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Science/Tech
See other Science/Tech Articles

Title: Small Modular Nuclear Reactors By 2022 -- But No Market For Them
Source: Forbes
URL Source: http://www.forbes.com/sites/jeffmcm ... y-2022-but-no-market-for-them/
Published: May 25, 2012
Author: Jeff McMahon
Post Date: 2012-05-25 14:58:50 by Original_Intent
Ping List: *US INDUSTRIAL WAR MACHINE*     Subscribe to *US INDUSTRIAL WAR MACHINE*
Keywords: Nuclear, Reactor, Death, Machine
Views: 40

The Department of Energy will spend $452 million—with a match from industry—over the next five years to guide two small modular reactor designs through the nuclear regulatory process by 2022. But cheap natural gas could freeze even small nuclear plants out of the energy market well beyond that date.

DOE accepted bids through Monday for companies to participate in the Small Modular Reactor program. A number of reactor manufacturers submitted bids, including NuScale Power and a collaboration that includes Westinghouse and General Dynamic.

“This would allow SMR technology to overcome the hurdle of NRC certification – the ‘gold standard’ of the international nuclear industry, and would help in the proper development of the NRC’s regulatory framework to deal with SMRs,” according to Paul Genoa, Senior Director of Policy Development at the Nuclear Energy Institute.

Genoa’s comments are recorded in a summary released today of a briefing given to Senate staff earlier this month on prospects for small modular reactors, which have been championed by the Obama Administration.

DOE defines reactors as SMRs if they generate less than 300 megawatts of power, sometimes as little as 25 MW, compared to conventional reactors which may produce more than 1,000 MW. Small modular reactors can be constructed in factories and installed underground, which improves containment and security but may hinder emergency access.

The same summary records doubt that SMRs can compete in a market increasingly dominated by cheap natural gas. Nuclear Consultant Philip Moor told Senate staff that SMRs can compete if natural gas costs $7 to $8 per million BTU—gas currently costs only $2 per MBTU—or if carbon taxes are implemented, a scenario political experts deem unlikely.

“Like Mr. Moor, Mr. Genoa also sees the economic feasibility of SMRs as the final challenge. With inexpensive natural gas prices and no carbon tax, the economics don’t work in the favor of SMRs,” according to the summary.

The SMRs most likely to succeed are designs that use the same fuels and water cooling systems as the large reactors in operation in the U.S. today, according to Gail Marcus, an independent consultant in nuclear technology and policy and a former deputy director of the Department of Energy Office of Nuclear Energy, simply because the NRC is accustomed to regulating those reactors.

“Those SMR designs that use light water cooling have a major advantage in licensing and development [and] those new designs based on existing larger reactor designs, like Westinghouse’s scaled‐down 200 MW version of the AP‐1000 reactor, would have particular advantage.”

This is bad news for some innovative reactor designs such as thorium reactors that rely on different, some say safer, fuels and cooling systems.

Senate staff also heard criticism of the Administration’s hopes for SMRs from Edwin Lyman, Senior Scientist in the Global Security Program at the Union of Concerned Scientists:

The last panelist, Dr. Lyman, provided a more skeptical viewpoint on SMRs, characterizing public discussion on the topic as “irrational exuberance.” Lyman argued that, with a few exceptions, safety characteristics were not significantly better than full‐size reactors, and in general, safety tended to rely on the same sorts of features. Some safety benefits, he stated, also declined as reactor power approached the upper bound of the SMR category….

Lyman argued that the Fukushima disaster should lead to a “reset” in licensing. In his opinion, the incident exposed numerous weaknesses in how nuclear power is regulated, and in order to remedy these oversights, regulation should be revisited


Poster Comment:

I posted this not so much for what the article says but what it doesn't say. That is no mention of the tabletop fusion generator developed in Italy.

It looks like the PTB are busy trying to bury it in the memory hole. Also I think they are worried because the massive radiation releases from the Fukushima reactors are now having a planet wide impact. Radiation levels in food are increasing not just in Japan but all over the Northern Hemisphere. This is increasing the growing tide of resistance to the construction of any new Fission Reactors and the deadly waste they create.

However, the issue of technology suppression is an important one because it highlights a couple of related issues. - Smart Meters and The Electric Grid concept in general.

The electric grid is also a control grid on a number of levels. First is the implied threat of shutting off someone's electricity, or an entire area, and then there is the issue of the Smart Spy Meters which allow monitoring of electric use, appliances, and provide another window into your home.

The "Grid" poses another problem for freedom in that frequencies can be piggy-backed on the electrical signal and transmitted over the grid and into your wiring in your walls - things like mood control frequencies. With the existing wires there is currently no reason that you could not have cable or internet access through your electrical wiring other than the PTB evidently do not want people to connect the two in their minds.Subscribe to *US INDUSTRIAL WAR MACHINE*

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