“What is spectacular is the extent to which the nuclear industry is appearing to ignore reality.” Global
investment in new nuclear is an order of magnitude less than renewable
energy investment. That is just one of the findings of a new independent report on the state of the worldwide nuclear industry that was issued on Thursday. No matter which aspect of the nuclear industry is assessed, the picture isn't pretty.
Despite
talk of a nuclear renaissance in the 1990s, no single Generation III
reactor has come into service in the past 20 years. Most are delayed
three to nine years and are far over budget. “The impressively
resilient hopes that many people still have of a global nuclear
renaissance are being trumped by a real‐time revolution in
efficiency‐plus‐renewables‐plus-storage, delivering more and more
solutions on the ground every year,” Jonathon Porritt, co-founder of the
Forum for the Future and former Chairman of the U.K.
Sustainable Development Commission, wrote in the forward to the World
Nuclear Industry Status Report 2015. “[The report] remorselessly lays
bare the gap between the promise of innovation in the nuclear industry
and its delivered results.”
China, which leads the world in new
nuclear builds, spent about $9 billion in 2014, but invested more than
$83 billion on wind and solar in the same year. China’s no -hydro
renewable fleet produces more energy than its nuclear capacity. What's
more, Germany, Brazil, India, Mexico, the Netherlands, Spain and Japan
all generate more electricity from non-hydro renewables than from
nuclear. Those countries make up nearly half of the world’s population
and three of the world’s largest economies.
For
nuclear that is being built, the word "boondoggle" seems to come up
frequently, especially in the West. “The project is in shambles,” the
report said of the U.K.’s Hinkley Point C reactor, which was meant to be
the first new nuclear in the country in decades. Now, the company
building it, Areva, is bankrupt. Areva’s Olkiluoto 3 project in Finland
and Flamanville 3 in France are also both way over budget and still not
in operation.
“What is spectacular is the extent to which the
nuclear industry is appearing to ignore reality,” the report states. In
2013, Areva’s then-CEO predicted reactors would be coming back on-line
in Japan by the end of the year and that his company would be taking new
orders in the next few years. In 2015, Japan has been nuclear-free for
the first time in more than four decades. Areva has had no new orders.
Despite
the issues with Areva reactors, there are more than 60 reactors
currently under construction. Of those reactors, most have been under
construction for more than seven years. Three-quarters of the building
sites are delayed and, amazingly, five have been listed as “under
construction” for more than 30 years.
For
the reactors that are in operation, many are aging rapidly. The mean
age for reactors worldwide is about 29 years, and most were designed for
life spans of 40 years, but many will operate beyond that. The cost of
going beyond 40 years isn’t cheap -- about $1 billion to $5 billion per
reactor. By 2050, nuclear's share of global electricity generation is
expected to be similar to its role today, which amounts to about 10
percent.
Given the cost and time necessary to build large reactors, many in the industry have argued for a move to small modular reactors. Yet SMRs have also suffered from higher-than-expected costs and long development timelines, the report states.
The
U.S. Department of Energy has been one of the proponents of this
technology, yet none of the designs it said in 2001 could be available
by the end of the decade were deployed. Of the two companies the DOE
chose years later for SMR development funding, one slashed its spending
on SMRs in 2014. NuScale, the other SMR manufacturer, is still
continuing with development. Even so, “there is no evidence
that SMRs will be constructed in the United States anytime soon,” the
report states.
The picture is not rosier in other countries that
have lent support to SMRs. South Korea, for example, has been developing
an SMR since the 1990s, and while it was approved in 2012, no orders
have yet been received. Saudi Arabia did say earlier this year it would
test the technology in a three-year pilot.
“The static,
top-heavy, monstrously expensive world of nuclear power has less and
less to deploy against today’s increasingly agile, dynamic,
cost-effective alternatives,” wrote Porritt. “The sole remaining issue
is that not everyone sees it that way -- as yet.”
http://www.theenergycollective.com/katherinetweed/2250134/around-world-nuclear-cant-compete-growing-renewables
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