Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Front page of USA Today "money" section: Nuclear power inches back into energy spotlight

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Front page of USA Today "money" section: Nuclear power inches back into energy spotlight

    http://www.usatoday.com/money/indust...y-return_N.htm

    By Paul Davidson, USA TODAY

    Several companies have taken significant steps that will likely lead to completion of four reactors by 2015 to 2018 and up to eight by 2020. All would be built next to existing nuclear plants.

    [..]

    Still, some hurdles are emerging. Some companies are submitting incomplete applications or seeking design changes at the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC), possibly delaying approval. At least two utilities recently said they're switching to different reactor models because they couldn't receive assurances on costs and the timetable. And since several models are new, problems could emerge as they're built in the USA for the first time. The type of reactor planned for Maryland is being built in Finland, where it's three years behind schedule and $2 billion over budget.

    "We're talking about a new generation of technology," says John Reed, CEO of Concentric Energy Advisors. "You have to demonstrate to (lenders) that you can make money with these."

    [..]

    Today, 104 reactors supply 20% of the nation's electricity. Just to hold that share, all 26 proposed reactors would have to be completed by 2030.

    [..]

    Under new rules, power companies can apply for one license to both build and operate a nuclear reactor, streamlining the review. Designs must be approved separately before construction begins. And power companies are using just five blueprints. Regulators hope they'll churn out cookie-cutter versions of each design. Yet, even as they seek licenses, only two of the five designs have been certified.

    "They're putting the cart before the horse," NRC Commissioner Gregory Jaczko says. "They should get the design done" before applying for a license. Also, he says, some reactor makers are proposing extensive modifications to their designs. Westinghouse, for instance, wants to make about 100 changes to its AP1000 reactor, says Vice President Ed Cummins. He says they're largely minor.

    [..]

    To avoid cost overruns, power companies want to lock in prices and put the onus on equipment vendors to pay added fees if a project is delayed. Vendors are reluctant to set prices because the reactors lack a track record, and it's impossible to predict the cost of labor and materials when construction starts in a few years.

    NRG (NRG), an independent power producer that's building two reactors in Texas, has signed a contract with Toshiba that nails down most costs, says Steven Winn, CEO of the NRG unit building the plant. That's possible, he says, because Toshiba owns 12% of the venture and has already built four of the same model units, called an ABWR, in Japan.

    Others are having mixed success at locking in terms. Exelon, for instance, recently said it was no longer going to use a General Electric Hitachi reactor because GE (GE) couldn't sufficiently guarantee fixed prices and a firm schedule. "We have to be careful and pragmatic" about risks, says GE Vice President Danny Roderick.

    With lenders hesitant to take chances on nuclear energy, 10 companies seek a total of $93 billion in federal loan guarantees for new nuclear plants. But only $18.5 billion is available — enough to finance three or four projects.

    NEI President Marvin Fertel told Congress this month that independent power producers would likely abandon projects if the entire $93 billion is not funded, slowing the nuclear revival.

    Bill Wicker, spokesman for the Senate Energy committee, says guarantees are meant to bankroll only the maiden versions of new models. No more than another $18 billion is likely to be funded, he says. "It's not like a bottomless cup of coffee."

    [..]

    Only one company, Japan Steel Works, builds the 600-ton steel forgings used to make reactor vessels. It can make only five or six a year. Southern, SCE&G, NRG and Constellation have spent tens of millions of dollars reserving such items. Those building reactors after the front-runners could face bottlenecks, Standard & Poor's says. But Japan Steel Works has said it's expanding its capacity by about a third, while others are entering the market. In the U.S., factories to make nuclear parts are being built in Virginia, Louisiana, Indiana and Tennessee.

    *****

    I wonder why the article was published on the 30th? The Senate's energy committee discussed nuclear on March 18th.

    It's the USA Today, so the target audience is nothing out of the ordinary.

  • #2
    Re: Front page of USA Today "money" section: Nuclear power inches back into energy spotlight

    I wonder if any of these Nuclear Reactors are insured for the maximum amount of damage they could cause. Looks like more Too Big To Fail and the taxpayers picks up the damage bill.

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Front page of USA Today "money" section: Nuclear power inches back into energy spotlight

      The Obama Administration's priorities are quite evident to me: $12 TRILLION so far for bailing-out banks, and so far just $18 billion for loan guarantees for atomic power. In other words, Bernanke's bail-outs for banks is about 1000 times more important to Washington than atomic power is.

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Front page of USA Today "money" section: Nuclear power inches back into energy spotlight

        Scientists take another stab at nuclear fusion

        Jim Doyle, Chronicle Staff Writer
        Wednesday, April 1, 2009

        After more than a decade of work and an investment of $3.5 billion, scientists at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory say they have created a super laser that will enable them to build a miniature sun within the lab in the next two years.

        The U.S. Department of Energy certified the world's largest laser on Tuesday, an instrument that will test the reliability of the nation's nuclear weapons stockpile, explore the origins of the universe and seek to create nuclear fusion energy.

        Nuclear fusion is the National Ignition Facility's biggest goal.
        By 2010 or 2011, the lab's scientists hope to achieve ignition - that is, produce the first tiny thermonuclear explosions inside their capsule targets in hopes of ultimately creating a limitless source of fusion energy, the kind of energy that powers the blazing heat of the sun and stars.

        "It's an extremely exciting prospect," said Edward Moses, director of the laser project. "The search for fusion energy has been a long haul. Some people say it's better than you can believe, but based on everything we know, the question now is more 'when,' not 'if.' "

        Researchers have dreamed for more than half a century of tapping the potential of nuclear fusion as a clean, cheap power source. If successful, nuclear fusion energy could be a game-changer for meeting the world's energy needs. Current nuclear power plants rely on nuclear fission, or the splitting of atoms, a chain reaction that produces large quantities of deadly radioactive waste.

        But if this costly experiment at Lawrence Livermore fails, it could kill U.S. fusion research for good. Since the 1950s, scientists have tried different processes to create nuclear fusion but have failed. For all the money spent on research, fusion has yet to power a light bulb.

        http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/articl...MN7M16QB7I.DTL

        It's the waste issue that puts nuclear power in question for me.

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Front page of USA Today "money" section: Nuclear power inches back into energy spotlight

          http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZP2oG0n4NLc

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: Front page of USA Today "money" section: Nuclear power inches back into energy spotlight

            Originally posted by don View Post
            Scientists take another stab at nuclear fusion

            Jim Doyle, Chronicle Staff Writer
            Wednesday, April 1, 2009

            After more than a decade of work and an investment of $3.5 billion, scientists at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory say they have created a super laser that will enable them to build a miniature sun within the lab in the next two years.

            The U.S. Department of Energy certified the world's largest laser on Tuesday, an instrument that will test the reliability of the nation's nuclear weapons stockpile, explore the origins of the universe and seek to create nuclear fusion energy.

            Nuclear fusion is the National Ignition Facility's biggest goal.
            By 2010 or 2011, the lab's scientists hope to achieve ignition - that is, produce the first tiny thermonuclear explosions inside their capsule targets in hopes of ultimately creating a limitless source of fusion energy, the kind of energy that powers the blazing heat of the sun and stars.

            "It's an extremely exciting prospect," said Edward Moses, director of the laser project. "The search for fusion energy has been a long haul. Some people say it's better than you can believe, but based on everything we know, the question now is more 'when,' not 'if.' "

            Researchers have dreamed for more than half a century of tapping the potential of nuclear fusion as a clean, cheap power source. If successful, nuclear fusion energy could be a game-changer for meeting the world's energy needs. Current nuclear power plants rely on nuclear fission, or the splitting of atoms, a chain reaction that produces large quantities of deadly radioactive waste.

            But if this costly experiment at Lawrence Livermore fails, it could kill U.S. fusion research for good. Since the 1950s, scientists have tried different processes to create nuclear fusion but have failed. For all the money spent on research, fusion has yet to power a light bulb.

            http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/articl...MN7M16QB7I.DTL

            It's the waste issue that puts nuclear power in question for me.
            There is only a tiny amount of radioactive waste produced in reactors. It is mostly low-level long half-life radioactive waste.

            As I have said before, you can store this so-called "deadly" radioactive waste here on my property in East Sooke, BC. But I do expect to be paid for my service.

            A little education: Long half-life radioactive wastes are quite low level and anything but deadly. Uranium, for example, is very long half-life and barely radioactive at all. Uranium is found in all granites including the granites that my house is built upon.

            This foolishness about radioactivity being deadly is part of the mis-information about atomic energy that the public has been flooded with. So it is time to set this matter straight: Radioactivity is part of the natural environment. Human cells repair damage done by radioactivity. All life repairs radiation damage to cells, otherwise life on this planet would not be possible.

            If you fear radioactivity, don't eat bananas because bananas are rich in a radioactive natural isotope of potassium--- so rich as to be quite measureable with a Geiger-counter.

            Comment


            • #7
              Re: Front page of USA Today "money" section: Nuclear power inches back into energy spotlight

              Originally posted by Starving Steve View Post
              There is only a tiny amount of radioactive waste produced in reactors. It is mostly low-level long half-life radioactive waste.
              Yes, in fact there is more radioactivity in pot than there is in radioactive waste. That's the real reason for pot being illegal, to protect the public from radioactivity.

              Comment


              • #8
                Re: Front page of USA Today "money" section: Nuclear power inches back into energy spotlight

                There is more risk of dying from lung cancer by smoking cigarettes than by any waste including radon from nuclear reactors.

                All the hysteria about radon came from a junk-science study on radon co-relating lung cancer and radon exposure in mines. It turned-out that the study ignored the miners smoking cigarettes. As it turned-out, the miners who later died of lung cancer were the ones who smoked cigarettes, and their lung cancer was not related (as previously thought) to radon exposure in mines. The link between radon and lung cancer is now in question.

                This is why it is important for scientists to be rigourous and ask questions about findings before anything is published.

                Comment


                • #9
                  Re: Front page of USA Today "money" section: Nuclear power inches back into energy spotlight

                  I think Steve must drive around up there in BC with an "I love nuclear power" bumper sticker on his car (hey, maybe he drives a smelly old diesel!) - mainly for the satisfaction of enraging those he terms the "eco-fraud pot-heads".
                  Originally posted by Starving Steve View Post
                  There is more risk of dying from lung cancer by smoking cigarettes than by any waste including radon from nuclear reactors.

                  All the hysteria about radon came from a junk-science study on radon co-relating lung cancer and radon exposure in mines. It turned-out that the study ignored the miners smoking cigarettes. As it turned-out, the miners who later died of lung cancer were the ones who smoked cigarettes, and their lung cancer was not related (as previously thought) to radon exposure in mines. The link between radon and lung cancer is now in question.

                  This is why it is important for scientists to be rigourous and ask questions about findings before anything is published.
                  Last edited by Contemptuous; April 01, 2009, 08:09 PM.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Re: Front page of USA Today "money" section: Nuclear power inches back into energy spotlight

                    So the Chernobyl 3-Mile Island crowd are tree-hugging earth-warming eco-terrorists. I didn't know that. Thanks for filling me in. You can't beat wide ranging hyperbole to answer an inquiry

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Re: Front page of USA Today "money" section: Nuclear power inches back into energy spotlight

                      One single dental X-ray gives-off more ionizing radiation than the public received from Three Mile Island. And yet the public shows no concern about dental X-rays, even entire mouthfulls of them.

                      Yes, I assert that the eco-frauds have made the public hysterical about nuclear power, and that was easy to do with mis-information and bogus studies from Greenpeace, the Sierra Club, the Rocky Mtn. Institute, W.A.R.N. in North Carolina, and the E.P.A. in Washington.

                      Now it is time to set the record straight and re-educate the public about many issues concerning energy and the environment. It is time to push-back.

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Re: Front page of USA Today "money" section: Nuclear power inches back into energy spotlight

                        Let us not forget that a coal-fired power station directly ejects radiation into the environment. At least with nuclear power, you can manage the radioactive materials.

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Re: Front page of USA Today "money" section: Nuclear power inches back into energy spotlight

                          Originally posted by Starving Steve View Post
                          There is more risk of dying from lung cancer by smoking cigarettes than by any waste including radon from nuclear reactors.

                          All the hysteria about radon came from a junk-science study on radon co-relating lung cancer and radon exposure in mines. It turned-out that the study ignored the miners smoking cigarettes. As it turned-out, the miners who later died of lung cancer were the ones who smoked cigarettes, and their lung cancer was not related (as previously thought) to radon exposure in mines. The link between radon and lung cancer is now in question.

                          This is why it is important for scientists to be rigourous and ask questions about findings before anything is published.

                          You would be amazed at the number of people who are in the radon remediation business, but don't have a system in their home. I know of one who had a dirt floor basemant and a high radon count. He never did anything about it. He raised a few kids in that house. That's all you have to know about radon.

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Re: Front page of USA Today "money" section: Nuclear power inches back into energy spotlight

                            A while back maybe a year or 18 months ago Rajiv posted some very interesting articles about the net energy output of uranium after mining and processing costs were factored in. Caused a very heated controversy at that time. Hint: the net energy output was "greatly reduced". Point being, without petroleum we are in even more of a pickle than the availability of nuclear energy would have us believe.

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Re: Front page of USA Today "money" section: Nuclear power inches back into energy spotlight

                              Originally posted by leegs View Post
                              Yes, in fact there is more radioactivity in pot than there is in radioactive waste. That's the real reason for pot being illegal, to protect the public from radioactivity.
                              And people should be protected from other people since they carry around a good deal of radioactive potassium-40.

                              Just sharing a bed with another person increases exposure to radiation.

                              Comment

                              Working...
                              X