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Nuclear Power Nears Peak Friday, March 5, 1999 As the
20th Anniversary of Three Mile Island Approaches, the Nuclear Industry Faces
Slow Slide to Oblivion Christopher Flavin and Nicholas Lenssen
Two decades after the world's first major nuclear accident
at Three Mile Island, the nuclear industry is experiencing a meltdown of
historic proportions. After growing more than 700 percent in the 1970s, and 140
percent in the 1980s, nuclear generating capacity has increased less than 5
percent during the 1990s so far. (See Figure 1.) In the last decade, nuclear
power has gone from being the world's fastest growing energy source to its
slowest, trailing well behind oil and even coal. In 1998, world nuclear
generating capacity fell by 175 megawatts. NOTE: The figures referred to in
the text can be found in this article on the Worldwatch Institute web site at
worldwatch.org/alerts/990304.html
As the world approaches the 20th anniversary of the Three
Mile Island accident on March 28, global nuclear capacity stands at 343,086
megawatts, providing just under 17 percent of the world's electricity. Both of
these figures will likely turn out to be close to the all-time historical
peak-and less than one-tenth the 4,500,000 megawatts that the International
Atomic Energy Agency predicted back in 1974. The Worldwatch Institute projects
that global nuclear capacity will begin a sustained decline by 2002 at the
latest, and the U.S. Department of Energy projects that it will fall by half in
the next two decades.
Nuclear power's biggest problems are economic: it is simply
no longer competitive with other, newer forms of power generation. The final 20
U.S. reactors cost $3 to $4 billion to build, or some $3,000 to $4,000 per
kilowatt of capacity. By contrast, new gas-fired combined cycle plants using
the latest jet engine technology cost $400-$600 per kilowatt, and wind turbines
are being installed at less than $1,000 per kilowatt.
Even France, which gets more than three-quarters of its
electricity from nuclear power, now has a moratorium on nuclear plant
construction, and other European countries are debating how quickly to shut
their plants down. The only countries still building nuclear power plants are
nations such as China, Japan, and possibly Iran, where the electric power
industry is still a government sanctioned monopoly that is protected from
competition.
To view Figures 1 and 2, go to the Worldwatch web site at
the link below: http://www.worldwatch.org/alerts/990304.html
By the end of 1998, 429 nuclear reactors were operating
worldwide, one less than five years earlier. Construction is taking place at 33
new reactors. Of these, seven are likely to be completed by the year 2001,
while another fourteen may never be completed. Although global capacity is
likely to rise for another year or two, it will almost certainly decline
precipitously in the following years as the construction pipeline dries up, and
the closure of older, uneconomic, or unsafe reactors accelerates.
In the aftermath of the 1979 Three Mile Island accident, the
U.S. nuclear market was the first to deteriorate. No new nuclear plants have
been ordered since then, and where nuclear generating capacity is now lower
than it was a decade ago. Not only have U.S. power companies stopped building
nuclear power plants, they have closed six reactors since 1996 that had become
too expensive to operate. Meanwhile, seven of Canada's 21 reactors have been
"laid up" due to safety concerns and are unlikely to operate again.
For North American nuclear power, though, the worst may be
yet to come. Wall Street analysts and the Washington International Energy Group
project that as many as one-third of US and Canadian reactors are vulnerable to
shut down in the next five years. The main reason is cost: nuclear energy
cannot compete in increasingly competitive power markets.
Western Europe stayed with its nuclear expansion plans
longer than the U.S. did, but since the 1986 explosion at Chernobyl sent a
cloud of radioactive dust across Europe, the public has turned against nuclear
power. Since then, construction has started on only three new reactors. France,
long known as the most pro-nuclear country, now has a moratorium on nuclear
plant construction, and the Environment Minister, Dominique Voynet, has called
for making the ban permanent. A December 1998 poll found that only 7 percent of
French citizens thought that nuclear power should be the top energy priority,
compared to more than 60 percent who said the priority is renewable energy. The
state-owned utility, Electricite de France, which has in the past put virtually
all its efforts into nuclear power, has begun to invest in "pint-size"
microturbines, and in the development of wind power, both in France and in
Morocco.
In Germany, the discussion is not over whether to build more
nuclear plants, but on how quickly to shut down the existing reactors. While
the previous German government shut down all the nuclear power plants in
eastern Germany, the Social Democrat/Green government elected in October 1998
plans to phase out the 19 remaining reactors that produce 30 percent of the
country's power. As of February 1999, the Government had agreed that the first
reactor will be closed by 2002, though the country's electric utilities are
still fighting the plan.
Asia remains the last stronghold for the nuclear power
industry, with 88 reactors operating and 26 under construction, though even
there, a slowdown is evident. Japan, which obtains 35 percent of its
electricity from the atom, only has two reactors under construction, with work
starting on one of them in 1998. In fact, the plant at Higashidori in Aomori
was the first new one approved in ten years. Citizens groups have nearly
stopped construction of new plants, and some communities have passed referenda
prohibiting additional units. Although the government plans to add some 20 new
reactors by 2010, officials acknowledge privately that the plans are
unrealistic. South Korea, meanwhile, has six additional plants still under
construction, but there too, the nuclear industry faces growing public
opposition.
China has the world's most ambitious nuclear program today,
with plans to go from the three reactors it operates now to more than 50
reactors by the year 2020. The country currently has six reactors under
construction, with plans to add four more. Whether the Chinese government will
achieve these ambitious aims is uncertain, given the high foreign exchange
requirements of imported reactors and the lack of a sizable indigenous
industry. Moreover, China is likely to face growing pressure to make its power
industry more competitive, which would likely complicate nuclear development
efforts. Efforts to develop nuclear industries in Indonesia, Thailand, and
Vietnam have all been abandoned in the last few years.
Around the world, it is nuclear power's high cost that has
most damaged its market prospects. Most nuclear power plants have been built by
monopoly utilities, and the costs were passed through to consumers, regardless
of how high they were. But with governments around the world now opening
electric power markets to the winds of competition for the first time, nuclear
power must stand on its own. This development is the final blow to the nuclear
industry. It is only in the few remaining protected power markets-mainly in the
Far East-that any additional plants are being ordered.
One indication of nuclear power's economic status is the
price it has been commanding on the open market. The Pilgrim plant in
Massachusetts was sold for $80 million, though $67 million of that was for
fuel. Also last year, CBS decided to sell what was once the world's largest
nuclear company, Westinghouse Nuclear. The company sold for just $1.2 billion.
By contrast, Exxon is valued at $172 billion, and Microsoft at $278
billion.
Orders for new reactors have largely dried up. (See Figure
2.) The few remaining nuclear companies, including France's Framatome and
Germany's Siemens, are surviving on maintenance work, and government-sponsored
contracts to refurbish Eastern Europe's decrepit reactors. If new business does
not turn up soon, there may be little nuclear construction capacity left. In
light of the long lead times in nuclear construction, the decline of nuclear
power in the early decades of the new century has become virtually inevitable.
The U.S. Department of Energy, successor-agency to the U.S. Atomic Energy
Commission, now projects a sharp decline in nuclear power generation in the
next two decades.
Nuclear industry supporters argue that given recently
heightened concern about fossil fuel-induced climate change, the timing is
tragically ironic. Existing nuclear plants do displace the emission of large
quantities of greenhouse gases from coal-fired plants, but few governments are
seriously considering nuclear power as an alternative to fossil fuels.
Instead, they have responded to climate change by investing
in new energy technologies such as solar energy and wind power. As a result,
renewable energy sources are now expanding rapidly. Last year, while nuclear
capacity fell, wind power capacity rose by 2,100 megawatts. These provide tiny
amounts of power today, but are already growing at the kind of double-digit
rates that nuclear power enjoyed in the 1970s. And the new technologies are not
threatened by the kind of physical or economic meltdowns that have done in the
nuclear power industry.
-END-
Christopher Flavin, Senior Vice President for Research at
Worldwatch, is the author of a number of other energy publications which you
can order from the Worldwatch web site, including: Power Surge: Guide to the
Coming Energy Revolution (with Nicholas Lenssen), one of the Worldwatch
Environmental Alert Series published by W.W. Norton; Worldwatch Paper #138,
"Rising Sun, Gathering Winds: Policies to Stabilize the Climate and Strengthen
Economies (with Seth Dunn); Worldwatch Paper #130, "Climate of Hope; New
Strategies for Stabilizing the World's Atmosphere (with Odil
Tunali). Christopher Flavin's article from the November/December issue of
World Watch, "Last Tango in Buenos Aires," an overview of the problems of
producing a meaningful treaty to control climate change, is available as a
free Adobe PDF file at
www.worldwatch.org/mag/1998/98-6.html.
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