Rachel's Democracy &
Health News #927, September 27, 2007
WHY IS UNCLE SAM
SO COMMITTED TO REVIVING NUCLEAR POWER?
[Rachel's introduction: The long-advertised "nuclear
renaissance" got under way this week when NRG Energy applied for a federal
license to build two nuclear power plants in Texas, enticed by an offer of free
money from Uncle Sam. "The whole reason we started down this path was the
benefits written into the Energy Policy Act of 2005," says NRG's chief
executive, David Crame.]
By Peter Montague
The long-awaited and much-advertised "nuclear renaissance"
actually got under way this week. NRG Energy, a New Jersey company recently
emerged from bankruptcy, applied for a license to build
two new nuclear power plants at an existing facility in Bay City, Texas --
the first formal application for such a license in 30 years.
NRG Energy has no experience building nuclear power plants but they are
confident the U.S. government will assure their success. "The whole reason we
started down this path was the benefits written into the [Energy Policy Act] of
2005," NRG's chief executive, David Crame, told
the Washington Post. In other words, the whole reason NRG Energy wants to
build nuclear power plants is to get bundles of free money from Uncle Sam. Who
could blame them?
Other energy corporations are nuzzling up to the same trough. The federal
Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) is expecting to receive applications for
an additional 29 nuclear power reactors at 20 sites. The NRC has already
hired
more than 400 new staff to deal with the expected flood of applications.
But the question remains, Can investors be fooled twice? Financially, the
nuclear power industry has never stood on its own two feet without a crutch from
Uncle Sam. Indeed, the nuclear power industry is entirely a creature of the
federal government; it was created out of whole cloth by the feds in the 1950s.
At that time, investors were enticed by offers of free money --
multi-billion-dollar subsidies, rapid write-offs, special limits on liability,
and federal loan guarantees. Despite all this special help, by the 1970s the
industry was in a shambles. The British magazine, the Economist, recently
described it this way: "Billions were spent bailing out lossmaking
nuclear-power companies. The industry became a byword for mendacity, secrecy and
profligacy with taxpayers' money. For two decades neither governments nor
bankers wanted to touch it."
Now the U.S. federal government is once again doing everything in its power to
entice investors, trying to revive atomic power.
First, Uncle Sam is trying hard to remove the financial risk for investors. The
Energy Policy Act, which Congress approved in 2005, provides
four different kinds of subsidies for atomic power plants:
1. It grants $2 billion in insurance against regulatory delays and lawsuits to
the first six reactors that get licenses and begin construction. Energy
corporations borrow money to build plants and they must start paying interest on
those loans immediately, even though it take years for a plant to start
generating income. The longer the licensing and construction delays, the greater
the losses. Historically, lawsuits or other interventions by citizens have
extended the licensing timeline, sometimes by years, costing energy corporations
large sums. Now Uncle Sam will provide free insurance against any such losses.
2. Second, the 2005 law extends the older Price-Anderson Act, which limits a
utility's liability to $10 billion in the event of a nuclear accident. A serious
accident at a nuclear plant near a major city could create hundreds of billions
of dollars in liabilities. Uncle Sam has agreed to relieve investors of that
very real fear.
3. The 2005 law provides a tax credit of 1.8 cents per kilowatt-hour for the
first 6,000 megawatts generated by new plants. Free money, plain and simple.
4. Most important, the law offers guarantees loans to fund new atomic power
reactors and other power plants using "innovative" technology. Investors need no
longer fear bad loans.
One obvious conclusion from all this is that, more than 50 years into the
nuclear enterprise, atomic power still cannot attract investors and compete
successfully in a "free market." This industry still requires an unprecedented
level of subsidy and other government support just to survive.
An energy corporation's motives for buying into this system are clear: enormous
subsidies improve the chance of substantial gain. However, the federal
government's reasons for wanting to revive a moribund nuclear industry are not
so clear. If the "free market" won't support the revival of nuclear power, why
would the federal government want to pay billions upon billions of dollars to
allay investor fears?
It certainly has little to do with global warming. At the time the 2005 energy
bill was passed by a Republic-dominated Congress the official position of the
Republican leadership was that global warming was a hoax. Even now when some
Republicans have begun to acknowledge that perhaps we may have a carbon dioxide
problem, science tells us that nuclear power plants are not the best way to
reduce our carbon dioxide emissions. They're not even close to being the
best way. (Lazy journalists are in the habit it repeating the industry mantra
that nuclear power produces no greenhouse gases. This is nonsense. Read on.)
Substantial carbon dioxide emissions accompany every stage of nuclear power
production, from the manufacture and eventual dismantling of nuclear plants, to
the mining, processing, transport, and enrichment of uranium fuel, plus the
eventual processing, transport, and burial of nuclear wastes.
A
careful life-cycle analysis by the Institute for Applied Ecology in
Darmstadt, Germany, concludes that a 1250 megaWatt nuclear power plant,
operating 6500 hours per year in Germany, produces greenhouse gases equivalent
to 250,000 metric tonnes of carbon dioxide per year. In other (unspecified)
countries besides Germany, the same power plant could produce as much as 750,000
metric tonnes of carbon dioxide equivalents, the Institute study shows. (See
Figure 3, pg. 5)
The study concludes that, in the emission of global warming gases (measured per
kilowatt-hour of electricity made available), nuclear power compares unfavorably
to...
** conservation through efficiency improvements
** run-of-river hydro plants (which use river water power but require no dams)
** offshore wind generators
** onshore wind generators
** power plants run by gas-fired internal combustion engines, especially plants
that use both the electricity and the heat generated by the engine
** power plants run by bio-fuel-powered internal combustion engines
Of eleven ways to generate electricity (or avoid the need to generate
electricity through efficiency and conservation) analyzed by the Institute, four
are worse than nuclear from the viewpoint of greenhouse gas emissions, and six
are better.
[For a great deal of additional solid information showing that nuclear power is
no answer to global warming, check in with the
Nuclear Information and Resource Service (NIRS)].
A
study completed this summer by the Institute for Energy and Environmental
Research (IEER) in Takoma Park, Maryland concluded that it is feasible, within
35 to 60 years, to evolve an energy system to power the U.S. economy without the
use of any nuclear power plants or any coal plants. See the IEER
study,
Carbon-Free and Nuclear-Free; A Roadmap for U.S. Energy Policy.
So the rationale for the U.S. government's Herculean efforts to revive a
decrepit nuclear power industry cannot be based on concern for global warming or
energy independence. The facts simply don't support such a rationale.
Whatever its motivation, the U.S. federal government is doing everything in its
power to revive atomic power. In addition to removing most of the financial risk
for investors, Uncle Sam has removed other obstacles like democratic
participation in siting and licensing decisions.
Throughout the 1970s, energy corporations complained that getting a license took
too long. In response, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) has spent more
than a decade "streamlining" the process for building nuclear plants. Most of
the "streamlining" consists of new ways to exclude the public from information
and decisions. For example, members of the public used to be able to question
witnesses during licensing hearings. No more. There used to be two sets of
hearings -- one for siting the plant, and another for constructing the plant. No
more. These two set of issues have been rolled into a single license and a
single hearing. The purpose is to accommodate the needs of the nuclear industry,
to help it survive. As attorney Tony Roisman
observed recently, "The nuclear industry has come to the agency [the NRC]
and said, 'If you don't make it easy for us to get a license, we are not going
to apply for one.'" So the agency is making it easy.
Perhaps it is natural for NRC commissioners to justify a strong bias in favor of
keeping the nuclear industry alive even if safety and democracy have to be
compromised. After all, if there were no corporations willing to build new
nuclear power plants, soon there would be no need for a Nuclear Regulatory
Commission. So NRC commissioners know in their bones that their first priority
must be to keep the nuclear industry alive. Every bureaucracy's first priority
is self-perpetuation. Furthermore, historically a position as an NRC
commissioner can lead directly to a high-paying job, often in the nuclear
industry itself.
To grease the skids for a nuclear revival, the most important change the NRC has
made has been to creatively redefine the meaning of the word "construction."
This change was enacted in April, 2007, with lightning speed -- six months from
initial proposal to final adoption. By way of comparison, it took the NRC eleven
years to adopt regulations requiring drug testing for nuclear plant operators.
"Construction" has traditionally included all the activities undertaken to build
a nuclear power plant, starting with site selection, evaluation, testing and
preparation, construction of peripheral facilities like cooling towers, and so
on. Even the earliest stages of siting are crucially important with a facility
as complex and dangerous as a nuclear power plant.
In April of this year, the NRC officially redefined "construction" to include
only construction of the reactor itself -- excluding site selection, evaluation,
testing and preparation, construction of peripheral facilities and all the rest.
At the time, one senior environmental manager inside NRC complained in an email
that NRC's redefinition of "construction" would
exclude from NRC regulation "probably 90 percent of the true environmental
impacts of construction." Under the new rules, by the time the NRC gets
involved, a company will have invested perhaps a hundred million dollars. Will
NRC commissioners have the backbone to toss that investment into the toilet if
they eventually find something wrong with the site? Or will they roll over for
the industry and compromise safety?
The lawyer who dreamed up the redefinition of "construction" is James Curtiss,
himself a former NRC commissioner who now sits on the board of directors of the
nuclear power giant, Constellation Energy Group. This revolving door pathway
from NRC to industry is well-worn.
One NRC commissioner who voted in April to change the definition of construction
is Jeffrey Merrifield. Before he left the NRC in July, Mr. Merrifield's last
assignment as an NRC commissioner was to chair an agency task force on ways to
accelerate licensing.
In April, while he was urging his colleagues at NRC to redefine "construction,"
Mr. Merrifield was actively seeking a top management position within the nuclear
industry. In July he became senior vice president for Shaw Group, a nuclear
builder that has worked on 95% of all existing U.S. nuclear plants. Mr.
Merrifield's salary at NRC was $154,600.
Bloomberg reports that, "In Shaw Group's industry peer group, $705,409 is
the median compensation for a senior vice president."
No one in government or the industry seems the least bit embarrassed by any of
this. It's just the way it is. Indeed, Mr. Merrifield points out that, while he
was an NRC commissioner providing very substantial benefits to the nuclear
industry by his decisions, his concurrent search for a job within the regulated
industry was approved by the NRC's Office of General Counsel and its Inspector
General. From this, one might conclude that Mr. Merrifield played by all the
rules and did nothing wrong. Or one might conclude that venality and corruption
reach into the highest levels of the NRC. Or one might conclude that after NRC
commissioners have completed their assignment inside government, everyone in the
agency just naturally feels they are entitled to a lifetime of lavish reward
from the industry on whose behalf they have labored so diligently.
As recently as this summer, Uncle Sam was still devising new ways to revive
nuclear power. In July
the U.S. Senate allowed the nuclear industry to add a one-sentence provision
to the energy bill, which the Senate then passed. The one sentence greatly
expanded the loan guarantee provisions of the Energy Policy Act of 2005. The
2005 Act had specified that Uncle Sam could guarantee loans for new nuclear
power plants up to a limit set each year by Congress. In 2007 the limit was set
at a paltry $4 billion. The one-sentence revision adopted by the Senate removed
all limits on loan guarantees. The nuclear industry says it needs at least $50
billion in the next two years. Michael J. Wallace, the co-chief executive of
UniStar Nuclear, a partnership seeking to build nuclear reactors, and executive
vice president of Constellation Energy, said: "Without loan guarantees we will
not build nuclear power plants."
The Senate and the House of Representatives are presently arm- wrestling over
the proposed expansion of loan guarantees. In June, the
White House budget office said that the Senate's proposed changes to the
loan-guarantee program could "significantly increase potential taxpayer
liability" and "eliminate any incentive for due diligence by private lenders."
On Wall Street this is known as a "moral
hazard" -- conditions under which waste, fraud and abuse can flourish.
All these subsidies to revive a dead duck run directly counter to free market
ideals and capitalism's credo of unfettered competition. So the intriguing
question remains, Why? Why wouldn't the nation go whole-hog for alternative
energy sources and avoid all the problems that accompany nuclear power --
routine radioactive releases, the constant fear of a serious accidents, the
unsolved problem of radioactive waste that must be stored somewhere reliably for
a million years, and -- the greatest danger of all -- the inevitable reality
that anyone who can build a nuclear power plant can build an atomic bomb if they
set their minds to it. The recent experience of Israel, India, North Korea and
Pakistan in this regard is completely convincing and undeniable.
So why is Uncle Sam hell-bent on reviving nuclear power? I don't have a
firm answer and can only speculate. Perhaps from the viewpoint of both
Washington and Wall Street, nuclear power is preferable to renewable-energy
alternatives because it is extremely capital-intensive and the people who
provide the capital get to control the machine and the energy it provides. It
provide a rationale for a large centralized bureaucracy and tight military and
police security to thwart terrorists. This kind of central control can act as a
powerful counterweight to excessive democratic tendencies in any country that
buys into nuclear power. Particularly if they sign a contract with the U.S. or
one of its close allies for delivery of fuel and removal of radioactive wastes,
political control becomes a powerful (though unstated) part of the bargain. If
you are dependent on nuclear power for electricity and you are dependent on us
for reactor fuel, you are in our pocket. On the other hand, solar, wind and
other renewable energy alternatives lend themselves to small- scale, independent
installations under the control of local communities or even households. Who
knows where that could lead?
Then I think of the present situation in the Middle East. Saddam Hussein started
down the road to nuclear power until the Israelis
bombed to smithereens the Osirak nuclear plant he was building in 1981. That
ended his dalliance with nuclear power and nuclear weapons -- but that didn't
stop Don Rumsfeld and Dick Cheney from using Saddam's nuclear history as an
excuse to invade his country and string him up.
And now something similar is unfolding in Iran. Iran wants nuclear power plants
partly to show how sophisticated and capable it has become, and partly to thumb
its nose at the likes of Don Rumsfeld and Dick Cheney -- and perhaps to try to
draw us into another war that would indelibly mark us for the next hundred years
as enemies of Islam, serving to further unite much of the Arab world against us.
Is this kind of thinking totally nuts? I don't think so. Newsweek
reported in its October 1, 2007 issue that Dick Cheney has been mulling a
plan to convince the Israeli's to bomb the Iranian nuclear power plant at Natanz,
hoping to provoke the Iranians into striking back so that the U.S. would then
have an excuse to bomb Iran. I'm not making this up.
So clearly there are more important uses for nuclear power than just making
electricity. Arguably, nuclear reactors have become essential tools of U.S.
foreign policy -- being offered, withheld, and bargained over. They have a
special appeal around the world because they have become double-edged symbols of
modernity, like shiny toy guns that can be loaded with real bullets. Because of
this special characteristic, they have enormous appeal and can provide enormous
bargaining power. Witness North Korea. And, as we have seen, nuclear reactors
can provide excuses to invade and bomb when no other excuses exist.
So perhaps Uncle Sam considers it worth investing a few hundred billion dollars
of taxpayer funds to keep this all-purpose Swiss army knife of U.S. foreign
policy available in our back pocket. In the past five years, we've already
devoted $800 billion to
splendid little wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, at least partly to
secure U.S. oil supplies. Uncle Sam's desperate attempts to revive nuclear
power can perhaps best be understood as part of that ongoing effort at
oil recovery.
Meanwhile, investors should think twice before buying into the "nuclear
renaissance" because there's another "renaissance" under way as well: A powerful
anti-nuclear movement is growing again and they will toss your billions into the
toilet without hesitation. Indeed, with glee.