It would be almost three hours until Tesla’s big announcement, but inside a Northwestern University classroom near Chicago Thursday night, the famed nuclear critic Arnie Gundersen had the inside scoop: Tesla Motors TSLA -0.04% CEO Elon Musk
was about to announce an industrial-scale battery, Gundersen said, that
would cost about 2¢ per kilowatt hour to use, putting the final nail in
the coffin of nuclear power.
Thus Tesla’s big news broke first not amongst the throng of
reporters gathered under swirling colored lights at the carmaker’s
Hawthorne, Calif. headquarters, but in the middle of a debate on the
future of nuclear power sponsored by students agitating for a “Fossil Free NU.” It was Gundersen vs. Jordi Roglans-Ribas, the director of the Nuclear Engineering Division of Argonne National Laboratory.
Roglans-Ribas had just finished arguing that any future free
of fossil fuels would need nuclear power, which provides carbon-free energy 24 hours a day, supplying the reliability lacking in renewables like solar and wind.
Gundersen called that claim a “marketing ploy.” “We all know that the wind doesn’t blow consistently and the sun
doesn’t shine every day,” he said, “but the nuclear industry would have
you believe that humankind is smart enough to develop techniques to
store nuclear waste for a quarter of a million years, but at the same
time human kind is so dumb we can’t figure out a way to store solar
electricity overnight. To me that doesn’t make sense.”
Then Gundersen told the audience of about 80 students and visitors
that it was a momentous day in history—because of something that was
about to happen in California. He evoked Elon Musk, the founder of PayPal , chairman of SpaceX and SolarCity SCTY +2.6%, and the product architect for Tesla Motors:
“At about ten ‘o’clock tonight he’s going to hold a press conference
and he’s going to announce that he’s going to build industrial scale
storage batteries. While the announcement is still two hours away, it
appears that they’ll be able to produce these large batteries for about
2¢ per kilowatt hour. That’s an enormous breakthrough,” Gundersen said.
“So the nuclear argument that they’re the only 24-7 source is off the table now because Elon Musk has convinced me that industrial scale storage is in fact possible, and it’s here.” And a few hours later Musk announced
the launch of Tesla Energy, ”a suite of batteries for homes,
businesses, and utilities fostering a clean energy ecosystem and helping
wean the world off fossil fuels.” Many had anticipated the
batteries—but not the price.
Tesla will sell the home battery, the Tesla Powerall, for $3,500, a fraction of the $13,000 price observers had expected, and perhaps more importantly, a fraction of the cost of the $10,000 battery announced earlier this week by European competitors Sungevity and Sonnenbatterie.
Musk did not describe the cost of the utility-scale battery, but the
prospect of a cheap new battery powered Gundersen’s economic
argument as he collegially set out to demolish the nuclear claim: The UK government just signed an agreement guaranteeing a price of 16
cents per kilowatt hour for power generated by a reactor proposed for
Hinkley Point, on the coast at Somerset, England. That fresh contract
represents an example, Gundersen argued, of the market price of new
nuclear power.
Solar power costs six to seven cents, he said, and wind costs four or five cents. Add
2¢ for the cost of a utility-scale Tesla battery, and renewables with
reliable storage are still at half the price of new nuclear power.
They’re also approaching the price of existing nuclear power. “Here in Illinois you know it’s true because Exelon EXC +0.29% is threatening to close five nuclear plants because they can’t compete with wind anymore.”
The real cost of various sources of energy is a topic of debate. Last
year the U.S. Dept of Energy said the cost of wind power had reached a new low of 2.5 cents per kilowatt hour (pdf). The cost of solar is typically pegged much higher, but the UN Energy Information Agency estimates solar is on a path to a cost of about 4 cents per kilowatt hour in coming decades.
Gundersen is a former nuclear engineer and executive who lost his job
in 1990 after reporting safety violations to his employer. He testifies
and campaigns against nuclear power for Fairewinds Energy Education, a
non-profit founded by his wife, Maggie Gundersen, also a former nuclear
industry employee.
Gundersen’s debate opponent, Roglans-Ribas,
did not address the Tesla battery development. He based his argument
largely on reliability before Gundersen played that card, and
he suggested that reliability alone would not sustain nuclear power—that
it would need regulatory help to compete.
“To actually be able to incentivize reliability in the electric grid
will be the key,” Roglans-Ribas said. “And that is where nuclear power
can play a key role.” Each kilogram of uranium burned in a reactor saves “thousands or
millions of tons of CO2 emissions,” he said, conceding that “renewables
can do the same thing.” But if the U.S. depends entirely on renewables,
he predicted, a point will come when the supply cannot meet the demand.
“The solution to moving way from fossil fuels, moving away from
greenhouse gas emissions, the solution is a mix that includes nuclear
and includes also renewables and also other sources, including for
example gas turbines that provide peaking power,” Roglans-Ribas
concluded.
But Gundersen dismissed the nuclear contribution as too expensive and
too slow—even if the U.S. could license and afford new reactors, they
could not come online before 2023—and he replaced the nuclear
contribution with batteries and conservation. “The
operative word in this discussion tonight is now. What are we going to
do now to reduce the amount of carbon dioxide going into the
atmosphere?” he said. “These things can be
implemented immediately. We know how to insulate a building. We know how
to put double and triple-pane windows in them. We know how to build
windmills and put solar cells up. These are immediate things. We don’t
have to invest $50 trillion and wait 15 years for that to come to
fruition. “Producing our way out of the problem with renewables is half the solution. Conserving our way out is the other half.”
http://www.forbes.com/sites/jeffmcmahon/2015/05/01/did-tesla-just-kill-nuclear-power/?ss=energy
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