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Energy
Plan Reaction: Plan's Emphasis on Nuclear is
Costly Option
WASHINGTON, DC,
US, 2001-05-18 <SolarAccess.com> Contrary to
the proposed energy plan, energy efficiency could
replace all the electricity currently supplied by
nuclear power for the same cost as continuing to
operate existing U.S. reactors, says an analysis
by the Safe Energy Communication Council.
"The Bush
Administration's nuclear resurgence scheme offers
no financial relief to electricity customers and
stymies real progress toward reducing air
pollution and greenhouse gas emissions," says
research director Christopher Sherry.
"Building more reactors would drain
investment from other more effective and cheaper
options such as energy efficiency and renewable
energy, thus actually resulting in increased
greenhouse gas emissions."
Savings from
reduced utility bills through energy efficiency
would provide significant economic benefits versus
further investment in uneconomic atomic reactors,
according to the analysis. Extending the lives of
existing reactors and building new reactors would
hinder a reduction in carbon dioxide emissions,
since investment in nuclear power would, in fact,
displace funding for other more economic and
effective options for reducing greenhouse gas
emissions.
An investment
in energy efficiency is more economic than nuclear
because it could replace electricity from nuclear
at a cost of 2.4c/kWh. Cost-effective energy
efficiency improvements could reduce electricity
use by 33 to 75 percent of total national use, and
would create more jobs than building new nuclear
reactors.
"Further
investment in nuclear power would involve a severe
misallocation of capital, draining investment from
other more economic options such as energy
efficiency and renewable energy such as wind
power," it explains. "The carbon and
pollution reduction potential of renewable energy
exceeds the potential emissions avoided through
nuclear power plant relicensing."
The Nuclear
Energy Institute estimates that relicensing the
entire fleet of U.S. reactors will avoid emissions
of 216 million tonne of CO2 in 2020. The
Department of Energy indicates that renewable
energy technologies could reduce emissions from
209 to 444 million tonne during the same time.
"Energy
efficiency and renewable energy provide additional
economic benefits beyond reducing greenhouse gas
emissions without environmental liabilities such
as nuclear waste and the threat of accidents at
aging nuclear reactors," says Sherry.
"Commercially available efficiency and
renewable energy technologies can provide
cost-effective energy solutions today. The
Bush-Cheney energy scheme would require a massive
investment in environmentally destructive and
dangerous fossil fuel exploration and nuclear
power plant construction that would not produce
significant amounts of energy within the next ten
years."
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