http://www.deccanchronicle.com/science/science/201116/future-energy-wasteful-reactors.html

SCIENCE

Future energy: Wasteful reactors

DECCAN CHRONICLE. | M V RAMANA

Published Nov 20, 2016, 12:32 am ISTUpdated Nov 20, 2016, 12:32 am IST

Why the technology we’re using to produce nuclear power is fraught with risks.

Despite decades of high levels of funding and political backing,
nuclear power constitutes only a trivial fraction (3.5% in 2015) of
overall electricity generation in India

Just last month, the Secretary of the Department of Atomic Energy
announced that the Prototype Fast Breeder Reactor (PFBR) will be
commissioned next year at Kalpakkam. Despite an investment of over
$100 billion (in 2007 dollars) on research, development, and
constructing prototypes by countries such as the United States,
France, the United Kingdom, and Japan, fast breeder reactors have
proven to be costly to build and operate, susceptible to severe
accidents, and incapable of operating reliably. Given this history,
the DAE’s pursuit of this technology makes little sense. The PFBR has
been under planning since the early 1980s; it is to inaugurate the
second phase of the DAE’s three-phase strategy, which was adopted in
1954. The one operating breeder reactor in India is the Fast Breeder
Test Reactor, whose operating history has been patchy, it having
operated for only 21 per cent of the maximum possible operating time
(as of 2013).

Construction of the PFBR has already taken more than twice as long as
initially projected, and has cost 63 per cent more than what was
projected — so far. Even at the original cost estimate, and assuming
input costs that are favorable to the PFBR, electricity from that
reactor will be about 80 per cent more expensive in comparison with
electricity from the heavy water reactors that the DAE itself is
building. With more realistic values and after accounting for the
significant construction cost escalation, electricity from the
Prototype Fast Breeder Reactor could be 200 per cent more expensive
than that from heavy water reactors. This is not surprising — breeders
have been uneconomical everywhere.

The DAE’s rationale for building breeder reactors is that India lacks
large deposits of good quality uranium ore. This rationale is
mistaken. First, uranium is available freely in the global market and
there is no likelihood of there being a shortage of the material.
Second, if one is willing to pay higher prices for it, significantly
larger quantities of uranium will become available even domestically,
because it becomes economical to mine poorer grades of uranium. Since
breeder electricity is so much more expensive than electricity from
heavy water reactors, the latter will still be cheaper even at much
higher costs for uranium. Thus, there is no economical case for
building breeder reactors.

Apart from high costs for electricity, the PFBR and other breeder
reactors are risky because they are susceptible to what are called
core disassembly accidents. The core where the nuclear reactions take
place is not in its most reactive — or energy producing —
configuration. An accident involving the fuel moving around within the
core, (when some of it melts, for example) could lead to more energy
production, which leads to more core melting, and so on, potentially
leading to a large, explosive energy release that might rupture the
reactor vessel and disperse radioactive material into the environment.
The PFBR’s containment structure is not capable of withstanding such a
severe accident. Therefore, a large amount of radioactive material
could be dispersed over large areas.

Despite decades of funding and political backing, nuclear power
constitutes only a trivial fraction (3.5 per cent in 2015) of overall
electricity generation in India. Some part of the blame for this state
of affairs should go to the DAE’s obsession with breeder reactors.
Even for those favouring nuclear power, breeder reactors make little
sense.  The DAE’s reliance on such a problematic technology suggests
the organisation is incapable of learning appropriate lessons from its
past and makes it likely that nuclear power will never become a major
source of electricity in the country.

The writer is currently with the Nuclear Futures Laboratory and the
Program on Science and Global Security, both at Princeton University,
and is the author of The Power of Promise: Examining Nuclear Energy in
India.

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Peace Is Doable

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