Nuclear Energy Will Not Be the Solution to
Climate Change
There Is Not Enough Time for Nuclear Innovation to Save the
Planet
By
Allison
Macfarlane
Foreign Affairs
July 8, 2021
The world is almost out of time with respect to
decarbonizing the energy sector. Doing so, experts agree, is
essential to forestalling some of the most alarming
consequences of climate change, including rising sea levels,
droughts, fires, extreme weather events, ocean
acidification, and the like. These threats have helped
generate fresh interest in the potential for nuclear
power—and, more specifically, innovative nuclear reactor
designs—to allow people to rely less on carbon-spewing
electricity sources such as coal, natural gas, and oil. In
recent years, advanced nuclear designs have been the focus
of intensive interest and support from both private
investors such as Bill Gates—who founded TerraPower, a
nuclear reactor design company, in 2006—and national
governments, including that of the United States.
Advocates hope that this renewed focus on nuclear energy
will yield technological progress and lower costs. But when
it comes to averting the imminent effects of climate
change, even the cutting edge of nuclear
technology will prove to be too little, too late. Put
simply, given the economic trends in existing plants and
those under construction, nuclear power cannot positively
impact climate change in the next ten years or more. Given
the long lead times to develop engineered, full-scale
prototypes of new advanced designs and the time required to
build a manufacturing base and a customer base to make
nuclear power more economically competitive, it is unlikely
that nuclear power will begin to significantly reduce our
carbon energy footprint even in 20 years—in the United
States and globally. No country has developed this
technology to a point where it can and will be widely and
successfully deployed.STRUGGLING FOR VIABILITY
Nuclear power currently provides the United States with
about 20
percent of its electricity, but the industry has
struggled for decades to remain economically viable. When
New York’s Indian Point power plant shut down its last
nuclear reactor on April 30 this year, it was the 12th such
closure since 2013. At least seven more U.S. reactors are
slated to close by 2025. An October 2020 analysis by Lazard showed
that in the United States, capital costs for nuclear power
are higher than for almost any other energy-generating
technology. There are multiple efforts underway to make
nuclear reactors more efficient and, ultimately, more
competitive with other forms of energy production that can
cut down on carbon
emissions. Each of these designs faces its own
set of logistical and regulatory hurdles, however.
The power reactors currently in operation or under
construction in the United States, France, Japan, and a
number of other countries are all variations on the
light-water reactor, a plant that is powered by low-enriched
uranium fuel and cooled and “moderated” by water.
(“Moderation” reduces the energy of neutrons released in a
fission reaction to improve the likelihood of causing
further fission in uranium fuel.) Canada operates reactors
that use slightly enriched uranium fuel and are cooled and
moderated by heavy water, which contains deuterium, a type
of hydrogen isotope. The United Kingdom operates a single
light-water reactor, as well as some gas-cooled reactors.
These types of reactors are all large, capable of generating
between 600 and 1,200 megawatts of electricity.
New reactor makers propose to make reactors smaller and to
use different types of fuels, coolants, and moderators. One
of these new designs, the NuScale reactor—a small,
light-water reactor that is capable of generating 77
megawatts of electricity and emphasizes passive safety
features—is in the midst of the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory
Commission’s licensing process. The first customer for the
NuScale design is Utah Associated Municipal Power Systems,
which has plans to begin operating a plant in Idaho by 2027.
The U.S. Department of Energy has backed this
project with a $1.355 billion award.
NuScale has shown that it is possible for vendors of
innovative new reactor designs to engage in the licensing
process. The Nuclear Regulatory Commission, whose approval
of new designs carries considerable weight in other
countries, is working on a new
regulation to license some of the more exotic
designs.
Capital costs for nuclear power are higher than for almost
any other energy-generating technology.
NuScale is further along in the approval process than other,
more unconventional reactor designs, such as the
sodium-cooled fast reactor. This is the holy grail of
nuclear power—a design that creates more fuel than it uses.
Eight countries have built multiple versions of this type of
reactor over the last six decades at a cost of over $100
billion, but none have proven reliable enough to
produce electricity competitively. Nonetheless, the
Department of Energy has decided on this design for its
Versatile Test Reactor, to be constructed at the Idaho
National Laboratory in conjunction with GE Hitachi and
TerraPower. The Versatile Test Reactor, estimated to cost
between $3
billion and $6 billion, is slated to start
testing fuels by 2026.Other startup vendors are also considering two other
designs. The first is for molten salt reactors, only a few
of which have ever operated. These use either fluoride or
chloride salts, often mixed with lithium or beryllium. More
promising are high-temperature gas reactors that use helium
as a coolant and graphite, rather than water, as a
moderator. The United States built and operated two of these
power reactors between the 1960s and the 1980s. China,
Germany, and Japan have all built and operated test versions
of high-temperature gas reactors.
Another major challenge is that these new reactors must also
use new fuels, which must be licensed as well as produced,
managed during use, and stored and disposed of when spent.
Some new reactor designs depend on the use of fuels that
require higher enrichments of uranium—material that the
United States currently has little capability to produce.
The higher enriched fuels have set off concerns about
nuclear weapons proliferation and would require
international safeguards.
Even if these tricky fueling problems could be solved,
unconventional reactor designs also face formidable
construction challenges. Many of the new advanced designs
rely on the availability of adequate sites and efficient
construction to achieve profitability. But the nuclear
industry has been plagued by long construction times and
cost overruns. Since the 1979 Three Mile Island accident,
the construction time to build most reactors in the United
States has surpassed 10
years. Meanwhile, costs have skyrocketed. The
Vogtle plant in Georgia is the only new build of reactors in
the United States. The plant’s two reactors were initially
priced at $14 billion and expected to start in 2016 and 2017
after five years of construction. Instead, construction is
still ongoing and the plants may not start until 2022 at a
final cost
of $25 billion. And the recent new-build
experience in Europe is similar: the French EPR reactor
design has experienced multiple delays and large cost
overruns in both France and Finland. These megaprojects face
challenges in program management and quality control and
regulatory issues that result in lengthy delays.
The United States is hardly an outlier in this regard.
Nuclear reactors worldwide are aging and, for the most part,
are not being replaced as they are shut down. In 2019, for
instance, six
reactors started operations and 13 units were
shut down. The average age of the world’s 408 operating
reactors in 2020 was 31 years, with 81 of them over the age
of 41 years.
NO SILVER BULLET
For all these reasons, nuclear energy cannot be a near- or
perhaps even medium-term silver bullet for climate change.
Given how many economic, technical, and logistical hurdles
stand in the way of building safer, more efficient, and
cost-competitive reactors, nuclear energy will not be able
to replace other forms of power generation quickly enough to
achieve the levels of emission reduction necessary to
prevent the worst effects of climate change.
Innovations in reactor designs and nuclear fuels are still
worthy of significant research and government support.
Despite its limitations, nuclear power still has some
potential to reduce carbon emissions—and that is a good
thing. But rather than placing unfounded faith in the
ability of nuclear power to save the planet, we need to
focus on the real threat: the changing climate. And we need
strong government support of non-carbon-emitting energy
technologies that are ready to be deployed today, not ten or
20 years from now, because we have run out of time. We
cannot wait a minute longer.
ALLISON MACFARLANE is Professor and Director of the
School of Public Policy and Global Affairs within the
Faculty of Arts at the University of British Columbia.
She previously served as Chair of the U.S. Nuclear
Regulatory Commission.
Originally posted at
Foreign Affairs