President Obama is using his executive authority to encourage the government to invest in next-generation nuclear technologies. Last week, the president issued an executive order
mandating a 40 percent cut in carbon dioxide emissions across
government agencies.
Buried in the list of qualifying clean energy
technologies was a reference to small modular nuclear technologies -- a new breed of reactors that are smaller, safer and less capital-intensive than traditional light water reactors.
As
part of the targets, government agencies must get 30 percent of energy
from "alternative" technologies by 2025. Those include conventional
renewables, conventional fossil fuels with carbon capture, and small
modular nuclear reactors. The mention of nuclear was first reported by Matthew Bandyk of SNL.
The
Obama administration has long expressed its support for the nuclear
industry. Both of the administration's energy secretaries, Steven Chu
and Ernest Moniz, have been stalwart advocates of the industry. "If
we want to make a serious dent in carbon dioxide emissions -- not to
mention having cleaner air and cleaner water -- then nuclear power has
to be on the table," wrote former secretary Chu on his official Facebook page in 2010.
Last February, the Department of Energy finalized
a $6.5 billion loan guarantee for two 1,100-megawatt reactors at the
Vogtle nuclear site being developed by Southern Company. (The reactors,
which are the first developed in the U.S. in 30 years, are billions of dollars over budget and nearly two years behind schedule.)
With the remaining funds for loan guarantees, the Department of Energy made $12.5 billion available last December for advanced reactor designs or enrichment processes. There's a growing list
of technologies being supported by the feds. But President Obama's
executive order is the first time small modular nuclear has been
designated for government procurement. The executive order does not
necessarily mean that federal agencies will buy electricity from
next-generation nuclear facilities; however, it does add an extra
incentive for the military or government labs to enter into contracts --
assuming technologies are ready within the next decade.
American
companies working on advanced designs include NuScale Power, TerraPower,
Transatomic Power, Westinghouse and Babcock & Wilcox. Although more money is trickling in
from the government and venture capitalists for these firms, they still
have many years of testing and permitting to go through before
approaching commercial scale. Supporters of the industry have called
for additional federal funds to test new reactor designs, as well as an
overhaul of permitting processes at the Nuclear Regulatory Commission
to speed up deployment when those designs are ready.
The Obama
administration's new rules for federal facilities won't help in those
needed areas. But they may provide startups with a first customer when
they're ready to commercialize. Speaking to SNL, NuScale's Chief Commercial Officer, Mike McGough, said
that adding small modular nuclear to government clean energy targets
"absolutely will nudge folks closer" to purchasing electricity from one
of its early projects.
http://theenergycollective.com/stephenlacey/2209616/obama-administration-quietly-seeks-extra-boost-small-modular-nuclear-reactors
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