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- <text id=91TT0937>
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- <title>
- Apr. 29, 1991: Nuclear Power:Time To Choose
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Apr. 29, 1991 Nuclear Power
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BUSINESS, Page 54
- COVER STORIES
- Time to Choose
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>As energy needs rocket, America must face down old demons and
- decide on a role for nuclear power. Surprise: it's gaining new
- respect.
- </p>
- <p>By John Greenwald--Reported by Jerome Cramer/Washington, Thomas
- McCarroll/New York and Jeanne McDowell/Los Angeles
- </p>
- <p> Nuclear power. The words conjure first the hellish
- explosion at Chernobyl that spewed a radioactive cloud across
- the Ukraine and Europe five years ago this week, poisoning
- crops, spawning bizarre mutant livestock, killing dozens of
- people and exposing millions more to dangerous fallout. Then the
- words summon up Three Mile Island and the threat
- of a meltdown that spread panic across Pennsylvania's rolling
- countryside seven years earlier. From these grew the alarming
- television programs, the doomsday books, the terrifying movies,
- even the jokes (What's served on rice and glows in the dark?
- Chicken Kiev). Could any technology survive all that? It seemed
- this one couldn't. U.S. utilities ordered their last nuclear
- plant in 1978--and eventually canceled all orders placed after
- 1973. Nuclear power looked as good as dead.
- </p>
- <p> Yet it lives. More than that, it is reasserting itself
- with great force. A survey of high-level policy leaders and
- futurists by Yankelovich Clancy Shulman, released this month,
- shows a sudden upsurge in support for nuclear power following
- a decade of rejection. As the world worries about global warming
- and acid rain, even some environmentalists are looking a bit
- more kindly on the largest power source that doesn't worsen
- either problem: nuclear. New reactor designs would make
- accidents like Chernobyl and Three Mile Island impossible, or
- so the engineers say, and while much of the public is skeptical,
- some scientists are persuaded.
- </p>
- <p> The sometimes theoretical debate is becoming intensely
- practical. As summer approaches and electric companies around
- the U.S. warn of periodic brownouts, people wonder, Where will
- we get more juice?
- </p>
- <p> Nuclear power has a long way to go before it becomes the
- answer to that question. The public is afraid of it. Wall Street
- doesn't even want to hear about it. Most environmental groups
- are still virulently antinuclear. Yet here, there, in more
- places every day, support is building. The National Academy of
- Sciences called this month for the swift development of a new
- generation of nuclear plants to help fight the greenhouse
- effect. The new atomic plants already on the drawing board
- would replace power stations that burn coal and oil, fossil
- fuels that belch heat-trapping carbon dioxide--the primary
- greenhouse gas--into the atmosphere.
- </p>
- <p> Many scientists applauded the findings of the independent
- academy, which conducted a 15-month federally funded study of
- the greenhouse problem. Says Ratib Karam, director of the Neely
- Nuclear Research Center at Georgia Tech: "Nuclear energy is now
- the only major source of power that does not produce CO2. In
- terms of global society, nuclear power plants are essential."
- </p>
- <p> Even before the academy released its report, George Bush
- put forth an energy plan in February that proposed greatly
- speeding up the procedure for licensing the new generation of
- nuclear plants. That is critical: public challenges to plant
- construction have stretched out licensing to as much as 20 years
- and raised building costs to such intolerable levels that many
- utilities have been forced to abandon plants before they ever
- opened.
- </p>
- <p> To speed the process further, the Administration wants
- Westinghouse, General Electric and other suppliers of nuclear
- plants to build them to a standard design that would be
- relatively simple to repair and maintain. France, which
- generates 75% of its electricity from the atom--more than any
- other nation--has used a standard reactor since the mid-1970s,
- enabling any nuclear engineer or plant operator to work on 52
- of the country's 55 plants at a moment's notice. By contrast,
- each of the 112 U.S. nuclear plants, which produce 21% of the
- nation's electricity, was custom built at its site. So when
- something goes wrong, a specialist has to fix it, causing delays
- that tend to make U.S. plant shutdowns longer than in France.
- </p>
- <p> The new push for atomic power gained impetus from the gulf
- war, which focused attention on America's appetite for Middle
- East oil. Nuclear advocates have long argued that atomic plants
- could help wean the U.S. from risky reliance on energy from one
- of the world's most volatile regions. The effect would be
- small. Most utilities have already phased out their oil-fired
- plants, which generate just 6% of U.S. electricity and represent
- about 3% of the country's overall use of oil. But nuclear
- proponents insist that new atomic plants would further reduce
- America's dependence on foreign oil, enhancing U.S. energy
- security while reducing polluting emissions of CO2.
- </p>
- <p> The threat of climatological change could lead to a
- rapprochement between the nuclear power industry and U.S.
- environmentalists, long bitter foes. As they prepared to
- celebrate the 21st anniversary of Earth Day this week, leading
- environmentalists had the specter of global warming much on
- their mind. "Nuclear has a proven track record of producing
- large amounts of energy," says Douglas Bohi, director of energy
- at Resources for the Future, a Washington-based research group.
- "But the industry has to convince the public that the new
- technology will be safe and pose fewer problems."
- </p>
- <p> Nearly everyone agrees that this challenge will be key. It
- will surely be one of the most daunting public relations
- assignments of the century. After nearly 40 years of living with
- the so-called peaceful atom--once expected to make electricity
- "too cheap to meter"--Americans remain deeply ambivalent about
- nuclear power. A TIME/CNN poll conducted this month by
- Yankelovich Clancy Shulman found that 32% of the 1,000 adults
- surveyed strongly opposed building more nuclear plants in the
- U.S. vs. just 18% strongly in favor. So do Americans hate nukes?
- Not necessarily. When asked which energy source the U.S. should
- rely on most to meet its increased energy needs in the next
- decade, a surprising 40% of respondents picked nuclear power,
- far surpassing the 25% who chose oil and the 22% who named coal.
- </p>
- <p> The apparent contradiction results from the old
- not-in-my-backyard syndrome. Many people want nuclear power as
- long as it's generated elsewhere. Fully 60% of respondents said
- a new nuclear plant in their community would be unacceptable,
- vs. 34% who said it would be acceptable. Coal got a warmer
- reception. Only 41% considered a new coal plant in their
- community unacceptable, while 51% said it would be acceptable.
- </p>
- <p> Such tangled feelings about the risks and rewards of
- nuclear power fit a worldwide pattern. In March the governments
- of Britain, France, Germany and Belgium--Europe's largest
- users of nuclear energy--jointly reaffirmed their commitment
- to the atom and pledged to cooperate in the development of new
- reactors. Yet while the statement recognized "the environmental
- benefits" of nuclear power and noted that it provides "one
- appropriate response to the challenges now confronting the
- entire planet," the signers warned that future development of
- atomic energy "must take place in conditions of optimum safety,
- ensuring the best possible protection both for populations and
- for the environment."
- </p>
- <p> Safety is a vital global issue. A nuclear power accident
- anywhere stirs public fears about nuclear plants everywhere.
- Executives of U.S. utilities shuddered in February when the
- failure of a valve caused the worst mishap in the 20-year
- history of Japan's atomic power industry, crippling a plant in
- the town of Mihama, about 200 miles west of Tokyo. "When the
- skill and discipline of the Japanese falter," says Lawrence
- Lidsky, an M.I.T. nuclear engineer, "that means anyone can screw
- up."
- </p>
- <p> The strongest motive for a U.S. nuclear renaissance is
- America's galloping demand for electricity. The Department of
- Energy says the country will have to raise its present
- generating capacity of 700 gigawatts--or 700 billion watts--another 250 gigawatts by 2010. That is the equivalent of 250
- large coal or nuclear power stations. The need will grow more
- acute as existing nuclear plants, which were designed to last
- 40 years, are dismantled and buried. By 2030, DOE says, the U.S.
- will need 1,250 more gigawatts of generating capacity than it
- has now.
- </p>
- <p> The hottest argument in energy circles focuses on the
- right mix of fuels and conservation methods to satisfy this
- proliferating need for plug-in power. The issue is not whether
- the U.S. has enough coal. Even if the nation chose to meet all
- its staggering demand with its most popular fuel for generating
- electricity, coal, its reserves would last many decades. The
- question is whether America wants to bear the costs and effects
- of burning all that coal or would prefer the costs and effects
- of splitting some atoms instead.
- </p>
- <p> Or perhaps it would rather do something else entirely.
- Environmentalists call for harnessing such renewable resources
- as wind and solar power and retrofitting homes and offices to
- use electricity more efficiently. The only trouble is that,
- according to the National Academy of Sciences report,
- "alternative energy technologies are unable currently or in the
- near future to replace fossil fuels as the major electricity
- source for this country. If fossil fuels had to be replaced now
- as the primary source of electricity, nuclear power appears to
- be the most technically feasible alternative."
- </p>
- <p> That endorsement marks one of the few recent positive
- developments for an industry that has been mired in misery for
- more than two decades. Faced with an endless round of
- challenges, U.S. utilities have walked away from 120 nuclear
- plants since 1974--more than all the plants now in operation.
- In New York State, the Long Island Lighting Co. gave up on its
- completed $5.5 billion Shoreham nuclear facility in 1989 after
- local authorities refused to approve the firm's plans for an
- evacuation route for nearby residents in the event of a serious
- accident. The state now plans to buy the plant for a token $1--and to spend about $186 million to dismantle it.
- </p>
- <p> Such fiascoes have for years discouraged virtually every
- U.S. utility from even looking sideways at nuclear power. "We
- have no plans to build a nuclear plant," says Pam Chapman, a
- spokeswoman for Indiana's PSI Energy. The troubled company is
- still reeling from the financial crisis that sandbagged it in
- 1984, when it wrote off $2.7 billion in construction costs for
- a half-built reactor. Concurs Gary Neale, president of nearby
- Northern Indiana Public Service Co., which scrubbed a barely
- started nuclear plant in 1981: "We're not antinuclear, but given
- the size of our company, I just don't think it ever would be
- practical for us."
- </p>
- <p> Nor is nuclear power currently practical for any other
- firms in America, Wall Street experts argue. "The first utility
- that announces plans to build a new nuclear reactor will see
- its stock dumped," warns Leonard Hyman, who watches electric
- companies for Merrill Lynch. Hyman estimates that abandoned U.S.
- nuclear projects have generated some $10 billion of losses for
- the utilities' stockholders. "Investors are not quite ready to
- warm up to nuclear power just yet," says Hyman. "They're still
- recovering from their first chilling experience--and it was
- very chilling." He adds, "There is no demand for new plants,
- because no one wants to spend the next 10 years in court or
- being picketed."
- </p>
- <p> All that resistance stems from fear, and the overriding
- fear these days is of nuclear waste. Says I.C. Bupp, managing
- director of the Massachusetts-based Cambridge Energy Research
- Associates and a longtime student of nuclear energy: "There will
- be no nuclear renaissance until a waste-disposal program exists
- that passes some common-sense test of public credibility and
- acceptability."
- </p>
- <p> The public's dread centers on the radioactive elements
- that remain in spent fuel rods after atomic reactions. While
- such highly toxic fission products as strontium 90 and cesium
- 137 have half-lives of only about 30 years, other inradioactive
- substances like plutonium will endure for tens and even
- hundreds of millenniums, and are piling up fast. High-level
- waste--that which is most radioactive--from U.S. power
- plants is not voluminous. More than 30 years' worth totals
- 17,000 tons, a thimbleful compared with the slag that would
- result from generating equivalent power by burning coal. Yet
- this waste threatens to fill all available storage space at
- generating facilities, and the U.S. has made little headway in
- developing a safe final resting place for more of it.
- </p>
- <p> Congress three years ago selected Yucca Mountain in a
- remote part of southwest Nevada as the site for a permanent
- underground repository. The state has fought the plan in a
- series of court battles that have helped delay the scheduled
- opening of the site to 2010. The DOE is meanwhile compiling a
- library of 10 million computerized documents that will attempt
- to analyze every aspect of the site to be sure it can safely
- hold the waste.
- </p>
- <p> In light of all the turmoil, most people might be
- surprised to learn that a number of scientists say the waste
- problem can be solved with little fuss. The spent fuel rods can
- be buried in steel canisters thousands of feet below the
- surface, and experts can predict with a high degree of
- probability that a site will remain stable for hundreds or
- thousands of years. But as the public perceives nuclear waste,
- that's just not good enough. While the risks of so-called deep
- geologic disposal appear no greater than many others that
- Americans accept every day--crossing the street, driving a car--no scientist can guarantee that a disposal site will remain
- unchanged for tens of thousands of years or that groundwater may
- not seep into the containers at some point during the eons that
- the waste will remain radioactively hot. As long as the American
- public demands ironclad assurance that the waste cannot ever
- escape its containers, people's fears can never be entirely
- soothed.
- </p>
- <p> In France, where the state runs the nuclear plants, the
- public seems less fearful of nuclear waste. The French convert
- their high-level waste into a stable, glassy substance and store
- it in concrete bunkers at plant sites while experts study where
- to dispose of it permanently sometime early next century. "The
- most important thing to remember is that we have time to make a
- proper decision," says Bernard Tinturier, director of strategic
- planning for the government's Commissariat for Nuclear Energy.
- French scientists are considering four locations around the
- country, including clay deposits about 120 miles north of Paris
- and a shale site near the Loire valley. If the French seem
- calmly deliberate about the issue of nuclear waste, that may be
- because they view atomic power as a necessity rather than an
- option. With virtually no oil and little coal or natural gas,
- France has decided to rely on its rich uranium deposits as the
- primary source of fuel for its power plants. The country is
- pressing ahead with plans to construct seven new nuclear plants
- by the end of the decade.
- </p>
- <p> With new nukes out of the picture in the U.S., utilities
- have been scrambling to find other sources of the electricity
- they need to prevent summer brownouts and blackouts that hit
- when demand for air conditioning peaks. To handle the load,
- utilities have quietly placed orders in recent years for enough
- gas-fired generators to produce 30,000 megawatts of electricity--equivalent to 30 large nuclear plants. But gas has drawbacks
- as a long-term alternative to nuclear energy. Though far cleaner
- burning than coal, it is still a fossil fuel that emits at least
- some CO2. Reliance on natural gas would require augmenting
- pipelines that link the energy-rich U.S. Southwest to the
- populous North and Northeast, an expensive undertaking with its
- own environmental hazards.
- </p>
- <p> So utilities are turning with increasing vigor to other
- nonnuclear energy sources. California's giant Pacific Gas &
- Electric gets a substantial 14% of its generating capacity from
- renewable energy sources such as the sun and wind. Its neighbor,
- Southern California Edison, joined forces this month with Texas
- Instruments in a six-year, $10 million project that will use
- low-grade silicon instead of more expensive higher grades to
- make photovoltaic cells that convert sunlight into electricity.
- Says Robert Dietch, a Southern Cal Edison vice president: "This
- has the potential to be the type of breakthrough technology
- we've all been looking for in the solar industry."
- </p>
- <p> An alternative energy source that will not become
- practical for a long time, if it ever does, is nuclear fusion,
- which can use ordinary water as fuel. The difficulty is that
- fusion requires temperatures as high as hundreds of millions of
- degrees Celsius, and scientists have been unable to develop
- reactors that can handle that. Reports that some researchers
- achieved "cold fusion" at room temperature now produce more
- chuckles than heat.
- </p>
- <p> The most productive nonnuclear, nonfossil power source in
- the long run may be not some new way of generating more
- electricity but new ways of using less. Instead of spending
- money to build plants, utilities sometimes find it more
- economical to offer customers financial incentives to use power
- more efficiently. In New York City, for example, Consolidated
- Edison spent more than $8 million in January and February on
- rebates to customers who traded in their energy-hogging air
- conditioners and lighting fixtures for efficient new models.
- Notes John Dillon, a Con Ed assistant vice president: "The
- cleanest megawatt is the megawatt not consumed."
- </p>
- <p> Most environmentalists emphatically endorse conservation
- as a superior alternative to nukes. "Over the past decade, the
- U.S. has gotten seven times as much new energy from savings as
- from all the net increases of energy supply," asserts Amory
- Lovins, director of research at Rocky Mountain Institute in
- Snowmass, Colo. "Efficiency is a clear winner in the market,
- leaving everything else in the dust." Declares Lester Brown,
- president of the Washington-based Worldwatch Institute: "We as
- a nation should be hell-bent for efficiency. The exciting thing
- about conservation is, we have a huge potential for savings with
- already existing technology."
- </p>
- <p> Other experts argue that the U.S. will profit from both
- conservation and nuclear power. "Conservation has tremendous
- potential," says Cambridge Energy's Bupp. "We have every reason
- to applaud the effort. But it will take time and good management
- to get the full results." Meanwhile, he says, the nuclear power
- industry has "invested $1 trillion over the past 30 years making
- plants simpler, cheaper and safer. Nuclear power should continue
- to provide about 20% of U.S. electric generation over the next
- century because it does work."
- </p>
- <p> That moderate proposal seems sensible, but it won't be
- easy to realize. No matter how much scientific support the
- stricken industry receives, it hasn't a hope of getting back on
- its feet without lots of help from Washington, and for the
- moment that looks uncertain.
- </p>
- <p> Utility executives must be persuaded that ordering nuclear
- plants again can make economic, environmental and practical
- sense. The first challenge, already addressed in the
- Administration's recent proposal, will be to streamline the
- licensing process, which now requires a set of public hearings
- before a plant can be built and another before it can start
- operating. In the case of New Hampshire's $6 billion Seabrook
- nuclear power station, the second round of hearings kept the
- completed plant idle for three years, costing its owner, Public
- Service Co. of New Hampshire, an extra $1 billion in interest
- and other expenses before the facility finally opened in 1990.
- To prevent such costly delays, the White House wants to
- accelerate licensing by compressing the two sets of hearings
- into one while still allowing for public comment before a plant
- starts up.
- </p>
- <p> But that proposal seems sure to set off a furious battle
- in Congress that will test the depth of George Bush's
- commitment to nuclear power. "Congress is risk averse," says a
- House staff member. "The public doesn't like nuclear energy, and
- it doesn't want the right of a public hearing taken away." A
- careful reader of the public mood, Bush has so far shown little
- willingness to put up much of a fight for his program. Even
- chief of staff John Sununu, a former engineer who pushed hard
- for Seabrook when he was New Hampshire's Governor, has shown at
- least as much interest in blocking opponents of nuclear power
- from key jobs in the Administration as in promoting nuclear
- energy.
- </p>
- <p> While the White House has dithered, the DOE has invested
- more than $160 million in recent years to help develop a new
- generation of advanced reactors with standardized designs.
- Participants in the program include GE and Westinghouse, which
- have put up a total of $70 million. Washington wants four
- designs ready for utilities to choose from by 1995. "The key is
- getting the first one built," says William Young, an assistant
- DOE secretary for nuclear energy. That would "let the public
- know what it can expect."
- </p>
- <p> But the question remains: Who would buy such a plant? Wall
- Street experts say the most likely customers could be
- consortiums rather than individual firms. "The next generation
- of nuclear reactors will be partly owned by manufacturers as
- well as by utilities," says Barry Abramson of Prudential
- Securities. "Utilities want to spread the risks around this
- time." That seems to be happening already. Without much fanfare,
- for example, Westinghouse and Bechtel, a San Francisco-based
- engineering firm, have formed a joint venture with the Michigan
- utility Consumers Power to purchase and operate nuclear plants.
- </p>
- <p> The federally run Tennessee Valley Authority could be
- another deep-pocketed customer for the first new reactor. TVA
- chairman Marvin Runyon says he may order a nuclear plant by the
- end of the decade. TVA also plans to restart one of three
- nuclear reactors at its Browns Ferry plant, near Athens, Ala.,
- this summer. The facility had a serious fire in the mid-1970s
- and shut down in 1985 to correct safety problems. Runyon likes
- atomic energy because it is clean, but he lists four conditions
- that must be met if nukes are to regain the public's trust:
- "One-step licensing, standardized designs, a
- nuclear-waste-disposal program and a bold spirit of confidence."
- </p>
- <p> That will be a tall order for a fractious industry that
- seems to have a knack for making things difficult for itself.
- Case in point: while some congressional lawmakers want to
- sponsor a demonstration project that would showcase new nuclear
- technologies and help streamline licensing procedures,
- squabbling manufacturers have been resisting the idea. Companies
- that have developed new technologies argue that they don't need
- the project to prove that their designs are efficient and safe.
- Firms whose plans are still on the drawing board are worried
- that the project would leave them out in the cold.
- </p>
- <p> The bickering has left legislators shaking their heads.
- Bennett Johnston, a Louisiana Democrat who chairs the Senate
- Energy Committee, says he may drop a provision to fund
- demonstration projects from a bill he has co-sponsored to speed
- up the licensing of nuclear plants. Sighs a frustrated Senate
- staff member: "This is a hard industry to help."
- </p>
- <p> It certainly is. Of all the genies unleashed by modern
- science, none has inspired more anxiety than the power of the
- atom. As if that were not disquieting enough, the industry has
- long been plagued by what Victor Gilinsky, an outspoken former
- member of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, has called "too
- many deep-dish thinkers," who believed the future belonged to
- nuclear power and often overstated its potential. "It became a
- way of life instead of just a practical way of generating
- electricity," Gilinsky says. "The whole thing just became too
- ponderous, instead of practical and sensible."
- </p>
- <p> Now the U.S. must decide just how practical and sensible
- nuclear power--and other sources of energy--really are.
- Nukes worry the public far more than they worry scientists who
- have studied their technology, yet the decision must be a matter
- of public will. Would Americans rather run the risk of a
- worldwide rise in temperatures or take the chance that steel
- canisters filled with high-level radioactive waste might someday
- leak? Or would they prefer to minimize both risks in favor of
- heavy reliance on efficiency and alternative energy--and then
- not be sure the lights will come on when they flick a switch?
- </p>
- <p> The choice should not seem anguished. After all, it's
- about how to improve the lives of a growing number of people in
- an expanding economy. But following any course will require
- years of commitment--and as projections of electricity demand
- soar, there is no time to lose.
- </p>
- <p>OF TWO MINDS
- </p>
- <p>Which of these energy sources should the U.S. rely on most
- for its increased energy needs in the next ten years?
- <table>
- <row><cell type=a>Nuclear<cell type=i>40%
- <row><cell>Oil<cell>25%
- <row><cell>Coal<cell>22%
- <row><cell>Other<cell>5%
- </table>
- </p>
- <p>Do you favor or oppose building more nuclear power plants in
- this country?
- <table>
- <row><cell type=a>Oppose strongly<cell type=i>32%
- <row><cell>Oppose somewhat<cell>20%
- <row><cell>Favor somewhat<cell>22%
- <row><cell>Favor strongly<cell>18%
- </table>
- </p>
- <p>Which of these issues in building nuclear plants do you deem
- "very serious"?
- <table>
- <row><cell type=a>Disposal of radioactive waste<cell type=i>89%
- <row><cell>Plant workers' safety<cell>77%
- <row><cell>The possibility of an accident<cell>75%
- <row><cell>The plant's cost<cell>56%
- </table>
- </p>
- <p>[From a telephone poll of 1,000 American adults taken for
- TIME/CNN on April 10-11 by Yankelovich Clancy Shulman. Sampling
- error is plus or minus 3%. "Not sures" omitted.]
- </p>
- <p>WHO'S GONE NUCLEAR?
- </p>
- <p>Percent of electricity derived from nuclear power*
- <table>
- <row><cell type=a>France<cell type=i>75%
- <row><cell>Belgium<cell>60%
- <row><cell>Bulgaria<cell>36%
- <row><cell>Germany<cell>33%
- <row><cell>Japan<cell>27%
- <row><cell>U.S.<cell>21%
- <row><cell>Britain<cell>20%
- <row><cell>U.S.S.R.<cell>12%
- </table>
- </p>
- <p>* 1990 figures.
- </p>
- <p>Source: International Atomic Energy Agency; U.S. Council for Energy Awareness.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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