Nuclear Reactor Applications Rising
Stagnant For Decades, Nuclear Energy Industry Rebounding
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The Nuclear Regulatory Commission has received applications to build 15 new reactors in eight states. (AP / CBS)
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The Nuclear Regulatory Commission has received applications to build 15 new reactors in eight states. Later this year, plants in seven other states plan to seek permits for a dozen more reactors.
The first could be built and operating by 2016.
While 104 commercial nuclear reactors remain in operation in the U.S., the NRC has not approved a construction license for a new reactor since 1978.
The nuclear revival is far from a done deal, however. Companies still must arrange financing, and will need federal loan guarantees and states' approval to hike rates to pay for construction if those loans are to be affordable.
The current push is being driven by soaring demand for electricity nationwide - about 25 percent more electric-generating capacity will be needed by 2030, according to industry experts. And utility companies say environmental and regulatory hurdles have stalled their efforts to build more coal-fired plants.
Economic incentives included in a 2005 energy bill passed by Congress are another factor, encouraging utilities to build new, advanced nuclear reactors that produce no greenhouse gases but cost billions to build.
"We're talking about a trillion-dollar investment in the nation's power infrastructure," said Steve Kerekes, a spokesman for the Nuclear Energy Institute, the industry's policy organization. "That's a very substantial undertaking in providing the electricity that we all depend on.
"We have to have nuclear power as part of that," he said. "We need renewables, but by themselves, that's not going to get us where we need to be."
But critics say solar, wind and other "greener" electricity-producing alternatives can play a bigger role, and that nuclear reactors are expensive and dangerous. Some residents near the proposed sites have protested, saying nuclear plants could become terrorist targets. Opponents also are concerned that while the updated reactors called for in the plans are used in Europe, they are untried in the U.S.
And in arid states such as Texas, where two companies are looking to build new reactors, there are concerns about the vast amounts of water such plants require. Most of the new plants would be built in the South, which has faced severe drought recently.
"Investing in a very expensive nuclear plant with technology that's never been used in this country is a risky and costly option," said Cyrus Reed, conservation director of the Sierra Club's Lone Star Chapter. "And there's no power source that uses more water, which is especially a problem in parts of Texas."
The last time the NRC approved a construction license for a nuclear reactor was in 1978 near Raleigh, N.C.; it started operating in 1987. The last reactor to go online in the U.S. was in 1996 - Watts Bar near Spring City, Tenn. - although its construction license was approved in 1973.
Dozens of permits were issued in the 1960s and '70s and nuclear reactors were built in the '70s and '80s, although some projects were scrapped because of high costs and new regulations, said Sam Walker, an NRC historian.
In 1979, an accident at the Three Mile Island nuclear power plant near Middletown, Penn., caused radioactive materials to be released. It was the most serious commercial nuclear plant disaster in the nation's history.
Although no one died, the NRC didn't issue licenses for a year and a half and the disaster prompted significant changes to safety, regulations and oversight, Walker said.
Since then, existing nuclear reactors have increased output by 25 percent, Kerekes said. But many are reaching their limits and some must eventually be decommissioned due to age.
The NRC received its first application in about 30 years in November, when Houston-based NRG Texas applied for a license to build two reactors at its South Texas Project near Bay City.
Dallas-based Luminant Power is expected to apply in September to build two reactors at its Comanche Peak plant in Glen Rose, about 50 miles south of Fort Worth. Luminant spokesman Tom Kleckner said the reactors are used in Japan, based on proven technology and have a good operating record.
Utilities looking to build new nuclear plants may have to wait in line for the huge steel containers that house the reactors. Most of the vessels - about the size of a 6-story building - are supplied by a single Japanese company.
They will also face the still-unresolved issue of long-term nuclear waste disposal.
The Bush administration is trying to get approval for a national 77,000-ton nuclear waste dump at Yucca Mountain outside Las Vegas. Federal law requires the government to take spent reactor fuel piling up at commercial power plants and defense sites.
But Nevada's attorney general has recently challenged that plan.
"We feel it's very important to go ahead with the project because we need to stop greenhouse gas emissions," said David Knox, an NRG Texas spokesman. "We're confident the government will meet its obligation."
© MMVIII The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.



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Yea....big deal.
That''s half of what we just wasted in Iraq.
Re: "The first could be built and operating by 2016."
Don''t count on it. Nuclear fission power production is a very expensive and dangerous dead-end and we will not allow any new plants to be built.
Don''''t count on it. Nuclear fission power production is a very expensive and dangerous dead-end and we will not allow any new plants to be built.
You don''t want us to build new oil rigs to drill, you don''t want us to build power plants for nuclear power, you don''t want any wind mills build because that might harm birds, and you don''t want us to use horses because their XXXX might cause some methane thing - what are we suppose to do ? You peopple are killing the world. We don''t have other methods for power. If we did, you probably, would have one of your new terrorist friends complain to the ACLU that a picece of molcule might cause you to have a hang nail. You people are stupid and dum. Enough said.
Bin Laden said that taking the towers down would crumble our economy didnt he? Well, it just goes to show that a crazy old terrorist is smarter than our own "well educated" president.
Bla, Bla, Bla, the same *** out of you stupid libs - maybe I should used just one sheet of tiolet paper to wipe your ***. You libs are stupid !
Bechtel will be in no position to build any more nukes after their assets are seized and liquidated, to help pay some of the reparations that they owe.
These two groups have screwed this country for thirty years.
The Enviro''s donating 10''s of millions of dollars to Dems campaigns and then the Dems blocking and outlawing virtually all "domestic" development and production of energy in America since the 1970''s
It took us thirty years to get in this hole and it''s going to take twenty years to get us out.
ONLY if the Dems and their big donor, Enviro''s STAY OUT OF THE WAY.
Just more facts on the history of this bad situation.
Mountains are considered a less stable geological formation. There is no safe place to store radioactive waste, plain and simple.
I don''t feel very safe with chief terrorist in-charge-Bushit at the helm.
Cant have your kooky cake and eat it too ...
It takes 8-10 years to build one nuke untit .. we better get busy or we cpuld be in the dark by then ...
Weren''t the Repubs just having a fit over Iran''s reactors?
If these are the wave of the future, the US can hardly keep other countries from having them,
So be careful what you wish for.
Jeez I cant wait for Obasama to be elected ... to see how/what you little trolls post then ....
As for environmentalists, why can''t they move to countries where laws don''t exist? The US is hardly the worst offender and we''re working on cleaning up our act. It''ll take time but we''re doing it. These "booming economies" are now said to be the biggest polluters. Especially all that talk about the Olympics and how gross the atmosphere is. Where are the environmentalists?
Weren''''t the Repubs just having a fit over Iran''''s reactors?
If these are the wave of the future, the US can hardly keep other countries from having them,
So be careful what you wish for.
Posted by gkc99
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Because Iran''s leader has shown to be a vicious little, games-playing prat. More poignantly, the US is not alone in the world knowing Iran IS a threat if they get nuclear power and pervert it as a weapon.
It''s not a "Repub" issue because MANY Democrats feel the same way too.
The article clearly states that "Pres. Bush" is pushing for the Yucca Mountains. Which is why I cited him.
You got proof it started back in 78? But either way, it''s still a bad place to store this waste.
Posted by OneWorldUSA
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Yet we''re offshoring jobs and not hiring equally qualified Americans. Other countries do put their own first. (So I keep hearing, but as with all news, I try not to become closed-minded to other perspectives.)
It''d be GREAT if more people could/would walk to work and elsewhere. Over time, I can see more workplaces popping up near homes.
Posted by hypnotoad72 at 08:39 AM : Jun 14, 2008
Good question. The answer is fairly simple, The Chinese government clearly squashes any dissident, weather political, or environmental, or any other type of group that goes against that government. Remember?
The proof is in the US Deptartment of energy website ... go take a look ... as for a bad place .. its not like they just dig a hole and dump the waste ... its just a little more engineered than that ... since we have over 100 sites that now store radioactive waste from many industries .. the idea is to have all this in one place ... and breeder reactors have also been researched ... maybe a good idea huh?
Tree huggers & uninformed ignorant folks will and have been the downfall of the US energy policy .. and the common citizens are the ones who suffer from all of this stupidity ...
I wouldn''t trust him to bury a dead dog, let alone something as dangerous as radio active material.
HOWEVER, if the NRC required Fast-Neutron nuclear fission reactor (or better) technology to be utilized in these new plants, the same 1-gigawatt plant would create only 1 ton of much-less dangerous waste,
ie: Waste containing only 1% of the original energy of the fuel, waste that would take only ~250 years to reach safe levels.
And at that rate, it would take _THREE_HUNDRED_ 1-gigawatt Fast-Neutron fission plants to fill up Yucca mountain to it capacity in ~250 years,
_EXCEPT_ that (very importantly) at year 250 (and every year afterwards) Yucca Flats could release 300 tons safely.
On top of that, Fast-Neutron fission reactors could recycle the highly dangerous old-technology fission waste we currently have stockpiled.
A forward thinking federal government could help fund the 1st plant...
www.nationalcenter.org/NuclearFastReactorsSA1205.pdf
country is a risky
If we followed that line of thinking the 1st US nuclear plants would never have been built,
nor would we have ever landed on the moon.
They will also face the still-unresolved issue of
long-term nuclear waste disposal.
Federal law requires the government to take spent
reactor fuel
Precisely why the NRC should _NOT_ issue any permits for old-technology fission reactors. A 1-gigawatt old-technology fission plant creates ~100 tons/year of highly dangerous waste, waste which still (with gross inefficiency) contains 95% of the original energy of the fuel, waste that will take +25,000 years to reach safe levels before it can exit Yucca Mountain (w/its 77K ton capacity).
Yet at that rate, a _SINGLE_ old-technology fission plant will fill up Yucca mountain to it capacity in ~770 years, slightly short (24,230 years...) of the 25,000 year minimum required of the most-recent arrival.
(cont)
long-term nuclear waste disposal.
Posted by nodemotwit at 04:26 PM : Jun 14, 2008
That is a no-brainer, take the spent rods up in the shuttle and sling them into the Sun. (Don''t start harping about shuttle crashes either) If this stuff is stored on the planet, some terrorist will get his hands on it and spread around our cities, and that will negate any ''possible'' crash scenarios.
d) We have already lost two shuttles (`86, `00),
and while liberals might salivate at the remote
possibility of any conservative parts of Florida
being covered in 25,000 years-to-re-inhabit nuke
waste,
unless the probability of a missions disaster drops
to near zero I suspect most Floridians
(and NASA officials, EPA, & the down-flight range
EU...)
would strongly doubt the wisdom of anyone who would
authorize such missions based on the such a high
catastrophic failure rate.
Not to mention the possibility of it all going into
the ocean, and the ocean currents spreading it
around the globe...
All meaning the space shuttle is highly likely to
not be an option for addressing old-technology fission waste.
However, require all new US nuke plants to use Fast-
Neutron fission (or better) reactor technology and
the whole problem becomes very manageable and much
safer wrt Yucca Mountain, as previously described
below.
A forward thinking federal government could help fund the 1st plant...
www.nationalcenter.org/NuclearFastReactorsSA1205.pdf
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by nodemotwit
June 17, 2008 12:11 AM EDT
- They will also face the still-unresolved issue of
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Reply to this comment
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See all 30 Commentslong-term nuclear waste disposal.
Posted by nodemotwit at 04:26 PM : Jun 14, 2008
That is a no-brainer, take the spent rods up in the
shuttle and sling them into the Sun. (Don''''t start
harping about shuttle crashes either) If this stuff
is stored on the planet, some terrorist will get his
hands on it and spread around our cities, and that
will negate any ''''possible'''' crash scenarios.
Posted by ToolMangler
Uhhh, Mr./Mrs ToolMangler,
this:
** They will also face the still-unresolved issue of
** long-term nuclear waste disposal.
as a quote from the CBS article above, not me.
As far as the rest:
============
a) The max payload of the shuttle 24 tons...
b) ...meaning roughly 5 shuttle missions just to get
rid of just ONE year of nuke waste from just ONE
1-gigawatt old-tech fission reactor.
So getting rid of the waste from TWO old-tech
fission reactor for ONE year would take 10-
flights/yr.
c) From 1977 - 2000 the space shuttle has only
averaged 4.4-missions/yr.
(cont)