http://www.ecowatch.com/ny-times-pushes-nukes-claiming-renewables-fail-climate-change-1942048130.html
By Harvey Wasserman
The New York Times published
an astonishing article last week that blames green power for difficulties
countries are facing to mitigate climate change.
The article by Eduardo Porter,
How Renewable Energy is Blowing Climate Change Efforts Off Course, serves as a
flagship for an on-going attack on the growth of renewables. It is
so convoluted and inaccurate that it requires a detailed response.
As Mark
Jacobson, director of Atmosphere/Energy Program at Stanford University,
pointed out to me via email:
The New York Times article
"suffers from the inaccurate assumption that existing expensive nuclear
that is shut down will be replaced by natural gas. This is impossible in
California, for example, since gas is currently 60 percent of electricity
supply but state law requires non-large-hydro clean renewables to be 50 percent by 2030. This means that, with the shuttering of
Diablo Canyon
nuclear facility be 2025, gas can by no greater than 35-44 percent of
California supply since clean renewables will be at least 50 percent (and
probably much more) and large hydro will be 6-15 percent. As such, gas must go
down no matter what. In fact, 100 percent of all new electric power in Europe in 2015 was
clean, renewable energy with no new net gas, and 70 percent of all
new energy in the U.S. was clean and renewable, so the fact is nuclear is not
being replaced by gas but by clean, renewable energy.
"Further, the article
fails to consider the fact that the cost of keeping nuclear open is often
much greater than the cost of replacing the nuclear with wind or solar. For
example, three upstate New York nuclear plants require $7.6 billion in
subsidies from the state to stay open 12 years. To stay open after that, they
will need an additional $805 million/year at a minimum, or at least $17.7
billion from 2028-2050, or a total of $25.3 billion from 2016 to 2050. If, on
the other hand, those three plants were replaced with wind today, the total
cost between now and 2050 would be $11.9 billion. Thus, keeping the nuclear
plants open 12 years costs an additional $7.6 billion; keeping it open 34 years
costs and additional $25.3 billion, in both cases with zero additional climate
benefit, in comparison with shuttering the three plants today and replacing them
with onshore wind."
Gideon Forman, climate change
and transportation policy analyst at David Suzuki Foundation, also shared his dismay on the
Times piece:
"The notion that
non-renewable power sources are necessary is questionable at best. Some
scientists believe that, over the next few decades, renewables could provide
all our power. One is Stanford Prof. Mark Jacobson. He has done modeling to
show the U.S. could be entirely powered by renewables by 2050.
"Porter is wrong to claim
that nuclear produces 'zero-carbon electricity.' If we look at the full nuclear
cycle, including production of uranium fuel, we find it involves considerable
carbon emissions. Jacobson and his co-author, Mark A. Delucchi, have written, 'Nuclear power results in up to 25 times more
carbon emissions than wind energy, when reactor construction and uranium
refining and transport are considered.'
"Porter says if American
nuclear plants were replaced with gas-fired generators it would lead to 200
million tons of additional CO2 emissions annually. But it's wrong to suggest
that nuclear could only be replaced by natural gas. A full suite of
renewables—along with energy
storage and conservation programs—could meet demand, certainly in the not
very distant future.
"Porter suggests that
nuclear power can 'stay on all the time.' But of course, nuclear plants, like
all generators, are sometimes out of service for maintenance. This downtime can
be considerable. For example, it is expected that from 2017 to 2021, Ontario's
Pickering nuclear station will require back-up almost 30 percent of the
time."
Karl Grossman,
professor of journalism at State University of New York/College at Old
Westbury, called the Times piece "outrageous." He told me:
"The Times piece
continues the paper's long record of minimizing and downplaying—not recognizing
and indeed often denying—the deadly impacts of nuclear power. It's been a
shameful journalistic dysfunction. As Alden Whitman, a Times reporter for 25
years, told me, 'there certainly was never any effort made to do' in-depth or
investigative reporting on nuclear power. 'I think there stupidity involved,'
he said, and further, 'The Times regards itself as part of the
establishment." Or as Anna Mayo of The Village Voice related: 'I built a
full-time career on covering nuclear horror stories that the New York Times
neglected.'"
So where do I stand on the
Porter piece? Here are my eight biggest complaints:
1. Though viewed as the
"journal of record," the Times has been consistently pro-nuclear. Its
slanted coverage has served as an industry bulwark for decades. A long-time
atomic beat reporter, Matt Wald, went straight from the Times to a job with the Nuclear Energy
Institute, the primary public relations front for the reactor industry. The
Times has a long history as a cheerleader for nuclear power dating back to the
atomic bomb era, when it consistently denied health problems from radioactive
fallout. It also denied health problems resulting from radiation releases at
Three Mile Island, and much more. Now it has taken a major role in defending
the nuclear industry from the renewable energy revolution that is driving it to
bankruptcy while bringing a tsunami of reactor shut downs. It's these shut
downs that now seem to worry the paper.
2. The primary technological
transition in the world of electric power today is from fossil and nuclear
fuels (King CONG: Coal, Oil, Nukes, Gas) to a Solartopian system based on green
power. But there's a deeper shift going on: from centralized, grid-based
corporate control to decentralized citizen-based community control. When
nuclear power and its apologists defend continued operations at dangerously
deteriorated reactors, they are more broadly defending the power and profits of
huge corporations that are completely invested in a centralized grid. When they
argue that renewables "can't do the job," they're in fact working to
prolong the lives of the large generators that are the "base load"
basis of a corporate grid-based supply system.
3. But that grid is now
obsolete. What strikes the ultimate terror in utility boardrooms is the
revolutionary reality of a decentralized power supply, free of large
generators, comprised instead of millions of small photovoltaic (PV) panels
owned by individuals. Industry sources have widely confirmed that this
decentralized, post-grid model means the end of big utilities. Thus when they
fight against PV and for nuclear power, they are fighting not for the life of
the planet, but for the survival of their own corporate profits.
4. Some utilities do support
some renewables, but primarily in the form of large centralized grid-based
solar and wind turbine farms. Pacific Gas & Electric said it will replace
the power from the Diablo Canyon nuke plant with solar energy. But PG&E is
simultaneously fighting rooftop solar, which will allow individual
homeowners to disconnect from the grid. Germany's transition from fossil-nukes
to renewables has also been marked by conflict between large grid-based wind
farms versus small community-based renewables.
5. PG&E and other major
utilities are fighting against net metering and other programs that
promote small-scale renewables. The Koch Brothers' American Legislature
Exchange Council (ALEC)
has spread a wide range of taxes and disincentives passed by the states to make
it ever-harder to go solar. All this is being done to preserve the grid-based
monopolies that own large fossil/nuclear facilities.
6. The idea that nuclear power
might fight climate change, and that environmentalists might support it, is a
recent concoction, a disgraceful, desperate load of utility hype meant to
defend the status quo. Fukushima,
unsolved waste problems and the plummeting
price of renewables have solidified the environmental community's
opposition to nuke power. These reactors are dirty and dangerous. They are not
carbon-free and do emit huge quantities of heated water and steam into the
ecosphere. The utility industry can't get private liability insurance for them,
and relies on the 1957 Price-Anderson Act to protect them from liability in a
major catastrophe. The industry continually complains about subsidies to
renewable energy but never mentions this government protection program without
which all reactors would close.
7. Not just nuke power but the
entire centralized fossil/nuke-based grid system is now being undermined by the
massive drops in the price of renewable energy, and massive rises in its
efficiency and reliability. The critical missing link is battery technology.
Because the sun and wind are intermittent, there needs to be energy storage to
smooth out supply. Elon
Musk's billion-dollar Tesla Gigafactory in Nevada and many other industrial ventures
indicate major
battery breakthroughs in storage is here
today.
8. Porter's NY Times piece
correctly says that the massive amounts of cheap, clean renewables flooding the
grid in Europe and parts of the U.S. are driving nuclear power plants into bankruptcy.
At least a dozen reactor shut downs have been announced in the U.S. since 2012
and many more are on their way. In Japan 52 of the 54 reactors online before
the Fukushima disaster are now closed. And, Germany has pledged to shut all its reactors by 2022.
But Porter attacks this by
complaining that those nukes were supplying base load power that must be
otherwise—according to him—shored up with fossil burners. Here's his key line:
"Renewable sources are
producing temporary power gluts from Australia to California, driving out other
energy sources that are still necessary to maintain a stable supply of
power."
But as all serious
environmentalists understand, the choice has never been between nukes versus
fossil fuels. It's between centralized fossil/nukes versus decentralized
renewables.
Porter's article never
mentions the word "battery" or the term "rooftop solar."
But these are the two key parts in the green transition already very much in
progress.
So here is what the Times
obviously can't bring itself to say: "Cheap solar panels on rooftops are
now making the grid obsolete." The key bridging element of battery back-up
capability is on its way. Meanwhile there is absolutely no need for nuclear
power plants, which at any rate have long since become far too expensive to
operate.
Spending billions to prop up
dying nuke reactors for "base load" generation is pure corporate
theft at the public expense, both in straight financial terms and in the risk
of running badly deteriorated reactors deep into the future until they
inevitably melt down or blow up.
Those billions instead should
go to accelerating battery production and distribution, and making it easier,
rather than harder, to gain energy independence using the wind and the sun.
All this has serious
real-world impacts. In Ohio, for example, a well-organized shift to wind and
solar was derailed
by the Koch-run legislature. Some $2 billion in wind-power investments and
a $500 million solar farm were derailed. There are also serious legal barriers
now in place to stop homeowners from putting solar shingles and panels on their
rooftops.
Meanwhile, FirstEnergy strong-armed the Ohio Public Utilities Commission into
approving a huge bailout to keep the seriously deteriorated Davis-Besse nuke
operating, even though it cannot compete and is losing huge sums of money.
Federal regulators have since put that bailout on hold.
Arizona
and other Koch-owned legislatures have moved to tax solar panels, ban solar
shingles and make it illegal to leave the grid without still paying tribute to
the utilities who own it. Indeed, throughout the U.S. and much of the western
world, corporate-owned governments are doing their best to slow the ability of
people to use renewables to rid themselves of the corporate grid.
For an environmental movement
serious about saving the Earth from climate change, this is a temporary
barrier. The Times and its pro-nuke allies in the corporate media will continue
to twist reality. But the Solartopian revolution is proceeding ahead of
schedule and under budget. A renewable, decentralized energy system is very
much in sight.
The only question is how long
corporate nonsense like this latest NY Times screed can delay this vital
transition. Our planet is burning up from fossil fuels and being irradiated by
decrepit money-losing reactors that blow up. Blaming renewable energy for all
that is like blaming the peace movement for causing wars.
The centralized King CONG grid
and its obsolete owners are at the core of the problem. So are the corporate
media outlets like the New York Times that try to hide that obvious reality.
Harvey Wasserman's SOLARTOPIA!
OUR GREEN-POWERED EARTH is at www.solartopia.org, where his
AMERICA AT THE BRINK OF REBIRTH: THE ORGANIC SPIRAL OF US HISTORY is soon to arrive. He edits www.nukefree.org and hosts the Solartopia Green Power & Wellness Show at www.prn.fm.
AMERICA AT THE BRINK OF REBIRTH: THE ORGANIC SPIRAL OF US HISTORY is soon to arrive. He edits www.nukefree.org and hosts the Solartopia Green Power & Wellness Show at www.prn.fm.
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