[Nevertheless, assuming a capital cost of Rs.10 crore per megawatt,
suggested by the government’s press release on its decision, and using
the pattern of expenditure seen at Rawatbhata and Kakrapar, a rough
estimate suggests that the cost of electricity during the first year
of operations at these reactors is likely to be around Rs. 6 per unit
at current prices. The Central Electricity Regulatory Commission’s
published tariffs show that almost all currently operating Indian
coal, natural gas and hydroelectric power plants produce cheaper
electricity.
Even prices for solar power have dropped below those of nuclear power.
For example, the winning bid at the auction for the Bhadla Phase-IV
Solar Park in Rajasthan held last month was Rs. 2.44 per unit, which
is fixed for 25 years. This is not an isolated example, but part of a
trend of falling prices in the renewable sector.]

http://www.thehindu.com/opinion/lead/nuclear-power-expensive-hazardous-and-inequitable/article18732213.ece

Nuclear power: Expensive, hazardous and inequitable

M.V. Ramana Suvrat Raju

JUNE 07, 2017 00:02 IST
UPDATED: JUNE 07, 2017 11:36 IST

*The government’s recent approval to ten new nuclear reactors deserves
to be carefully appraised.*

By  all accounts, nuclear power has had a bad year. In March,
Westinghouse, the largest historic builder of nuclear power plants in
the world, declared bankruptcy, creating a major financial crisis for
its parent company, Toshiba. The French nuclear supplier, Areva, went
bankrupt a few months earlier and is now in the midst of a
restructuring that will cost French taxpayers about €10 billion. Its
reactor business is being taken over by a clutch of companies,
including the public sector Électricité de France, which is itself in
poor financial health. In May, the U.S. Energy Information
Administration announced that it expects the share of nuclear
electricity in the U.S. to decline from about 20% in 2016 to 11% by
2050. The newly elected Presidents of Korea and France have both
promised to cut the share of nuclear energy in their countries. And
the Swiss just voted to phase out nuclear power.

Both Areva and Westinghouse had entered into agreements with the
Indian government to develop nuclear plants. Areva had promised to
build the world’s largest nuclear complex at Jaitapur (Maharashtra),
while last June, Prime Minister Narendra Modi and U.S. President
Barack Obama announced, with great fanfare, that Westinghouse would
build six reactors at Kovvada (Andhra Pradesh). The collapse of these
companies vindicates critics of these deals, who consistently pointed
out that India’s agreements with Areva and Westinghouse were fiscally
irresponsible. If these projects had gone ahead, Indian taxpayers
would have been left holding the bag — billions of dollars of debt,
and incomplete projects. This narrow escape calls not only for a hard
look at the credibility of those members of the nuclear establishment
who advocated these deals for a decade, but for a comprehensive
re-evaluation of the role of nuclear power in the country’s energy
mix.

Therefore, the government’s recent decision to approve the
construction of ten 700 MW Pressurised Heavy Water Reactors (PHWRs)
deserves to be scrutinised carefully. Strictly speaking, there is
little that is new in this decision. A list of all the sites where the
PHWRs are to be constructed had already been provided to Parliament by
the United Progressive Alliance government in 2012. But delays with
the first 700 MW PHWRs already under construction, the changed
international scenario for nuclear energy, and the ongoing reductions
in the cost of renewable energy all imply that these earlier plans are
best abandoned.

It doesn’t come cheap
First, although the 700 MW PHWRs are cheaper than imported reactors,
their electricity is likely to be costly. These reactors are
commercially untested, since the largest PHWRs constructed so far in
India are the 540 MW twin units at Tarapur. There are two 700 MW PHWRs
under construction at Rawatbhata (Rajasthan) and Kakrapar (Gujarat),
but these have been delayed by over two years, and the government has
not revealed the resultant cost increases.

***Nevertheless, assuming a capital cost of ₹10 crore per megawatt,
suggested by the government’s press release on its decision, and using
the pattern of expenditure seen at Rawatbhata and Kakrapar, a rough
estimate suggests that the cost of electricity during the first year
of operations at these reactors is likely to be around ₹6 per unit at
current prices. The Central Electricity Regulatory Commission’s
published tariffs show that almost all currently operating Indian
coal, natural gas and hydroelectric power plants produce cheaper
electricity.*** [Emphasis added.]

***Even prices for solar power have dropped below those of nuclear
power. For example, the winning bid at the auction for the Bhadla
Phase-IV Solar Park in Rajasthan held last month was ₹2.44 per unit,
which is fixed for 25 years. This is not an isolated example, but part
of a trend of falling prices in the renewable sector.*** [Emphasis
added.]

In fact, the government’s tariff model makes nuclear power appear more
competitive than it really is. The capital invested in any plant
yields no returns while the plant is being constructed. At the end of
construction, the government fixes a tariff by calculating a rate of
return on the nominal amount of capital invested, disregarding the
value this amount could have accumulated during this idle time. As a
result, the effective rate of return on equity invested in nuclear
energy is significantly lower than the rate of return provided by
other sources of electricity that have shorter gestation periods.
Nuclear power would be even less economically attractive if a
methodology that consistently incorporates the time value of capital
were to be used to establish tariffs.

While announcing its decision, the government claimed that these
plants would “generate more than 33,400 jobs in direct and indirect
employment”. But this number ceases to be impressive when viewed in
the context of the planned capital expenditure of ₹70,000 crore. The
relevant factor in assessing the employment opportunities provided by
a project is not just the total number of jobs produced but the ratio
of the jobs produced to the capital invested.

A widely cited study by three analysts from the University of
California, Berkeley, found that nuclear power created only 0.14
job-years per gigawatt-hour of electricity produced. In contrast,
solar photovoltaic sources were more than six times as labour
intensive, creating about 0.87 job-years per gigawatt-hour of
electricity. Since solar energy is cheaper, this comparison is even
more unfavourable to nuclear power when viewed in terms of jobs
created per rupee spent.

Bad fit for climate change
The government also argued that these reactors would bolster “global
efforts to combat climate change”. While climate change is indeed a
grave problem, it is not the only environmental problem confronting
us. Nuclear power poses its own set of threats to the environment and
public health, and is therefore an inappropriate tool to mitigate
climate change.

All nuclear reactors produce radioactive waste materials because each
fission event involving nuclei of uranium or plutonium gives rise to
radioactive elements called fission products. Some of these remain
radioactive for hundreds of thousands of years. Despite decades of
research, nuclear waste remains an unavoidable long-term problem for
the environment.

Nuclear reactors are also capable of catastrophic accidents, as
witnessed in Fukushima and Chernobyl. A single nuclear disaster can
contaminate large tracts of land with radioactive materials, rendering
these areas uninhabitable for decades. More than 30 years after the
accident at Chernobyl, about 650,000 acres are still excluded from
inhabitation.

The people’s concerns
Local communities are keenly aware of the hazardous nature of nuclear
power. Since the 1980s, every new site chosen for a nuclear plant has
been greeted with a protest movement. Sometimes, these movements have
succeeded in forcing the cancellation of plans, including at two sites
in Kerala and one site in West Bengal. More recently, the plan to
establish a plant near Patiala seems to have been dropped.

Other communities have been less lucky. In some proposed sites, such
as Fatehabad (Haryana), the government has succeeded in using
financial incentives to counter opposition to nuclear construction, in
essence exploiting the economic vulnerability of the local population.
But protests continue at other sites, such as Chutka (Madhya Pradesh).
The sad irony in Chutka is that some of the affected people were
previously displaced by the Bargi dam, and are now being asked to move
a second time. Their plight typifies the social dynamics associated
with nuclear power. The risks and costs are borne overwhelmingly by
poor rural communities, who consume only a tiny fraction of the
electricity that is generated.

The government claims that its recent decision displays “India’s
commitment to sustainable development”. But does the path to
sustainable development run through a source of electricity that is
expensive, hazardous and antithetical to equity?

Suvrat Raju and M.V. Ramana are physicists associated with the
Coalition for Nuclear Disarmament and Peace, and currently based in
Bengaluru and Princeton, respectively. The views expressed are
personal

-- 
Peace Is Doable

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