Sunday, May 17, 2020

NUCLEAR UPDATE during the pandemic


NUCLEAR UPDATE during the pandemic

As most of the world is in turmoil and a great variety of businesses and industries look to evolve and adapt to the uncertain future, life goes on in those many essential services.  The recent dramatic changes in energy use demonstrates that major shifts in supply and demand can happen very quickly, either by choice or through unforeseen factors.  The recent over-drilling for oil coupled by a sharp drop in demand and use has shown not only the vulnerable complexity of artificial price structures; but also a significant decrease in air pollution, which will be a driving force in our future attempts to deal with climate change as we rebuild our societies.  The continued decline of coal due to cheaper renewables continues here and across the globe.  That, too, is encouraging.  The nuclear industry continues to drain our dollars, this time not for energy production, but for costly shutdowns, decommissioning, and waste management.  The current administration still subsidizes the unattainable myth of cheaper and safer small modular reactors, the boondoggle of fusion power, and even the expansion of uranium mining on public lands.  The fight for money goes on!

Here in California, we are still bumbling through the bankruptcy of PG&E, and the impacts that it is having and will continue to have on our high electricity and gas prices. The future of the Diablo Canyon nuclear complex is very unclear as to when it will shut down, will PG&E sell the license, when decommissioning will actually begin, how long will it take, and most importantly, how much will it cost and who will pay for it.  There is also the unsolved dilemma of the high-level spent fuel, the hundreds of dry casks to be stored on site, and the unknown impacts of climate change, earthquakes, etc. Similar issues are facing the San Onofre units, and the shutdown of Indian Point unit 2 in New York, with unit 3 to soon follow.  Other cleanups continue at a handful of shuttered plants, as well as difficult and costly cleanup at the many military and industrial facilities throughout the nation.

The future does not bode well for the supply side of the nuclear industry.  If we remember back to around 2005, when the “nuclear renaissance” was put forth by the Bush Administration, guaranteeing subsidies for construction of new plants that were then deemed to be necessary, and could be built on time and on budget..  Out of the 30+ plans that were submitted, 5 units were chosen.  One in Texas never broke ground, the two units in South Carolina were abandoned after being about 50% completed and billions of dollars over budget, leaving the two Vogle units in Georgia currently still in process.  Fifteen years later, and at a current estimated cost of $25 billion (up from the original $8 billion) and still only 60% constructed, here is another glitch.  The foundation of unit 1 is sinking!!!!! Read the article below…mindboggling!!!!  The rest of the nuclear industry continues to suck up taxpayer dollars for the development of small modular reactors which supposedly will be built by the hundreds to provide cheap electricity.  That will not happen…it is the same myth/hoax the industry has plied us with for over half a century.  Those reactors suffer with not only their costs, but the main issue not addressed, which is the creation, management, and disposal of all the high-level and low-level nuclear wastes that are produced through the vast infrastructure and supply chain.

Low-level wastes are currently disposed of in a handful of waste dumps in Utah, Texas, Idaho, and Nevada.  The nuclear industry is currently optimistic about the storage of high-level spent fuel, with a couple of companies taking the lead.  The biggest is Holtec, a private company that back in the early 2000’s just manufactured dry casks.  Humboldt Bay bought 6 of these, and the spent fuel from the decommissioned reactor is encased in these huge cannisters in a facility located on Humboldt Bay.  At the time, the casks were rated to last about 40 years, the idea being that they would eventually go to Yucca Mountain for permanent disposal.  Politics aside, that is not going to happen, since the geology of that repository is unsuitable for containment of the wastes for a minimum of 10,000 years.   Holtec has almost cornered the market today for dry casks (some 15,000 at $1million/cask will eventually be needed) and has ventured out into the full range of decommissioning business.  They have bought up licenses from utilities with shut down plants, and are making money in their dismantlement and low-level waste disposal.  Their latest attempt is currently in process to buy Indian Point.  I would not be surprised if they try for Diablo Canyon!  But the real clincher is their attempt to receive approval from the various federal and state agencies to build a facility in southern New Mexico, which would accept dry casks from all over the US, and place them on a very large pad out in the desert.  This concept, called Monitored Retrievable Storage, was proposed about 30 years ago for a site in Utah, but was dismissed as a potential environmental, economic, technological, military, etc. disaster.  Picture thousands of casks concentrated out in the open…for how long?  Transportation issues—getting them there, eventually shipping them to a permanent place?  What is the time frame - how long will the cask survive, how will they be repackaged, monitored, safeguarded from natural and terrorist attacks???  How much will all this cost, who will pay…all this is great for Holtec! They can be in position to control the whole decommissioning process…dismantle the plants, use their products to transport and store both high and low-level wastes, and have citizens and ratepayers foot the bill.  This will be a booming business over the next 50 years.

In the very near future we will be forced to re-examining all our energy systems.  The old school, big money utilities, large scale centralized power plants and the grid, the incredible impacts on air, water, land, and public health will all be in the forefront as we seriously address climate change, and embrace the cheaper (in so many ways) and sustainability of small scale local microgrids and the continued development of solar, wind, and other renewables, and the coming surge of electricity storage.  As a peer of mine once said, we are transitioning from a hunter-gatherer society (keep your hands off of that oil…I found it…it’s mine) to energy farmers, capturing the solar energy available to us in so many forms, and learning to manage and store it as nature did for us over the millions of years.  At the forefront is an amazing new economy with jobs, lower costs in every aspect, and a verdant sustainable future.  It is just common sense, but will depend on changing the current politics of greed and capitalism.  Let the sun shine.!!!!!