"I told you so."   (smile)

 

REH

 

From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of D and N
Sent: Sunday, May 22, 2011 3:51 PM
To: Keith Hudson; RE-DESIGNING WORK, INCOME DISTRIBUTION, EDUCATION
Subject: Re: [Futurework] FW: Inconvenient Truths About 'Renewable' Energy -
The Wall Street Journal.

 

Did you read this article I sent out last month? Government subsidies
channeled into sustainable industries rather than high-risk, life
threatening ones? Even if the math isn't quite there, at least there's still
a planet to live on, potable water, and fewer three-eyed fish.

Natalia

We tried the nuclear power experiment - and it didn't work
by Joshua Pearce

The Whig Standard, Kingston, Ontario, March 24, 2011

Every nation with nuclear power is currently in a frenzy to determine if
they are at risk of ending up in a situation like the one plaguing Japan's
Fukushima nuclear power plant.

What is happening now in Japan simply lets the public in on a secret that
has been well known in both the energy and insurance industries for decades:
No nuclear power plant would exist without a government-backed insurance
liability subsidy.

Nuclear energy is simply not insurable in the free market. Period.

Thus, the nuclear industry is completely dependent on an artificial cap on
insurance liability, which reduces the costs of nuclear energy to something
affordable rather than its real cost. In the U.S. this cap is about $10
billion.

If the nuclear disaster amounts to something like $310 billion, as the U.S.
Sandia National Lab. estimated in the 1980s for a major screw-up, then the
public ends up picking up the tab on $300 billion. In Canada this cap is
orders of magnitude lower, exposing the public to an even greater potential
financial risk.

These liability caps represent an indirect subsidy because no money actually
flows from government coffers unless a disaster occurs. In general these
indirect subsidies have been ignored because they are hard to calculate.
Understandably it can be difficult to estimate the full effects of a nuclear
accident given the difficulty of placing value on human lives, health, a
contaminated environment and loss of productivity.

For example, what happens to the property values within 20 km of Fukushima?
Or what is the cost if there is a meltdown like Chernobyl where the national
sacrificial zone amounted to the area of Kentucky?

On the other hand, it is exactly for these reasons that such calculations
must be attempted and more research on potential damages be developed with
risks included in assessing nuclear energy viability. And if the nuclear
industry is to be placed in competition with alternative sources of energy,
then it is essential to understand the full weight and cost of its
operational risks.

There are other options. Currently, nuclear power and solar energy are
competing for policy support in Ontario, which governs their economic
viability.

Queen's University recently completed a study (in press in the peer-reviewed
journal Energy Policy), in which the effects of indirect subsidies in the
nuclear and solar technologies are compared.

The potential power, energy and financial returns were calculated for the
indirect subsidy that is currently provided to the U.S. nuclear industry in
the form of liability caps, with providing the same level of indirect
subsidy to the solar photovoltaic manufacturing industry in the form of loan
guarantees. The startling results show even if just this one relatively
minor subsidy was diverted from nuclear power generation into large-scale
solar manufacturing, it would result in both more installed power and more
energy produced by mid-century. Such a policy would increase the cumulative
solar industry over the 500 TWhours mark in just 10 years and by the end of
the study the cumulative electricity output of solar amounts to an
additional 48,600 TW-hours worth more than $5 trillion over the nuclear
case.

Nuclear power plants do not produce enough electricity to justify the public
subsidizing the risks. Japan is one of the most technologically advanced
societies, with some of the best scientists and engineers in the world -
their safeguards are top of the line. Yet, an extremely unlikely one-two
punch of an earthquake and tsunami have them on the ropes.

Nuclear experts of every flavour are flocking to the media to assure us such
a thing could never happen in Canada. Can we handle a one-two punch (e. g.,
can we prevent a major radioactive release if our plants are hit with say a
tornado then a terrorist attack?) The nuclear experts, of course, have no
idea. The people that do know work for insurance companies.

If any insurance company is willing to shoulder the unsubsidized full
liability of our nuclear fleet then that is the first sign nuclear is a
viable option. This would significantly increase the costs of nuclear energy
because the insurance premiums would skyrocket, particularly given what is
happening in Japan, and make it extremely unlikely that nuclear could ever
compete on the free market.

Nuclear power is simply not worth risk. We tried the nuclear experiment - it
did not work. It is time we cut our losses and started putting all of our
financial resources into a portfolio of renewable energy technologies.

Joshua Pearce is an assistant professor in the Faculty of Applied Science,
Mechanical and Materials Engineering at Queen's University.



On 5/21/2011 7:01 AM, Keith Hudson wrote: 

At 13:56 21/05/2011, Arthur wrote:




Subject: Inconvenient Truths About 'Renewable' Energy - The Wall Street
Journal.
 
I thought you would be interested in the following story from The Wall
Street Journal. 

Inconvenient Truths About 'Renewable' Energy

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703421204576327410322365714.ht
ml 


Yes, this is a pretty accurate summary of the 'renewables. What the article
should also have said that the techno-renewables -- wind, solar, nuclear
power -- are uneconomic and all require government subsidies. And this, long
before their long-term maintenance costs (and de-commissioning costs in the
case of nuclear) are known. 

Keith 




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Keith Hudson, Saltford, England http://allisstatus.wordpress.com/2011/05/
  

 
 
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