And now:Ish <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Source:
<A HREF="http://www.post-gazette.com/forum/19990328edhughes7.asp">
http://www.post-gazette.com/forum/19990328edhughes7.asp</A>
======================================================
Forum: Nuclear power - unsafe, dirty and expensive 

It's time to disable an obsolete industry, says David Hughes, and support
21st-century methods of generating electricity 

Sunday, March 28, 1999

Twenty years ago today, the worst nuclear plant accident in the nation
occurred at the Three Mile Island plant. In connection with the anniversary,
the nuclear industry has been waging a coordinated campaign to revive nuclear
power in the United States. We are being told that nuclear energy is safe,
clean (the answer to global warming) and an economical way to produce
electricity.

None of these claims withstand scrutiny. 

It is well known that nuclear power production creates the deadliest and
longest living wastes known to man. The technology to safely dispose of this
waste has yet to be developed and it is becoming increasingly clear that safe
storage is simply impossible to achieve. 

Nuclear plants only seem safe because government safety standards and Nuclear
Regulatory Commission oversight have been too lax. There are problems at U.S.
nuclear plants just about every day, ranging from incidental to serious. 

Some of these problems are close to home. At a plant in Perry, Ohio (near
Cleveland), partly owned by Duquesne Light, the zirconium tubes covering the
uranium fuel pellets are perforating, causing potentially dangerous radiation
leaks within the reactor. The leaks are exposing plant workers to extra
radiation and increasing the likelihood that more radiation would be released
into the atmosphere in case of a serious accident. 

Nine such leaks have been detected at Perry since it began operation in 1987.
The latest ones were discovered last September, but apparently Duquesne Light
and FirstEnergy (the plant manager) decided to wait until their regularly
scheduled maintenance, beginning yesterday before doing anything about them.
(Duquesne Light, by the way, intends to sell its share in the plant this year
to FirstEnergy.) Last month the Union of Concerned Scientists succeeded in
getting the NRC to hold hearings on the leaks. So far, the NRC has taken no
action. 

There is a new concern about nuclear power. In states (including Pennsylvania)
where electric deregulation has occurred, nuclear plants will have to run
practically all the time to be competitive. Unlike other generators, nuclear
plants are not designed to operate continuously. Safety is likely to be a
casualty of the bottom line. 

Nuclear power is not the clean energy its apologists claim. The smelting
process used to make commercial grade fuel for nuclear plants contributes to
greenhouse gases. Secondly, in addition to the waste problem, nuclear plants
pollute our air, only you cannot see, smell or taste what they emit. Some of
the most toxic gases known to man are by-products of the fission process and
are routinely vented from the "off gas" building at nuclear plants.

You may remember when we were told that nuclear power would be "too cheap to
meter." Well, it is not. In fact, nuclear is one of the most expensive ways to
produce electricity. 

When nuclear proponents provide their figure of what nuclear cost to produce
electricity they often leave out the cost of building the plant. Indeed, it
was the high cost ($10 billion) to build the Perry 1 and Beaver Valley 2
nuclear plants that now cause Duquesne Light customers to have to pay some of
the highest rates in the country. And, it is the high cost of nuclear plants
that accounts for most of the "transition" charge on your new electric bill,
no matter who supplies your generation.

A gas-fired plant can be built for $350 per kilowatt (kW); wind turbines are
being installed at less than $1,000/kw. A nuclear plant costs $3,000 to $4,000
per kw to build. Nuclear fuel is relatively cheap compared to other fuels, but
only if you ignore spent fuel permanent storage costs. When these and plant
decommissioning costs are included, nuclear power is prohibitively more
expensive, on a total cost basis, than other energy sources. Even nuclear
power advocates are frightened by the prospect that these costs will be
astronomical.

The fact is that nuclear power is obsolete. 

There are cutting-edge energy technologies available now that are competitive
and more environmentally healthy. Despite being on the short end of government
research and development funding, renewable energy technologies' share of U.S.
generating capacity (11 percent compared with 14 percent for nuclear) is
growing at double-digit rates. 

According to a recent study by the Worldwatch Institute, nuclear power "has
reached its peak and will begin a sustained decline in the year 2002 to its
eventual demise." Even France, the world leader in nuclear power usage with 70
percent of its electricity nuclear-generated, has established a moratorium on
nuclear plant construction. 

In the United States, no new power plants have been ordered since the
mid-1970s. Many utility companies, including Duquesne Light, are planning to
unload their nuclear plants. Existing nuclear plants are being purchased for
next to nothing , demonstrating their low market value. Only its position near
the top of the corporate welfare rolls enables the nuclear industry to hang
on. 

Nuclear power proponents argue that the United States cannot afford to phase
out nuclear power. Studies by the Rocky Mountain Institute show that we could
significantly reduce our electricity demand by using energy more efficiently.
A concerted national effort, a "war against wasting energy," combined with
increased use of new, safe and clean energy technologies would enable the
phase out of nuclear power. 

It is time for our political leaders to recognize that nuclear power is not
worth further investment. As we head into the 21st century, Americans should
demand increased utilization of 21st-century energy technologies. 

========================================================

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