The spruikers for nuclear energy never say die. Climate change has given them a whole new lease of life. No-emission nuclear power should, they say, be part of Australia’s response to climate change. This week ANSTO chief Ziggy Switkowski said we should aim for 50 nuclear plants by 2050.
It won’t happen until the ALP fundamentally changes its policy on nuclear power. The Coalition is too scarred by their experience in the last election, when John Howard’s flirtation with the debate led to a Labor scare campaign about nuclear reactors in every backyard. Alas, that wasn’t quite how the right-wing media hoped the issue would play out when the Switkowski Report was released in 2006.
Still, hope springs eternal in Liberal hearts. In Tuesday’s joint partyroom meeting, Julie Bishop pointed out that “19 out of 20” G20 countries are pursuing nuclear power. Australia, self-evidently, is the nuclear laggard.
Tomorrow we’ll look at just how much it would cost for Australia to seriously embrace nuclear power as a response to climate change. Today, let’s consider whether the rest of the world is going nuclear in the way that proponents suggest.
First, some bald numbers taken from the German Government-commissioned World Nuclear Industry Status Report from August this year.
There are currently 435 reactors operating worldwide, nine less than in 2002. There are 52 reactors listed as “under construction” (more on that later), down from a peak in 1979 of 233 and 120 in 1987. No new plants were connected anywhere in 2008. The last plant to come online was the Romanian plant Cernavoda-2, which took 24 years to build. Reactors now provide slightly less power worldwide than they did two years ago.
By way of context, the 2 GW of nuclear power connected in 2006-07 was equal to one tenth of the wind power installed globally in 2007. More than double the amount of wind power was installed in the U.S. alone in 2007.
Clearly the nuclear industry is yet to begin recovering from the slump in reactor building worldwide after its peak in the mid-1980s.
That poses two problems for any “nuclear renaissance” and its capacity to provide a legitimate, timely response to climate change. ...
It’s not radioactivity or scare campaigns that are the nuclear industry’s biggest problem, it’s the maths. The numbers show that for decades to come, it will offer less and less of a solution to climate change, and it simply takes too long and costs too much to develop
The nuclear option: too slow, too costly
Other Posts by Big Gav
IEA World Energy Outlook: “If We Don’t Change Direction, We’ll End Up Where We’re Heading” - November 14, 2011
In Marine Current Energy, Siemens Wants To Lead - November 7, 2011
Australia's Carbon Tax Debate - June 6, 2011
Graph of the Day: The Cost of Production Of Oil - February 18, 2011
Study: Nuclear Power Will Be Pricier Than Other Renewables by 2020 - December 2, 2010
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CharlesBarton said:
Christina, renewable advocates talk about thousands of square miles of Solar arrays and wind mill farms that are not even in the planning stage. They talk about virtually unproven energy storage systems that are not even in the planning stage. They talk of hugely expensive grid expansions and upgrades without even a hint, They also said that India was incapable of designing and building reactors, and that proved untrue. They said that China woulds never build the Three Gorges Dam. Your skepticism is at best silly and at worst, since you target four Asian countries by name, racist.CharlesBarton said:
The report you mention was a German Green anti nuclear propaganda piece propaganda that contains many errors. It claims thatChina will built only a third of its stated objective of 60 newreactors by 2020, it completely ignore the reactor constructionplans of India, and slights the ambitious plans of Japan and SouthKorea. India alone has announced plans to build reactor capable ofproducing 40 GWs of electricity, far more than the world total thereport acknowledges. The slight to Asia is such as to suggest racial bias might be a motive. In addition the statement does not mention that theUnited Kingdom plans to build nuclear power plants on as many as 10sites, with between 25% to as much as 40% of its electricity coming from nuclearsources by 2025.
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Scott Edward Anderson is a consultant, blogger, and media commentator who blogs at The Green Skeptic. More »
Marc Gunther is a writer, speaker and consultant, who focuses on business and the environment. More »
Christine Hertzog is a consultant, author, and a professional explainer focused on Smart Grid. More »
Jesse Jenkins is the director of energy and climate policy at the Breakthrough Institute. More »
Robert Rapier works in the energy industry and writes and speaks about energy and the environment. More »
Geoffrey Styles is Managing Director of GSW Strategy Group, LLC and an award-winning blogger. More »
Dan Yurman is a nuclear energy blogger and writes regularly for Fuel Cycle Week. More »
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