1 / 23

ECONOMICS OF NUCLEAR ENERGY IN A SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT PERSPECTIVE

ECONOMICS OF NUCLEAR ENERGY IN A SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT PERSPECTIVE. Evelyne Bertel OECD Nuclear Energy Agency. SOCIAL. Health hazards. Labour. Environmental awareness. Job opportunities/quality. Energy resources. ENVIRONMENT. ECONOMY. Investment in pollution reduction.

kerem
Download Presentation

ECONOMICS OF NUCLEAR ENERGY IN A SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT PERSPECTIVE

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 OF NUCLEAR ENERGYIN A SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT PERSPECTIVE Evelyne BertelOECD Nuclear Energy Agency 15TH Pacific Basin Nuclear Conference, 15-20 October 2006, Sydney, Australia

  2. SOCIAL Health hazards Labour Environmental awareness Job opportunities/quality Energy resources ENVIRONMENT ECONOMY Investment in pollution reduction Sustainable development framework 15TH Pacific Basin Nuclear Conference, 15-20 October 2006, Sydney, Australia

  3. 15TH Pacific Basin Nuclear Conference, 15-20 October 2006, Sydney, Australia

  4. Framework of the OECD study • Data provided by participants • Technical characteristics • Construction costs and schedule (IDCs),and O&M costs • Fuel price projections • Common levelised cost methodology • Common assumptions • Discount rates [5%, 10%] • Economic lifetime [40 years – for most plants] • Load factor for base-load plants [85%] 15TH Pacific Basin Nuclear Conference, 15-20 October 2006, Sydney, Australia

  5. Scope of the OECD study [1] State-of-the art power plants • Recently completed, or • Under construction in 2003-2004, or • Planned to be connected to gridsby 2010-2015, or • Under consideration [cost estimates exist] 15TH Pacific Basin Nuclear Conference, 15-20 October 2006, Sydney, Australia

  6. Scope of the OECD study [2] • ~ 130 power plants in 21 countries • Coal, gas, nuclear • Wind, hydro, solar • Cogeneration, biomass, waste incineration, … • Costs supported by electricity producers • Investment, incl. refurbishment & decommissioning • Interest during construction • O&M • Fuel, incl. waste management and disposal 15TH Pacific Basin Nuclear Conference, 15-20 October 2006, Sydney, Australia

  7. Out of the OECD study scope • Transmission & distribution costs • Business risks • Externalities, incl. • Damage from residual pollution • Positive value of security of supply • Negative value of carbon • First of a kind (FOAK) design and engineering costs 15TH Pacific Basin Nuclear Conference, 15-20 October 2006, Sydney, Australia

  8. Issues addressed in appendices • Impact of risks on costs • Fuel price trends and projections • Wind power in electricity grids • Carbon emission trading • Generation technologies 15TH Pacific Basin Nuclear Conference, 15-20 October 2006, Sydney, Australia

  9. Overnight construction costs [USD/kWe] Coal Gas Nuclear Wind 15TH Pacific Basin Nuclear Conference, 15-20 October 2006, Sydney, Australia

  10. Nuclear investment costs [USD/kWe] 15TH Pacific Basin Nuclear Conference, 15-20 October 2006, Sydney, Australia

  11. Generation costs at 5% [USD/MWh] Gas Coal Wind Nuclear 15TH Pacific Basin Nuclear Conference, 15-20 October 2006, Sydney, Australia

  12. Generation costs at 10% [USD/MWh] Gas Coal Nuclear Wind 15TH Pacific Basin Nuclear Conference, 15-20 October 2006, Sydney, Australia

  13. Generation cost structure Uranium ~ 5% 15TH Pacific Basin Nuclear Conference, 15-20 October 2006, Sydney, Australia

  14. Cost ranges* [USD/MWh] * Levelised generation costs - excluding the 5% highest and 5% lowest values * Excluding the 5% highest and 5% lowest values 15TH Pacific Basin Nuclear Conference, 15-20 October 2006, Sydney, Australia

  15. Ratios Gas/Nuclear 15TH Pacific Basin Nuclear Conference, 15-20 October 2006, Sydney, Australia

  16. Ratios Coal/Nuclear 15TH Pacific Basin Nuclear Conference, 15-20 October 2006, Sydney, Australia

  17. Main Findings of OECD study • No technology/source is always cheaper for base load electricity generation • The competitive margin of nuclear energy is increasing • Gas is losing ground owing to gas price increase • Wind power is improving but remains seldom competitive 15TH Pacific Basin Nuclear Conference, 15-20 October 2006, Sydney, Australia

  18. Nuclear energy and externalities • Security of energy supply • Nuclear energy is essentially domestic • Fuel inventories are cheap and easy to store • Natural resources are plentiful and well distributed • Environmental protection • Nuclear energy induces no local air pollution • Nuclear energy is nearly carbon free • Waste volumes are small and can be managed safely 15TH Pacific Basin Nuclear Conference, 15-20 October 2006, Sydney, Australia

  19. Greenhouse gas emissions from electricity production chains (gC equiv./kWh) Source: IAEA and NEA 15TH Pacific Basin Nuclear Conference, 15-20 October 2006, Sydney, Australia

  20. Impact of carbon values on generation costsat 10% discount rate US$/MWh Carbon value 15TH Pacific Basin Nuclear Conference, 15-20 October 2006, Sydney, Australia

  21. Concluding remarks [1] • Recent trends • Good performance of NPPs • Revived interest in the nuclear option • Active R-D&D, national & international • Slow pace of new industrial projects 15TH Pacific Basin Nuclear Conference, 15-20 October 2006, Sydney, Australia

  22. Concluding remarks [2] • Changing decision-making landscape • Sustainable development policies integrate economic, environmental and social aspects • Risk issues need attention • Financing • Severe accidents • Long term HLW stewardship • Proliferation and physical security 15TH Pacific Basin Nuclear Conference, 15-20 October 2006, Sydney, Australia

  23. Concluding remarks [3] • Economic competitiveness is no longer an issue for nuclear energy • Oil and gas price trends increase the interest in alternatives to hydrocarbons • Internalising externalities would enhance the competitiveness of nuclear versus fossil fuels 15TH Pacific Basin Nuclear Conference, 15-20 October 2006, Sydney, Australia

More Related