierce local opposition. One can hardly blame the
Nevadans. Not many people would want 70,000 metric tons of nuclear waste buried
in their neighborhood or transported through it on the way to the dump.
The result is that nuclear waste is stored on-site at the power plants,
increasing the risk of leaks and the danger to plant workers. Eventually,
we’ll run out of space for it.
Goin’ fission?
Given the drawbacks, it’s surprising that anybody would seriously
consider a nuclear renaissance. But interest is surging; the NRC expects
applications for up to 28 new reactors in the next two years. Even California, which has a
31-year-old ban on construction of nuclear plants, is looking into it. Last
month, the state Energy Commission held a hearing on nuclear power, and a group
of Fresno
businessmen plans a ballot measure to assess voter interest in rescinding the
state’s ban.
Behind all this is a perception that nuclear power is needed to help
fight climate change. But there’s little chance that nuclear plants could
be built quickly enough to make much difference. The existing 104 nuclear
plants in the U.S.,
which supply roughly 20% of the nation’s electricity, are old and nearing
the end of their useful lives. Just to replace them would require building a
new reactor every four or five months for the next 40 years. To significantly
increase the nation’s nuclear capacity would require far more.
The average nuclear plant is estimated to cost about $4 billion.
Because of the risks involved, there is scarce interest among investors in
putting up the needed capital. Nor have tax incentives and subsidies been
enough to lure them. In part, that’s because the regulatory process for
new plants is glacially slow. The newest nuclear plant in the U.S. opened in
1996, after having been ordered in 1970 - a 26-year gap. Though a carbon tax or
carbon trading might someday make the economics of nuclear power more
attractive, and the NRC has taken steps to speed its assessments, community opposition
remains high, and it could still take more than a decade to get a plant built.
Meanwhile, a 2006 study by the Institute for Energy and Environmental
Research found that for nuclear power to play a meaningful role in cutting
greenhouse gas emissions, the world would need to build a new plant every one
to two weeks until mid-century. Even if that were feasible, it would overwhelm
the handful of companies that make specialized parts for nuclear plants,
sending costs through the roof.
The accelerating threat of global warming requires innovation and may
demand risk-taking, but there are better options than nuclear power. A
combination of energy-efficiency measures, renewable power like wind and solar,
and decentralized power generators are already producing more energy worldwide
than nuclear power plants. Their use is expanding more quickly, and the
decentralized approach they represent is more attractive on several levels. One
fast-growing technology allows commercial buildings or complexes, such as schools,
hospitals, hotels or offices, to generate their own electricity and hot water
with micro-turbines fueled by natural gas or even biofuel, much more
efficiently than utilities can do it and with far lower emissions.
The potential for wind power alone is nearly limitless and, according
to a May report by research firm Standard & Poor’s, it’s
cheaper to produce than nuclear power. Further, the amount of electricity that
could be generated simply by making existing non-nuclear power plants more
efficient is staggering. On average, coal plants operate at 30% efficiency
worldwide, but newer plants operate at 46%. If the world average could be
raised to 42%, it would save the same amount of carbon as building 800 nuclear
plants.
Nevertheless, the U.S.
government spends more on nuclear power than it does on renewables and
efficiency. Taxpayer subsidies to the nuclear industry amounted to $9 billion
2006, according to Doug Koplow, a researcher based in Cambridge, Mass., whose
Earth Track consultancy monitors energy spending. Renewable power sources,
including hydropower but not ethanol, got $6 billion, and $2 billion went
toward conservation.
That’s out of whack. Some countries - notably France, which gets
nearly 80% of its power from nuclear plants and has never had a major accident
- have made nuclear energy work, but at a high cost. The state-owned French
power monopoly is severely indebted, and although France
recycles its waste, it is no closer than the U.S. to approving a permanent
repository. Tax dollars are better spent on windmills than on cooling towers.
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