Luke Metzger
Executive Director, Environment Texas
Executive Director, Environment Texas
SAN ANTONIO – Far from a solution to global warming, nuclear power will actually set America back in the race to reduce pollution, according to a new report by Environment Texas. Leading environmental organizations, consumer groups and energy experts gathered today to release the report and call on the San Antonio City Council, Mayor Castro, the State of Texas, and Congress to focus on energy efficiency and renewable energy instead of nuclear power as the solution to global warming.
“When it comes to global warming, time and money are of the essence and nuclear power will fail America on both accounts,” said McCall Johnson, Clean Energy Advocate with Environment Texas. “With investment dollars more precious than ever, nuclear power is a foolish endeavor that will set us back in the race against global warming. San Antonio can make a real impact on global warming by choosing energy efficiency and renewable energy over the STP expansion.”
Environment Texas’ new report released today, Generating Failure: How Building Nuclear Power Plants Would Set America Back in the Race Against Global Warming analyzes the role, under a best-case scenario, that nuclear power could play in reducing global warming pollution. Some key findings of the report include:
· To avoid the most catastrophic impacts of global warming, America must cut power plant emissions roughly in half over the next 10 years. No new reactors are now under construction in the United States, and building a single reactor could take a decade or longer. As a result, it is quite possible that nuclear power could deliver no progress in the critical next decade, despite spending billions on reactor construction.
· Even if the nuclear industry somehow managed to build 100 new nuclear reactors by 2030, nuclear power could reduce total U.S. emissions of global warming pollution over the next 20 years by only 12 percent. As a result, America would burn through its 40-year electric sector carbon budget – the limit on carbon emissions determined by scientists to be necessary to stave off the worst impacts of climate change – in just 15 years.
· In contrast, energy efficiency and renewable energy can immediately reduce global warming pollution. Energy efficiency programs are already cutting electricity consumption by 1-2 percent annually in leading states, and the U.S. wind industry is already building the equivalent of three nuclear reactors per year in wind farms. America has vast potential to do more.
· Building 100 new reactors would require an up-front investment on the order of $600 billion dollars – money which could cut at least twice as much carbon pollution by 2030 if invested in clean energy. Taking into account the ongoing costs of running the nuclear plants, clean energy could deliver as much as 5 times more pollution-cutting progress per dollar overall.
· Nuclear power is not necessary to provide clean, carbon-free electricity for the long haul. The need for base-load power is exaggerated and small-scale clean energy solutions can actually enhance the reliability of the electric grid.
“We can spend $600 billion on nuclear power and fail to reduce enough global warming pollution to make a difference until it is too late,” said Johnson. “Or we could spend the same money on clean energy and achieve twice the carbon reductions at a much faster pace.”
“This new report reiterates that nuclear power is not the answer to reducing San Antonio’s contribution to climate change,” said Energia Mia’s Orlando Gutierrez. “We as city need clean renewable energy and energy efficiency to boost our local economy and truly address global warming.”
To address global warming, city, state and federal policy makers should focus on improving energy efficiency and generating electricity from clean sources that never run out – such as wind, solar, biomass and geothermal power, according to Environment Texas and the coalition groups that attended today’s event.
“Building risky, expensive nuclear reactors is a step backward when solving global warming,” said Andy Wilson, Global Warming Program Director for Public Citizen’s Texas Office. “The answers are simple: efficiency and renewables. For a fraction of the cost of a nuke, we can weatherize homes, creating local jobs and saving San Antonio families money from day one. And while efficiency and renewables have a proven track record of reducing global warming pollution, nuclear cannot make any such claim. The STP expansion is a clunker, and San Antonio shouldn’t wait any longer to ditch it.”
“Nuclear energy remains as flawed an idea today as it was in the 1980’s — the last time it was rejected by the American public,” said Dave Hamilton, Director of Energy Programs at the Sierra Club. “Today we have cleaner, cheaper, faster solutions that we should be investing in before we seriously consider reviving the nuclear dinosaur.”
“New nuclear power investments would actually worsen climate change because the money spent on nuclear reactors would not be available for solutions that fight it faster and at lower cost,” said Peter Bradford, a former U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commissioner. “Counting on new nuclear reactors as a climate change solution is no more sensible than counting on an un-built dam to create a lake to fight a nearby forest fire.”