1 / 35

Economics 331b The Dilemmas of Nuclear Power

Economics 331b The Dilemmas of Nuclear Power. - Electricity is the shmoo* of the energy world. - It can do (just about) everything. - Nuclear power was forecast to be “too cheap to meter.” (Lewis Strauss, chairman Atomic Energy Commission, 1954)

aspen-cook
Download Presentation

Economics 331b The Dilemmas of Nuclear Power

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Economics 331b The Dilemmas of Nuclear Power

  2. - Electricity is the shmoo* of the energy world. - It can do (just about) everything. - Nuclear power was forecast to be “too cheap to meter.” (Lewis Strauss, chairman Atomic Energy Commission, 1954) “Shmoos are delicious to eat and eager to be eaten. If a human looks at one hungrily, it will happily jump into a frying pan, after which they taste like chicken, or into a broiling pan, after which they taste like steak. When roasted they taste like pork, and when baked they taste like catfish. Raw, they taste like oysters on the half-shell.” (Wikipedia)

  3. The rising share of electricity in energy Source: EIA. Primary energy in electricity as share of total.

  4. Prices of different energy carriers Source: EIA and other.

  5. Electricity generation, US, 2007

  6. Key uncertainties in nuclear power

  7. Projected costs of different generation types IEA, Projected Costs Generation Electricity, 2005, Paris, p. 46. Note: highly dependent on assumptions about discount rate and fuel cost. These also exclude all external costs (externalities).

  8. How to calculate “levelized costs” Levelized cost = constant cost that would lead to required return on investment LC = pfuel * fuel rate + O&M + (r + δ + ρ)* pkwe * capacity factor where pfuel * = price of fuel fuel rate = quantity of fuel per kwh O&M = operations, maintenance, storage, other r = real riskfree interest rate δ = depreciation rate ρ = risk premium pkwe = price per kilowatt electric capacity capacity factor = fraction of year in operation

  9. More Detailed on Financial Calculations There are two different approaches in calculating costs: • Social costs (using some normative discount rates): used in Stern Report, cost-benefit analyses for government programs, IEA estimates, etc. • Private costs (using market rates, tax rates and depreciation, risk premiums, etc.): uses in MIT Report, by bank analysts, some energy modeling. The private costs approach: • Assume some traditional leverage ratio, market interest rates, current depreciation practices, etc. • Then calculate a “break-even price” that just makes hurdle return.

  10. The corporate finance of the private approach Assume a debt ratio of λexponential depreciation of δ, no inflation. Risk - free (T - bond) rate is r, risk premium on utility debt is ρb, required return on utility equity is ρb, profits tax rate is τ. We want to calculate a capital recovery factor, z, which is the equivalent of the user cost of capital in macro. The present value of the investment is zero when z is given by: This means that the annual rental per dollar of capital is 19 cents.

  11. External costs Major issue is that pollution and other external costs of electricity production are inconsistently regulated and prices: • Air pollution (SO2, …) • Climate change (differs by country) • Routine releases • Catastrophic accidents (Three Mile Island, Chernobyl, liquefied natural gas [LNG], …)

  12. Overview of estimating externalities Energy services (kwh, vpm, …) Distribution in atmosphere, carbon cycle, climate system, … Energy consumption Valuation: Lives lost x p(life) + Illnesses x p(illness) + Ecosystem harms x p(eco) Emission (pollution of SO2, CO2, release of radioactivity, …) Exposure (human health, agriculture, structures, ecosystems 12

  13. External cost and wholesale price, power, US Wholesale price of power External costs of generation (air pollution, mining accidents, reactor meltdowns, …) Source: Muller, Mendelsohn, 2007; Muller, Nordhaus, Mendelsohn, 2008.

  14. Ratio of External Costs to Electricity Price, Different Generation Types, With and Without Climate Charge Source: Climate priced at $30 per ton C. Electricity at 8.4 cents per kwh. Muller, Nordhaus, Mendelsohn, 2008.

  15. Energy Resources by Type Source: Energy Primer

  16. Nuclear basics U235 + n → fission + 2 or 3 n + 200 MeV

  17. Controlled nuclear fission for a power reactor

  18. Fuel Cycle of Nuclear Power Source: MIT Study

  19. “Connecticut Yankee” nuclear power station

  20. More of the system for a PWR http://www.cleansafeenergy.org/Portals/0/student-pwr.gif

  21. Major issues in nuclear power Source: MIT Study

  22. The most unhappy scenarios 108 TJ = world energy consumption

  23. Major nuclear fatalities Multiple sources

  24. Bomb basics Source: Global Fissile Material Report 2008

  25. Uranium Enrichment Source: Global Fissile Material Report 2008

  26. The role of enrichment in criticality Source: Global Fissile Material Report 2008

  27. Making Plutonium Source: Global Fissile Material Report 2008

  28. Assembling the critical mass for weapon Source: Global Fissile Material Report 2008

  29. Source: Global Fissile Material Report 2008

  30. Map of nuclear programs http://www.isis-online.org/mapproject/worldmap.html

  31. Key to map

  32. Sufficient for 50,000 warheads. Source: Global Fissile Material Report 2008

  33. Nuclear winter Owen B. Toon, Alan Robock, et al., “Consequences of Regional-Scale Nuclear Conflicts,” Science, March 2, 2007, 1224-1225. Early studies suggested that nuclear exchange would lead to global cooling and threaten civilization. These were discredited. A new round of studies in 2007 used more up-to-date modeling. Conclusion was that even limited nuclear war (say Pakistan-India) could have devastating global effects: Fires ignited by nuclear bursts would release copious amounts of light-absorbing smoke into the upper atmosphere. If 100 small nuclear weapons were detonated within cities, they could generate 1 to 5 million tons of carbonaceous smoke particles, darkening the sky and affecting the atmosphere more than major volcanic eruptions like Mt. Pinatubo (1991) or Tambora (1815). Indirect effects on surface land temperatures, precipitation rates, and growing season lengths (see figure) would be likely to degrade agricultural productivity to an extent that historically has led to famines in Africa, India, and Japan after the 1783–1784 Laki eruption or in the northeastern United States and Europe after the Tambora eruption of 1815. Climatic anomalies could persist for a decade or more because of smoke stabilization.

  34. Change in growing season from small nuclear exchange Owen B. Toon, Alan Robock, et al., “Consequences of Regional-Scale Nuclear Conflicts,” Science, March 2, 2007, 1224-1225.

  35. How to minimize diversion of weapons-grade materials 1. Reduce stocks of weapons-grade materials • Technical way is through reducing fissile stocks • Only serious long-run way is nuclear abolition 2. Safer reactor designs and fuel cycle: • Safe fuel cycles are either “battery type” is hub-and-spoke, once-through fuel cycle, or complete new fuel cycle. • To prevent widespread dissemination of “dangerous facilities” and knowledge (particularly enrichment), need international control over fuel cycle and mandatory intrusive inspections. 3. Withering away of nuclear power • This would leave no large-scale non-fossil technology, with the almost certain prospect of major increases in CO2 emissions and global warming Red items are either highly controversial or perilous.

More Related