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Nuclear power quietly confident in energy debate
Reuters on Yahoo ^ | 10/7/05 | Jeremy Lovell - Reuters

Posted on 10/07/2005 9:05:07 PM PDT by NormsRevenge

SELLAFIELD (Reuters) - The nuclear power industry is quietly confident that the world is about to beat a path to its door in an increasingly desperate search for "clean" energy that doesn't heat up the planet.

Soaring oil prices and new data on global warming -- brought into sharp focus by devastating hurricanes in the United States -- have heated up the nuclear debate and outraged the environmental lobby, which says nuclear power is not the answer.

China plans to invest some $50 billion to build around 30 new nuclear reactors by 2020, there are investment incentives in the United States and nuclear power was back on the agenda at a summit of the Group of Eight industrialised nations in July.

The nuclear industry now feels it is on a roll -- 20 years after an explosion at the Chernobyl nuclear reactor spread a cloud of radioactivity over Europe and dealt a severe blow to the reputation of a sector long denounced by environmentalists.

"Nuclear power is in the ascendant world-wide -- less so in the (United Kingdom) than elsewhere, but that will change," said Ian Hore-Lacy of the World Nuclear Association (WNA), which aims to promote nuclear power as a sustainable energy resource.

Last week, British Prime Minister Tony Blair pledged a review of the country's climate change commitments which he said must include looking at the nuclear option.

A few days later, a government minister said Britain must decide within a year whether to invest in a new wave of nuclear power generation but added no decision had yet been made.

Scientists' warnings about global warming have increased the pressure on rich nations to cut carbon dioxide emissions.

Experts have said that the earth's temperature will rise by at least two degrees centigrade by the end of this century due to greenhouse gases from burning fossil fuels, putting millions of people at risk from floods and droughts.

It is difficult to tell if global warming caused hurricanes Katrina and Rita, scientists say but they forecast more unpredictable weather as the world gets hotter.

CLEANING UP ITS IMAGE

The nuclear debate has long stirred passions in Britain, home of one of the most intensively used nuclear sites in the world at Sellafield, northwestern England.

In the late 1990s, Sellafield found itself in the firing line after a report criticised safety standards at the nuclear reprocessing plant which has been operating for some 50 years.

Now, workers understand the public relations challenge.

"We have got to demonstrate that we can clean up the legacy of the past. That way we can show we can deal with the waste of the future," said Tony Price, head of the clean-up programme.

Waste has long been an industry black spot. The enriched uranium used in atomic reactors in nuclear plants is highly radioactive and spent fuel remains hazardous for 100,000 years.

"As we show we are dealing with the legacy waste, people are starting to get more confident," Price said.

The nuclear industry's most optimistic projection, from the WNA, sees global nuclear power capacity doubling to around 750 gigawatts over the next 25 years but its share of world electricity supply only edging up to 18 percent from 16 due to booming demand, expected to double between 1990 and 2020.

To put that in context, 750 gigawatts of capacity could produce up to 5.2 trillion kilowatt hours of electricity which would be enough to supply every person in the United States, Britain, Russia, France and Germany for a year.

"Between 2030 and 2050 you could see nuclear as a percentage of world electricity supply rising sharply," Hore-Lacy said. "It is not hard to envisage a scenario where nuclear could provide 50 percent of world electricity."

"THE WRONG ANSWER"

Environmentalists say the true costs of nuclear power are three times those stated, there is a risk terrorists could get hold of deadly plutonium, and waste is a problem for the future.

"We are not taking an ideological view ... We have analysed the pros and cons ... and we have concluded that (nuclear power) is the wrong answer," said Tony Juniper of Friends of the Earth.

"A much more positive set of options are there," he said, citing a combination of energy efficiency, microgeneration, renewables, carbon capture, and more sustainable transport.

Greenpeace told the European Parliament last week that far from being the answer, nuclear power should be phased out.

"To replace one environmental catastrophe -- polluting fossil fuel power -- with another environmental disaster -- nuclear energy -- is clearly not the answer," it said.

Environmentalists want more use to be made of renewable energy like solar, wind and waves. The wind power industry says that by 2020 wind could provide 12 percent of the world's electricity, but it complains of administrative barriers.

It says wind power has no carbon emissions, employs many and is good for local economies -- although most complaints come from people who don't want wind farms in their back yards.

In Europe, Germany takes the lead with renewable energy sources supplying 10 percent of electricity while in neighbour France, nuclear power provides nearly 80 percent of electricity.

In Britain, where Blair advocates tackling global warming, renewables provide only 3 percent of electricity with 19 percent coming from nuclear power but plants are getting old, hence the need for a prompt decision on whether to build new ones.

WNA's Hore-Lacy argues that the nuclear industry has high start-up costs but low running costs and dismisses the notion that waste causes any problems.

"We have to dispel the myths, the suspicion and the fear."


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Government; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: confident; debate; energy; nuclearpower; quietly
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To: 103198

That would work for me.


21 posted on 10/07/2005 10:13:22 PM PDT by clee1 (We use 43 muscles to frown, 17 to smile, and 2 to pull a trigger. I'm lazy and I'm tired of smiling.)
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To: NormsRevenge
These "environmentalists" don't care about the environment. It's all about socialism.

Here in Wisconsin the utility is jacking the rate up 11%. People complain and b!tch about the cold but when power companies want to expand or build new facilities they're the same ones whining to county board and trying to stop them, and unfortunately they have a sympathetic ear in Governor Doyle.

Wisconsin has a law that forbids the utility from cutting off power in the winter. It's time the state gov't rescind this law and let people learn the hard way. Nukes need to be built, enough said, because Jimmy Carter conservationism just doesn't work.

22 posted on 10/07/2005 10:20:09 PM PDT by Extremely Extreme Extremist (Harmful or Fatal if Swallowed)
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To: Siena Dreaming

APS, Arizona Public they own Palo Verde, largest in the US and with enough land for probably 7 more reactors.


23 posted on 10/07/2005 10:26:27 PM PDT by church16 (“People sleep peaceably in their beds at night only because rough men stand ready to do violence...")
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To: Siena Dreaming
GE and Westinghouse are almost guaranteed to have at least a little work on any nuclear reactor designed. In reality, it will probably be a large part of the work. Unfortunately even if the nuclear sector booms (not literally), these companies are too large for that to significantly affect the stock price. Westinghouse will probably be making a lot of money with its new AP 1000 reactor once it gets approved.

Just checked the NRC web page. Two companies currently doing an application review for new reactors: GE (ESBWR) and Westinghouse (AP 1000). I'm glad to see that the ESBWR has finally moved further along.

If you are interested in foreign markets, the CANDU reactor seems to be doing very well. It might also make significant inroads into the US market once we start building new reactors.
24 posted on 10/07/2005 10:46:40 PM PDT by burzum (Great minds discuss ideas, average minds discuss events, small minds discuss people.-Adm H Rickover)
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To: azcap
If they'll pay the rent they are welcome to put a pebble-bed on my back 40. The GOP needs to gut it up and ram a massive expansion of nuclear power (tax incentives, environmental waivers, and tort limits) through congress. While they are writing the bill they should throw the same bones to oil refineries. It is time to stop talking about energy policies (done that for 30 years) and let the free market have it. The energy (electric and fuel) problems we have would be solved in a decade.

Exactly right.

Our power comes from Plant Hatch- for close to thirty years, all it's done is produce clean, cheap electric power.

By contrast, the two chemical plants in my city kill a worker or two every year-- guess which one I'd prefer as a neighbor.

Our Navy has run atomic reactors in the most challenging environment- marine service- for nearly fifty years without a fatality, proving that if you provide the right equipment and operators, it can be done safely.

We need to get off the industry's back, and let them go ahead with clean, cheap atomic power.

25 posted on 10/08/2005 1:26:28 AM PDT by backhoe (-30-)
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To: NormsRevenge; seastay

I can't figure the environmental movement, socialists in EU are OK with nuclear power. But here it would lead to growth and people making *gasp* money.

And yes, if we could capture all the hot air that is generated by Greenpeace, we could run a lot of generators.


26 posted on 10/08/2005 10:23:43 AM PDT by KC_for_Freedom (Sailing the highways of America, and loving it.)
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To: NormsRevenge

I've noticed a large uptick in telly ads promoting nuclear energy lately. I wonder if that is tied in to this.


27 posted on 10/08/2005 10:31:35 AM PDT by Eepsy
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