1 / 17

The Economics of Nuclear Fusion R&D

This article explores the economic aspects of nuclear fusion research and development (R&D) and its potential value in the future energy market. It discusses the impact of energy prices, reserves of traditional energy sources, and the application of capital budgeting in evaluating the worth of nuclear fusion. The article also introduces the Black-Scholes option pricing formula as an alternative approach to assess the benefits of R&D investments.

Download Presentation

The Economics of Nuclear Fusion R&D

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. The Economics of Nuclear Fusion R&D Jonathan Linton Desmarais Chair in the Management of Technological Enterprises School of Management University of Ottawa Ottawa, On David Goldenberg Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Troy, NY

  2. What Fusion is worth, depends on the future cost of energy: If perpetual motion machines become available, energy prices decline… ... Nuclear fusion could becomes valueless If reserves decline for traditional energy sources and demand continues to grow, energy prices increase… …Nuclear fusion becomes very valuable

  3. Application of Capital Budgeting Need to assume that costs and revenues are known in the future. It is not possible to accurately forecast demand, supply or price of commodities far into the future. It is not possible to forecast the degree of success of an R&D program in the future or the rate of improvement in technology in the future. Attempts to do so are needed, but easily challenged.

  4. An Alternative Approach Consider R&D as insurance against the possibility of high future energy prices Invest in R&D or an R&D portfolio To purchase protection against unattractive energy costs and/or cost volatility

  5. Simplest Case Black-Scholes • N(.) is the standard cumulative normal distribution. • St is the current stock price, • r is the annualized risk-free rate, • s is the annualized instantaneous volatility of percentage rates of return on the stock, • t=T-t is the time to expiration, and • E is the exercise price.

  6. Assumptions of the Black-Scholes Pricing Formula The model assumes that the underlying asset follows a stationary log-normal diffusion process described by the stochastic differential equation: dSt=mStdt + sStdZt where Zt is a standard arithmetic Brownian Motion process.

  7. The Black-Scholes Option Pricing Formula The Black-Scholes formula gives the current value of a European call option, C(St), as: C(St)=StN(d1)-exp{-rt}EN(d2) where d1=[ln(St/E) + (r+s2/2)t]/ssqrt(t) and d2=d1-sqrt(t)

  8. Assumptions (cont.) Under this description the log-normal diffusion process is essentially Geometric Brownian Motion. Black, Scholes, and Merton won the Nobel prize in economics for this model in 1997 under the title ‘for a new method to determine the value of derivatives’.

  9. N(.) • is the standard cumulative normal distribution • no assumptions required

  10. St • is the current stock price • not available for real assets • Consequently, we calculate the real stock price that makes the option attractive

  11. r • is the annualized risk-free rate • we utilize the average annualized Treasury Bill yield.

  12. s • is the annualized instantaneous volatility of percentage rates of return on the stock • this is typically the most difficult part of calculating any option price • historical volatility of same or similar assets is used

  13. t=T-t • is the time to expiration • given R&D spending in 2002 $ and commercialization in 2050 • time to expiration is 48 years

  14. E • is the exercise price • the exercise price is the cost of obtaining the benefit • cost of building and decommissioning nuclear fusion facilities – to meet demands for first fifty years of commercialization • note this involves all fixed costs

  15. Assessment of Needed Benefits to Make R&D worthwhile See: DH Goldenberg and JD Linton, Energy Risk, January 2006

  16. Additional notes on Black-Scholes • If the stock price, the expected savings, is desirable then the R&D should be conducted • Note the stock price does not take into account fixed costs of introduction, these are addressed in the exercise price • The stock price considers time-adjusted revenue minus variable costs

  17. Other Problems that can be considered using Real Options • Advantage and value of conducting research into more than one technology (Max-min option) • Considering R&D as a series of sequential options (Compound option) • Value of postponing certain investments, but maintaining option of conducting R&D at a later time (American option) • Value of developing/maintaining domestic capabilities (Various)

More Related