The World's #1 Renewable Energy Network for News & Information
Sign In or Register
Renewable Energy World Logo
Thursday, May 23, 2013
  • Sections
    • Home
      • News
      • Opinion & Commentary
      • Featured Blogs
      • Research & Reports
      • Video
      • Press Releases
      • All Blogs
      • Events
      • Products
      • Finance
    • Solar
      • News
      • Opinion & Commentary
      • Featured Blogs
      • Research & Reports
      • Video
      • Press Releases
      • All Blogs
      • Events
      • Products
      • Finance
    • Wind
      • News
      • Opinion & Commentary
      • Featured Blogs
      • Research & Reports
      • Video
      • Press Releases
      • All Blogs
      • Events
      • Products
      • Finance
    • Geothermal
      • News
      • Opinion & Commentary
      • Featured Blogs
      • Research & Reports
      • Video
      • Press Releases
      • All Blogs
      • Events
      • Products
      • Finance
    • Bio
      • News
      • Opinion & Commentary
      • Featured Blogs
      • Research & Reports
      • Video
      • Press Releases
      • All Blogs
      • Events
      • Products
      • Finance
    • Hydro
      • News
      • Opinion & Commentary
      • Featured Blogs
      • Research & Reports
      • Video
      • Press Releases
      • All Blogs
      • Events
      • Products
      • Finance
    • Careers
    • Companies
      • Company Directory
      • Press Releases
      • Products
      • Events Calendar
      • White Papers
    • Webcasts
      • Upcoming Webcasts
      • Featured Webcasts
      • Archived Webcasts
      • Events Calendar
    • White Papers
    • Magazines
      • Renewable Energy World
      • Wind Technology
      • Large Scale Solar
      • Hydro Review
      • HRW - Hydro Review Worldwide
      • Renewable Energy World (North America Edition)
      • Photovoltaics World
    • Awards
  • Account
    • Sign In
    • Register
  • Search
Don't Miss The Great Solar Debate: Where Does the Global Solar Industry Stand? Click Here to Register! ×

The Future of Nuclear Power in California

Tam Hunt, Contributor
July 05, 2012  |  14 Comments

It's not been a good year for nuclear power. A federal court recently found that local storage solutions for nuclear waste, kept currently at each power plant where the waste is produced, have not been shown to be safe. The Nuclear Regulatory Commission, the federal agency that regulates nuclear power, must complete a full review or explain why one is not required.

Perhaps more seriously, the San Onofre nuclear plant (SONGS), owned and operated jointly by Southern California Edison and San Diego Gas & Electric, has been shut down since January due to unexpected and unexplained erosion of numerous pipes in its power generators. It is unclear when SONGS will be re-started – if ever. The power generators were almost new, having just been replaced in 2010 at a cost of $680 million, charged directly to us, the electricity ratepayers of California. This expense came on top of the many billions required for construction and other expenses.

Last year, of course, Japan’s unfortunate accidents with its Fukushima nuclear plants illustrated the potential harm that nuclear plants can wreak – and the inability of even the world’s best engineers to plan for all possible eventualities. As I wrote in a piece earlier this year, a number of countries are now phasing out nuclear power entirely as a consequence of Fukushima.

California is now considering how to respond to the SONGS shutdown. Do we need more power plants, or at least better local capacity, and if so what kinds of power plants should be built to replace SONGS? Should the Diablo Canyon nuclear plant, located near San Luis Obispo and owned and operated by PG&E, also be shut down due to lingering safety concerns related to local earthquake faults? 

There are many questions and no easy answers. I’ve recommended previously that California agencies, as a first step, analyze how California could in theory cope without nuclear power. The California Independent System Operator (CAISO) has completed detailed modeling of various scenarios, in order to inform the California Public Utilities Commission long-term planning process. These scenarios don’t currently include a nuclear-phaseout scenario but they should. This new scenario planning would be the first responsible step to dealing with the SONGS issues and broader nuclear safety issues. 

The previous detailed state-wide modeling completed by CAISO for the CPUC’s long-term planning found that we have a huge surplus of power state-wide, and we will very likely maintain this surplus through 2020 even as we reach 33 percent renewables. It seems, given this huge state-wide surplus, that we could probably phase out nuclear over the next decade without much difficulty, at least with respect to keeping the lights on.

However — and this is an important “however” — CAISO recently completed a survey of the backup power available in the SONGS area and concluded that there may some cause for concern with respect to locally available backup capacity: “The absence of the San Onofre nuclear plant does not create system-wide issues but does create local reliability issues because of transmission constraints that limit imports into the Los Angeles Basin and San Diego areas.” The issue of local power needs is far less clear than the state-wide discussion. 

Some policymakers and advocates are currently considering the merits of investing heavily in transmission resources, in order to ensure that the power surplus available in California more generally can reach the areas where it’s needed, like the SONGS area. However, a very important part of this conversation must be consideration of non-transmission alternatives, such as local power options, known as “wholesale distributed generation,” demand response, and energy efficiency. Wholesale distributed generation (WDG) is defined as renewable energy generated close to load.

Numerous examples support the ability of WDG to come online quickly and massively — with the right policies in place. California itself has demonstrated this clearly, back in the 1980s and 1990s, during which time we added over 10,000 megawatts of new renewable energy generation from geothermal, wind, biomass, hydro and solar power. This transformation of our power sector was made possible due to California’s robust, first-of-its-kind “feed-in tariff,” which provides a power purchase contract to any renewable energy developer meeting certain criteria. The contract provides a set payment over a set period. The major benefit of feed-in tariffs (FIT) is certainty, which every business knows is the key to successful markets.

(FITs are also known as CLEAN policies now, which stands for Clean Local Energy Available Now, part of an attempt to re-brand the name for better popular support.)

California’s experience with its FIT in the 1980s and 1990s led to jurisdictions like Germany, Italy, Spain, Portugal, China, the UK and dozens of other countries, adopting their own robust FITs. FITs are now the preferred policy mechanism around the world for bringing renewable generation online quickly and efficiently. Wisely implemented FITs can also be more cost-effective than alternative policies like tender systems or auctions because of the greater market certainty, and thus far lower risk to developers and financiers, that FITs provide. 

Along with the nuclear-phaseout scenario planning mentioned above, California should enact a robust FIT sufficient to replace at least the capacity of SONGS. This will, among other things, ensure that our power grid is strengthened through large amounts of local capacity, in the SONGS power area and elsewhere around the state. A 5,000 megawatt state-wide FIT program, with clear and certain pricing and expedited interconnection procedures, will achieve many additional benefits as well as ensuring that local capacity requirements are met in the SONGS area.

FITs are not dead yet in California today, but they are dying — unless policymakers wake up to their potential. The CPUC just issued a terrible decision implementing what was already a very weak FIT bill (SB 32), three years after this law was passed. D.12-05-035 weakens SB 32 to the point of undermining the law entirely. The key problem is that the CPUC decision enacted an adjustable pricing mechanism that will ensure a “race to unviability.” This is the case because the price offered to developers will drop so quickly that developers will be heavily incentivized to accept contracts at unrealistically low prices. It’s probably best at this point to scrap the new program under D.12-05-035 entirely and go back to the drawing board with a new bill.

A bill to enact a robust and effective five gigawatt FIT should ensure stable and realistic prices for renewable energy projects 10 megawatts and below. This is a scale that can be built out quickly around the state, if good FIT and interconnection policies are enacted. At the same time, ratepayers should be protected from higher prices than are justified through planned and transparent “degression” of prices, under which prices offered to developers fall steadily as capacity is taken up. This is similar to the policies enacted by D.12-05-035, but the price adjustment mechanism adopted in that decision fails on the details of its implementation, primarily due to the fact that the program is far too small (it added only 15 megawatts to an already-existing but highly ineffective FIT program, for a total of only about 200 megawatts of new contracts state-wide) and the price adjustments occur far too quickly. These are problems that can easily be remedied with a new bill.

The recent events at SONGS have resulted, perhaps serendipitously, in what may be the smoothest path to a nuclear-free future for California. Historically, any discussion of shutting down nuclear plants has been highly contentious in large part because of the many jobs at stake. No major releases of radiation have apparently occurred at SONGS, so this has not to date constituted a major nuclear accident. It was averted before that happened. The shutdown also happened in a way that was completely independent of politics or policy; rather, the shutdown occurred due to bad engineering. Perhaps most importantly, if SONGS is shut down permanently, it is almost a certainty that the many SCE and SDG&E employees at SONGS will be re-deployed elsewhere within those companies and many will probably continue to work at SONGS as it is de-commissioned — a process that can take a decade or more.

In sum, California is looking at a future where nuclear power may be phased out involuntarily, in part or wholly, in the next few years. At the very least, we need to be responsibly planning for a potential nuclear-free future. And at the same time, we should enact a robust and effective feed-in tariff to strengthen our grid state-wide, while also adding numerous jobs, growing our economy, and reducing our greenhouse gas emissions. 

The Los Angeles Times editorial board recently agreed with me, stating: “Now is the perfect time for Edison, and the state as a whole, to begin the planning for a non-nuclear future.”

Image: Atomstop via Shutterstock

14 Comments

Register To Comment
DAVE KINGHORN
DAVE KINGHORN
July 10, 2012
You make my point exactly, jd, we can't even do simple things here anymore, like pay our own basic bills. Preposterous that we would even consider something more complicated like saving the world or changing the climate. I say begin with the simple things first. See if we can do that first. If as you have observed, we can't even do that, then there is no point in discussing anything more complicated.
Sam Salamay
Sam Salamay
July 10, 2012
What happened to us? We have always claimed that our nation had the means whereas anyone can be successful with technologies they work hard to develop. Well friends, we have become a corporatocracy that feeds massive amounts of money to our leaders, the media and their own pockets to keep business as usual. I truly believe when it comes to sheer genius, Eric Lerner has the true passion and American spirit to transform our world. For over 30 years he has developed the true answer to fusion. Please everyone, go to www.lpphysics.com and www.focusfusion.org and discover where we are going pertaining to alleviating COG in our lifetime. As an early pioneer of PV and fuel cells, I can say this disruptive technology is almost there. With very little funding, we can implement commercialization within 5 years.
JD Polk
JD Polk
July 10, 2012
Wow what a perfect solution if only Dave it was that simple...first you must do away with congress...what good are they any way as they get nothing done any more...Let us say for a moment we really could do just that… get rid of congress instead of having elected officials vote on the laws just have them write them then every 90days WE THE PEOPLE VOTE ON THEM maybe we could get something done
like reining in all that spending our government does...
Starting with the congressional pay and this would also end those entire k street lobbyist they would not be anyone for them to lobby any more...
AH!!! what we could do just setting back and dreaming...problem we don't live in a Dream World
DAVE KINGHORN
DAVE KINGHORN
July 10, 2012
The problem with all these subsidies is that they promote wasteful use rather than conservation because they impart the illusion that the the product is much cheaper than it actually is. If we really want conservation, then cut ALL government subsidies and let the end user bear the full cost of the things they choose to purchase, be it energy, food, education, transportation, communication, etc. Why has being proud and willing to pay your own way in life become so politically incorrect? Have we become a Nation of common street beggars?

If you want to save the world, the BEST thing you can do FIRST is to FULLY bear ALL costs of living for yourself and your own family. Do not burden your fellow citizens with subsidized economic choices you can not bear yourself. DO this FIRST... if you can first handle this simple thing, then after its successful completion we can discuss more complicated world issues. But we have US$15 TRILLION to individually bear FIRST. Right now. That's $150,000 for each working person in this country. That's about 3X the average gross individual income. And that has to be done first before any world-saving can realistically happen.
ANONYMOUS
July 10, 2012
Anonymous 10 of 10; Be sure to placard your own house.
ANONYMOUS
July 10, 2012
California is on its way to becoming a third-world state by its own folly. Continuing to distort the energy market with FITs, crazy CARB rulings, and green energy pie-in-the-sky schemes only accelerates the decline. The Golden State is now the state of IOUs and rolling brownouts, and, if it ever achieves 33% renewable energy, will need to be congratulated as the first state to have regressed to the pre-industrial age. Sacramento and Malibu are the bastions of imbeciles. There should be a law that placards be placed on all state government buildings warning that they contain large pockets of artificial stupidity known to cause social dysfunction and economic collapse.
JD Polk
JD Polk
July 10, 2012
And you forgot to mention the 800lb gorilla in the room...for far to long since inception Nuclear has gotten a free ride on the Tax payers back...the cost of the storage of the spent fuel rods in not added to the cost of the generation...if it was you would see a major increase in the TRUE COST OF PRODUCTION...instead our tax dollars pay for it separately...may be we should ask WHY?
F SC
F SC
July 9, 2012
Nuclear fusion is pie in the sky, and will always be so. The idea of having the power of the sun is enthusing. The problem is that the conditions at the center of the sun will destroy any man-made machine. The answer has been to hold the fusing element suspended in mid-air and super-pressurized inside an ultra-powerful magnetic field. The so called advancements are only a reminder as to how far the goal is. Recently they were able to actually get more power out than they put in, a milestone indeed. They were able to do that for less than one tenth of a second, or else the hundred million dollar contraption would blow up. Think about this for a second and try; just try to imagine running the thing cost effectively and reliably for hours every day. I am not even asking for 24-7. If you can imagine it, then congratulations. I can´t.
The government will continue to pour tax dollars into fusion without opposition. Big oil does not care, neither does big coal nor utilities. As far as they are concerned the government can keep throwing money down a pit hole without affecting their cash streams because, unlike real renewables, the technology will NEVER work.
The money spent in fusion should be redirected to projects that are viable, even by a long shot. Fusion is not.
Nuclear fusion is pie in the sky, and will always be so.
Douglas Prince
Douglas Prince
July 6, 2012
JD LIKES CAPITAL LETTERS!!! EEE-GAHHHHH!!!!
JD Polk
JD Polk
July 6, 2012
The real truth my Friend is that we must go away from building Hugh generation plants hundreds of miles from the end user... THAT ERA OF GENERATION IS OVER...THE EMERGING MARKETS WILL NOW GET IT RIGHT BY NOW BUILDING GENERATION AT OR NEAR POINT OF USE...co-generation or demand side depending on how long you have been in this Industry THE NEXT GENERATION OF ELECTRIC GENERATION WILL BE MUCH SMARTER AND BETTER THAN PUSHING CURRENT 200 MILES TO END USER... USA SHOULD HAVE LISTENED TO TESLA...and never built this stupid grid... IE: Millions of people with out electricity right now because of the storms of last week....................... SolarManJD
JD Polk
JD Polk
July 6, 2012
Again Sam "from your lips to Gods ears..." I will be the first one inline to embrace this IF IT REALLY CAN BE DONE... by that i mean in a real full scale nuclear generation station... not in a R&D labratory... The proof is in the pudden.. Build a 1GW plant and show the world....
Sam Salamay
Sam Salamay
July 6, 2012
Focus Fusion leaves No radioactive waste and costs pennies per kw to produce enormous clean energy at 1.8 billion degrees. No need for incentives or grants. The world has been waiting for fusion for over many decades. I believe Eric is closest to implementation. See www.focusfusion.org to learn more. No more fracking, drilling or mining. Coal, Oil, Gas (COG) will die faster than anyone will realize.
JD Polk
JD Polk
July 6, 2012
Well, Well If Eric's process really works may be so...BIG IF THERE... The truth of the mater, that you will not here the Nuclear Regulatory Commission say... Is the cost of the "per KW production" does not include the cost of storage of those fuel rods... NOW LETS STOP LYING TO THE REST OF THE WORLD ABOUT IT... STOP TAKING OUR TAX DOLLARS TO FUND STORAGE AND MAKE THE POWER COMPANIES AND OWNERS AND OPERATORS OF THESE NUCLEAR PLANTS PAY FOR IT....THEN YOU WILL SEE THE REAL COST OF NUCLEAR GENERATION...IT IS FAR MORE THAT ALL RENEWABLES PUT TOGETHER…
Sam Salamay
Sam Salamay
July 6, 2012
Nuclear can live in a wdg world. Focus Fusion is about to become reality based on the extraordinary research of Eric Lerner at Lawrencevile Plasma Physics (www.lpphysics.com). His work will create no radioactive waste using a feedstock of boron and hydrogen in tiny amounts to produce 5 mw's of clean energy. We should concentrate on funding his research immediately to alleviate the current nuclear production and transfer to the distribution model which Eric possesses. This is the direction we must take.

Add Your Comments

To add your comments you must sign-in or create a free account.

  • Create a Free Account!
  • Sign-In
Tam Hunt

Tam Hunt

Tam Hunt is managing member of Community Renewable Solutions LLC, a renewable consulting and project development company focused on community-scale wind and solar. He is also a lecturer at UC Santa Barbara’s Bren School of Environmental...
  • About
  • Articles
  • Blog
  • Contact
  • FOLLOW
  • CONTACT
Stay Connected
         
To register for our free e-Newsletters, create your free account here:

Editors' Picks

  • America's Real Problem with Solar Energy
  • US, Australian Companies Taking Giant Steps for Global EGS Geothermal
  • EU Debate Over Climate Change Policy Could Dampen Renewable Energy Growth
  • Wind Power — Even without the Wind
  • Massachusetts Resets Its Solar Energy Bar, Four Years Early

Most Commented

  • 15
    Fracking and Solar: Friends, Foes or the Bridge to Clean Energy Adoption?
  • 12
    Breakdown: Penetration of Renewable Energy in Selected Markets
  • 8
    San Antonio Solar Fans Delay Introduction of SunCredit Program
  • 6
    Renewable Energy Research Initiative Launched in UK

Total Access Partners

Growing Your Business? Learn More about Total Access
  • AllEarth Renewables
  • Magnum Energy Inc.
  • North American Board of Certified Energy Practitioners
  • Prudent Living, Inc.
  • ReneSola
  • Arena Solutions
  • RBI Solar Inc.
  • Brightergy
News
  • Renewable Energy
  • Solar Energy
  • Wind Energy
  • Bioenergy
  • Geothermal Energy
  • Hyrdo Power
  • Blogs
  • Video
  • Finance
Resources
  • Companies
  • Products
  • Careers
  • Events
  • Webcasts
  • White Papers
  • Magazines
  • Press Releases
  • e-Newsletters
Company
  • About Us
  • Our Team
  • Contact Us
  • Advertising & Services
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Site Map
Network Partners - Magazines
  • Hydro Review Magazine
  • Hydro Review Worldwide Magazine
  • Renewable Energy World Magazine
Network Partners - Events
  • Power-Gen International
  • Renewable Energy World Conference & Expo North America
  • Renewable Energy World Conference & Expo Europe
  • Renewable Energy World Conference & Expo Asia
  • Renewable Energy World Conference & Expo Africa
  • Renewable Energy World Conference & Expo India
  • HydroVision International
  • HydroVision Brazil
  • HydroVision India
  • HydroVision Russia
© Copyright 1999-2013 RenewableEnergyWorld.com - All rights reserved.
RenewableEnergyWorld.com - World's #1 Renewable Energy Network for news & Information