Posted on 03/04/2005 5:27:56 PM PST by NormsRevenge
ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) - Electric stoves are a convenience, but in the Yukon River city of Galena, many people pass them by - the appliances suck up more juice than residents can afford.
With Galena tucked into the western part of Alaska, diesel oil that powers the electrical plant must be towed 350 miles by barge. Customers pay 30 cents per kilowatt hour, compared to a national average of 8.71 cents, so they cook with propane, turn off lights and limit television time.
In need of relief, the community of 700 people is turning to nuclear power. But Galena's plant would be far different from other U.S. commercial nuclear power plants - at 10 megawatts, it would be downright tiny.
City officials met recently with staff from the Nuclear Regulatory Commission to discuss licensing a plant being developed by Toshiba Corp. that could be a test case for providing cheap power to rural communities.
"Some people believe nuclear is coming around again," said Marvin Yoder, Galena's city manager.
The smallest U.S. commercial nuclear power plants are the Fort Calhoun Nuclear Plant, 19 miles north of Omaha, Neb., and the Ginna Nuclear Plant, east of Rochester, N.Y. Both have electrical output of 470 megawatts, roughly 45 times larger than what Toshiba is contemplating, said NRC spokesman Scott Burnell.
Joe Williams, an NRC senior project manager in the new reactors section, described the meeting with Galena officials as a get-acquainted session to hear about the city and lay out the formidable process for building a nuclear plant.
Williams and Burnell stressed that the commission's role is not to discuss whether nuclear power is a viable alternative for rural America, but to ensure that reactors are safe.
Few places are as rural in America as rural Alaska and options for low-cost power are few. Galena is 185 miles west of the nearest link to the nation's highway system. Diesel oil is shipped to residents on the Yukon and Tanana rivers.
Like all of Interior Alaska, Galena experiences wild temperature extremes, from a summer high of 92 to a winter low of 64 below zero.
"It's a little bit like people in Florida getting used to hurricanes," Yoder said. "Cars don't like to run. You hope the windows are insulated good. If they aren't, you feel the cold coming right through."
A reactor would be a dramatic contrast with Galena's austere infrastructure. Its roads are gravel, and only a few homes are on a piped water and sewer system. Most have water delivered and sewage pumped out of holding tanks.
Galena began considering nuclear power after determining that wind and solar power were impractical and that coal was too costly. After discussions with Toshiba, city officials concluded nuclear power would be the cleanest and least expensive alternative, lowering costs to 10 cents per kilowatt hour.
Toshiba officials said the small reactor would not be operational for five to 10 years. The actual reactor would be about 7 feet tall and 30 inches in diameter and would be near the bottom of a concrete tube about 60 feet below the ground.
The reactor's fuel, which has not been specified, would stay encapsulated for 30 years, unlike fuel at a conventional reactor that is routinely replenished.
Yoder expects an encased reactor, with few moving parts using a low-grade plutonium or other fuel that could not be reused for weapons, would be cheaper to operate and protect than a conventional reactor.
It will take at least another two years to determine whether Galena is an appropriate site for a reactor. It also remains to be seen whether such a small plant presents economies of scale that would allow such a tiny plant to pay for security costs, disposal of spent fuel and other expenses.
"We don't have information to be able to judge that at this point," the NRC's Williams said.
If it's successful in Galena, there are likely to be applications elsewhere.
Yoder said no opposition has surfaced at City Council meetings, but attributed that to the fact that there are so many unknowns and that the council's endorsement must be renewed again in two years.
Yet Galena's neighbors on the Yukon River, the fourth-largest drainage basin in North America and home to the world's largest inland salmon run, have misgivings. Rob Rosenfeld of the Yukon River Intertribal Watershed Council, an organization created by the Yukon's indigenous people to protect the river, said villages around Galena worry about the experimental status of the reactor and what would happen to spent fuel.
Paul Gunter, director of the Reactor Watchdog Project for the Nuclear Information and Resource Service in Washington, D.C., voiced concerns about how a reactor would stand up to the harsh Alaskan climate.
"This design pushes all those envelopes to an extreme," he said.
And screw the dims and enviros for stopping the ANWAR drilling
Oil will stay play a part for some time, but it simply can't keep up with energy demand any longer.
I don't suppose they have natural gas reservoirs at that location? A diesel electric generator can be run on a lean mixture of natural gas, using small injections of conventional diesel oil to precipitate ignition . . .
So it's OK if Iran wants to build nukes for 'energy use only' even they they have lots of oil?
but it wouldn't be OK for the Alaskans to have mini-nukes or drill for more oil for their own use to have cheap energy..
makes ya wonder who's side the left is on?
I don't think most of them have a clue themselves..
I really wish we'd get at least several dozen new big reactors going.. Replace all the ones getting old now with new ones, and add several more online. Also build micronuke plants for areas that are isolated.
I hope we don't have to grind to a halt before we do this. It would be such a waste.
how many billions of dollars and inconvenience has jane fonda's anti-nuclear movie cost this country?
even the left-wing, socialist-given, frenchies have nuclear power.
10MW sounds about the size of a naval reactor. Can anyone confirm?
Pull the poles out of the holes so they can turn the lights on. Then we'd have some real Northern lights.
The one I worked on was 78MW. Newer ones are much larger.
Is Mike allowed to add to this?
China was an oil exporter in the 1990s. Now they import. India will become a major energy demand point. Between those two countries, that's half the world's population.
There's not enough oil capacity and production to meet demand. Nuclear has to make up the difference, even with advances in clean coal technology. America will have this debate in the next 25 years or so. They should be having it now.
My thoughts exactly
Oops, bad guestimation. Make that about 25MW electrical.
I just told him about the article and he's reading it now.
If this community is serviced by sea then buy a surplus Russian nuclear submarine and park it there....generate a ton of electricity.
Poof off a few missiles on 4th July also.
Sorry.......need coffee after long day.
I hope they use different trucks....
Naval Nuclear Propulsion Reactors power is measured in MWe (megawatts electrical). Nice size reactor for a small town. They range from about 60 to 100 MWe, ballpark.
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