Posted on 06/16/2009 1:37:51 PM PDT by kellynla
Excerpted from a speech by Sen. Lamar Alexander on May 27 to the Tennessee Valley Corridor Summit in Oak Ridge, Tenn.
One year ago I came to Oak Ridge to propose a new Manhattan Project to put America on the path to clean energy independence. The project would focus on seven grand challenges: plug-in electric cars and trucks, carbon capture from coal plants, making solar power cost competitive, recycling used nuclear fuel, advanced biofuels from crops we dont eat, green buildings, and finally, fusion.
Today I am in Oak Ridge to propose that the United States build 100 new nuclear power plants during the next 20 years while scientists and engineers figure out these grand challenges. This would double Americas nuclear plants which today produce 20% of all our electricity, and 70% of our pollution-free, carbon-free electricity.
It is an aggressive goal, but with presidential leadership it could happen. And I am convinced it should happen because conservation and nuclear power are the only real alternatives we have today to produce enough low-cost, reliable, clean electricity to clean the air, deal with climate change, and keep good jobs from going overseas.
Climate change may be the inconvenient problem of the day, but nuclear power is for many skeptics the inconvenient answer.
These nuclear skeptics cite regulatory delays, bring up past problems with safety, and appoint commissions to slow-walk decisions about recycling used nuclear fuel. They point to the shortage of welders for new plants. They complain that Japan and France are building most of the essential equipment for new nuclear plants -- no surprise since Japan is building one nuclear plant a year and France is producing 80% of its electricity from nuclear. The skeptics say that carbon from coal plants contributes to climate change, which is true, and so they offer their solution: Operate our big complex country, which uses 25% of all the energy in the world, on electricity generated from the wind, the sun, and the Earth.
One day, that might be possible. But today there is a huge energy gap between the renewable electricity we would like to have and the reliable, low-cost electricity we must have. My guess is it will be 30, 40, or 50 years before these new sources of electricity are cheap enough and reliable enough to supply most of the power to our electric grid.
The nuclear skeptics in Congress, urged along by the President, reported last week an energy and climate change bill that would require 20% of our electricity to be made from a narrow definition of renewable energy.
To put things in perspective, the Tennessee Valley Authority produces on average about 27,000 megawatts of electricity for industrial and household customers in its seven-state region: 60% comes from coal, 30% from nuclear, 8% from hydroelectric power and 1% from natural gas. Nationally, it is 50% coal, 20% nuclear, 20% natural gas and 6% hydro. Nationally, only 1.5% of electricity comes from the sun, the wind and the Earth and almost none of TVAs power does. But the 40% of TVA power that comes from nuclear and hydro is just as clean as these narrowly defined renewables -- free of pollution that dirties the air and of carbon that contributes to global warming. In that sense, TVA is the 16th cleanest utility in the country.
Here is another yardstick: The new nuclear unit at Watts Bar can produce 1240 megawatts, the Bull Run coal plant 870 megawatts, the Fort Loudoun Dam 150 megawatts. All three operate almost all the time. That is called baseload power, which is important since large amounts of power cant be stored. Some forget that solar power is only available when the sun shines and the wind is available only when the wind blows.
So how much renewable electricity is available in our region? The new solar plant Gov. Bredesen has proposed for Haywood County will produce five megawatts. The 18 big wind turbines atop Buffalo Mountain just a few miles away have the capacity to produce 29 megawatts, but actually produce only 6 megawatts. The Southern Companys new biomass plant in Georgia -- biomass is a sort of controlled bonfire of waste wood products -- will produce 96 megawatts.
Each of these sources of renewable energy consumes a lot of space. For example, the big solar thermal plants in the Western desert where they line up mirrors to focus the suns rays take more than 30 square miles -- thats more than five miles on a side -- to produce the same 1000 megawatts you can get from a single coal or nuclear plant that sits on one square mile.
Or take wind. To generate the same 1000 megawatts with wind you would need 270 square miles. An unbroken line of wind turbines 50 stories high from Chattanooga to Bristol would only give us one-fourth of the electricity we get from one unit at Watts Bar -- which fits on less than one square mile -- and wed still need Watts Bar for when the wind doesnt blow.
Biomass, we are told, will be the renewable source were going to emphasize in the South. Thats a good idea. It might reduce forest fires and will conserve resources. The National Forest Service tells us there are two million tons of wood scraps and dead trees in Tennessee forests. And pulp and paper companies might produce another two million tons. But lets not expect too much. Wed need a forest the size of the entire 550,000 acre Great Smoky Mountains National Park to feed a 1000-megawatt biomass plant on a sustained basis. And think of the energy its going to take to haul all this stuff around. Georgia Southern says it will take 160-180 trucks a day just to feed biomass into a 96-megawatt electrical plant
Of all these renewable forms of electricity, in my judgment, solar has the most promise. It takes up massive spaces, but we can use rooftops. It only works when the sun shines, but the sun shines during peak times of electricity use. The first grand challenge of my proposed Manhattan project is to try to make solar power cost competitive. According to TVA, in our region, solar costs 4-5 times as much as the baseload electricity TVA now produces.
Wind power, on the other hand, can supplement electricity on the Great Plains or offshore, but for our region it would be a terrible mistake. Here, it is a waste of money and destroys the environment in the name of saving the environment. The turbines are three times as high as Neyland Stadium. In our region they work only on mountaintops where the winds are strongest, and they barely even work there. And I havent even mentioned the new transmission lines necessary from the mountain tops through your back yard. Someone asked Boone Pickens if he would put any of these turbines on his 68,000 acre ranch in Texas. Hell no, he said, Theyre ugly. Well, if Boone doesnt want them on his ranch because theyre ugly, why would we want them on the most beautiful mountaintops in America?
So why is it that nuclear energy, perhaps the most important scientific advance of the 20th Century, was invented in America yet we have stopped taking advantage of it just when we most need it?
Shortly after World War II, Glenn Seaborg, the great American Nobel Prize winner, said that nuclear energy had come along just in time because we were reaching the limits of the fossil fuels. And he was right. The succeeding decades proved that fossil fuels are not unlimited and their supplies can seriously compromise our energy independence. And that doesnt even begin to address global warming. Yes, I do believe global warming and climate change are problems we must address. We cant go on throwing three billion tons of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere every year without running into some kind of trouble.
Nuclear for Plug-Ins
The way both to deal with global warming and to keep our jobs is to encourage what is being called the Nuclear Renaissance and start making nuclear energy the backbone of a new industrial economy. Right now there are 17 proposals for 26 new reactors in licensing hearings before the Nuclear Regulatory Commission. Thats a start. But I think we need to go well beyond that. I propose that from the years 2010 to 2030 we build 100 new nuclear reactors to match the ones we already have operating. Thats what we did from 1970 to 1990. During that 20-year interval we built almost every one of the 104 reactors that now provide us with 20% of our electricity. If we built another 100 by 2030, well be able to provide well over 40%. Clean hydropower provides 6% of our electricity and with the electrification of small dams around the country we may be able to expand this to 8%. With diligent conservation, and other renewable resources, we can add another 10% to 12%. Then, my friends, well be talking about a clean-energy economy!
Still, thats only the beginning. The second largest source of carbon emissions -- and the biggest source of our energy instability -- is the 20 million barrels of oil we consume ever day to run our cars and trucks. I believe we should make half our cars and trucks plug-in within 20 years. That would reduce by one-third the oil we import from foreign sources. The Brookings Institution scholars estimate that we can power those cars and trucks by plugging them in at night without building one new power plant. As our fleet of electric vehicles grows, the most logical option for plugging in will be supplied by clean nuclear power. Until we make great advances in storage batteries, it cant be electricity thats sometimes there and sometimes not. We cant have Americans going to bed every night praying for a strong wind so they can start their cars in the morning.
Still, when it comes to nuclear power, a lot of people worry about safety. They say, Nuclear power sounds great to me, but Im afraid one of those reactors is going to blow up and cause a nuclear holocaust. Well, lets make a few things clear. As Oak Ridgers know better than almost anyone, a reactor is not a bomb. It cant blow up, thats impossible. Theres not enough fissionable material there.
What a nuclear reactor can do is overheat if it loses its cooling water, just the way your car engine can overheat and break down if it loses its antifreeze. Its called a meltdown. Nuclear scientists have worried about this from the beginning and take many precautions so that it wont happen.
Nuclear skeptics like to bring up Three Mile Island. So lets talk about that. What happened at Three Mile Island was basically an operator error. A valve failed and when the automatic safety mechanism kicked in, the operators overrode it because a mass of flashing lights and sirens on the control panel confused them about what was happening.
Three Mile Island completely changed the nuclear industry. The Kemeny Commission, appointed by President Jimmy Carter, analyzed the problems and made many recommendations, most of which were put into practice. The valve that started the whole thing had failed nine times before in other reactors and the manufacturer had tried to keep it a secret. People in the nuclear industry just werent talking talk to each other.
Now all of that has changed. Nuclear operators train for five years before they can take over in the control room. They spend one week out of every five in a simulator honing their skills . A Nuclear Regulatory Commission inspector practically lives on the site. Whats more, every reactor in the country is on the hook for $100 million if something goes wrong at another reactor. As you can imagine, they watch each other closely.
And it shows. Our entire nuclear fleet -- 104 reactors -- is now up and running 90% of the time. There has been only one yearlong shutdown for safety problems in the last decade. Weve added the equivalent of 29 new reactors since 1990 just by doing a better job of running the ones we already have. If the rest of America ran as well as the nuclear industry, wed be sitting on top of the world!
But what about Chernobyl? someone will say. Wasnt that a nuclear catastrophe? Well, the Soviets did things very differently at Chernobyl than how we do it this country. For instance, they didnt put a containment structure around the reactor, which is like not putting a roof on your house and then acting surprised when it rains and you get wet. In addition, they did something no American power reactor has ever done. They surrounded the core with carbon in the form of graphite. Thats like building your reactor in the middle of a charcoal grill. When the graphite caught fire, it spewed radioactive smoke all over the world. That could never happen at an American reactor -- and it wont happen again in Russia, since theyve made a lot of changes over there and now they are building reactors the same way we build reactors.
So lets build 100 new reactors in the next 20 years. Our new reactors have even better safety features -- although its never good to be overconfident. Weve learned how to run the current fleet at its full potential. Most reactors are making close to $2 million a day. The attorney general of Connecticut proposed a windfall profits tax a few years ago when fossil fuel prices went through the roof. He said it wasnt fair that reactors could run so cheaply. So why not expand on our winnings? Why not build another generation of reactors?
Well, a lot of people say it cant be done. They say we dont manufacture anything anymore in America. We have to import all our hard goods from China. They say we dont have the nuclear engineers to design the new generation. They say we dont have the specialty welders to put them together on-site. They say we cant manufacture the steel vessel heads anymore, and our steel forges arent big enough. Right now, the only forge in the world big enough to make a reactor vessel is Japan Steel Works and theyre backed up. People say our new plants will spend a decade standing in line behind the 34 other reactors that are already under construction in the world, mostly in Asia.
And you know something? Theyre right.
Theyre right because all the things theyre saying here are true. We dont currently have a nuclear construction industry. But then they dont know America. America can respond to a challenge. Just as we rose to the occasion in 1943 when we built this complex here at Oak Ridge, so can we rise to the occasion today to build a new generation of nuclear reactors that will provide clean, reliable power for America for the rest of this century.
Its not going to be easy. What were talking about here is essentially a rebirth of Industrial America, and its already starting to happen. Westinghouse is opening a school for training welders who can knit together a containment structure strong enough to protect both the environment from the reactor and the reactor from outside threats. Alstom, a French company, is investing $200 million in Chattanooga to manufacture heavy turbines for nuclear plants. We also have to train nuclear engineers to take the place of the great generation that embraced the technology in the 1960s and 1970s, only to see their dreams come to naught when the nation turned away from nuclear power. We have to find a steel manufacturer somewhere in this country that is willing to step up and say, Here, we can do those forgings right here in Pennsylvania or Ohio or Michigan. We dont have to stand in line in Japan. And we have to find investors who are willing to put up their money and say, Yes, I have faith in America. I have faith in technology. Im ready to invest in building a cleaner, safer, more prosperous world.
And with presidential leadership we could add more loan guarantees to accelerate construction, and could streamline the permit system to ensure that new reactors dont become ensnared in regulatory mazes or combative lawsuits. But we cant just sit on our hands, because in America we dont sit around waiting for the government to do things for us. We do things for ourselves.
So the task we face here today is no less formidable than the task the Oak Ridge pioneers faced when they first arrived here in 1943. They were trying to save the world from Japanese militarism and Nazi totalitarianism. Now, we are trying to save the world from the pending disaster of dwindling energy supplies, the uncertain dangers of a warming planet, and the stagnation and decay that can only follow if we do not revive American industry.
So I ask you here today to join in the task of bringing about this Nuclear Renaissance, in helping to generate the Rebirth of an Industrial America.
As we used to say in the Bronx: “F—in’ A!”
Good luck. We’ll be lucky to have ten operating bicycle generators in twenty years. And that will be what we’ll be pointing to as progress by then.
Obama wants the U.S. neutered, and what better way to accomplish it than by making us dependent on other nations.
Not gonna happen.
Obammy has publically stated that Iran can have nuclear power for “peaceful purposes”.
But, not for America.
It's sad when France is investing in real, practical energy solutions for America like Nuclear power, while Obama pushes ridiculous Green technologies like wind and solar.
Don’t see it happening with Obambi.
Perhaps with Palin.
Cool, cute baby nukes!
All but #3.
We can’t shut down debate, even if we think “the debate is over” (ie. “global warming”).
People truly interested in protecting the environment and public health must retain that forum, even if it leads to the courts. They’re not all wackos and some of them may have decent ideas.
But, streamline the process so that REAL science is used and ensures that the plans remain unresolved for decades.
The wackos killed the Midland (Michigan) nuke plant because they delayed, delayed and delayed. In the end, their “science” didn’t mean jack shit, but the billions in overruns made a nuke outcome unfeasible. It went to a co-generation plant.
If Uncle Mahmoud can survive this latest bit of street unrest following his legitimate re-election, he’s planning on building seven or eight himself. That get’s us down to ninety three. Oh wait: Did you want them built in this country? That’s impossible. Believe it or not, the same people who insist that we need to turn corn into oil so we won’t be beholden to foreign interests have also refused to allow a new plant to open in this country for over 13 years now. And they had been putting pressure on new cconstruction for 20 years prior to that.
Hussein will be history in three years.
Just like Jimmy Carter...”One & done!”
People are like goats, they will swallow almost anything
China syndrome, Three mile island, Chernobyl
The technology is far advanced from the early years.. the propaganda not so..
Besides, if it’s good enough for the french and germans,, yada yada .
Build Them! (/aRnie)
Get right on that, will you Lamar?
Nuclear Cogeneration Power Plants for Desalination http://www.nextenergynews.com/news1/next-energy-news12.27b.html
I appreciate the optimism, but I’ve learned not to underestimate the stupidity of a large part of the population.
Michelle Obama is now a fashion queen.
These people will deify Obammy, no matter what it takes.
“...Experience shows that nuclear reactors can be used
to heat seawater in a process known as “reverse osmosis”...”
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What a poorly written article.
To recap some facts:
3 mi Island proved that our reactor safety systems WORKED as designed. They have only improved since. Nobody died, nobody was seriously hurt, radiation exposure was minimal.
Chernobyl - 56 deaths total cumulative (as of 2004) For comparison: EVERY year, an average of 90 people are killed by lightening strikes in the USA
Thanks, but facts don’t always matter, yaknow . Just kidding. ;-]
It was the image and air of danger that was painted into folks mind that has done the most damage or induced the most reluctance in the end to utilizing and generating cleaner cheap energy.
100 plants! Is that the new 5-year plan? Why do we need a soviet-style government “plan” anyway. Hey Lamar, how about just stop governmental roadblocks and then see what the utility companies decide what they need to build?
Power generation is not a duty of the government.
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