Energy Efficiency, Renewable Energy Cheaper and Safer than Building
New Nuclear Plants in Florida and Georgia, Report Finds
WASHINGTON (October 6, 2011)—According to a new report, ratepayers in
Florida and Georgia would be better served by investments in energy
efficiency and renewable energy resources, rather than building new
nuclear reactors in those states. The report, “Big
Risks, Better Alternatives,” (PDF) was released today by Synapse
Energy Economics, a Cambridge, Massachusetts-based consulting and
research firm.
The report, prepared for the Union of Concerned Scientists (UCS), takes
a close look at two nuclear power projects: Progress Energy’s proposal
to build Levy 1 and 2 in Florida, and a Georgia Power-led consortium
plan to build two new reactors, Vogtle 3 and 4, at an existing nuclear
power facility in Georgia. Both projects were proposed in 2006 to meet
then-anticipated growth in electricity demand.
The report evaluates both nuclear projects and compares them with other
low-carbon alternatives that could meet projected consumer demand at
lower cost and risk.
“The report shows that there are major risks associated with the
construction of both the Levy and Vogtle projects,” said Ellen Vancko,
UCS’s nuclear energy and climate change project manager. “They include
cost escalation, construction and regulatory delays, and lack of
transparency, all of which could lead to much higher costs for Georgia
and Florida ratepayers.”
The two projects provide illuminating case studies for the next phase of
nuclear power production in the United States. They both would use the
same reactor design—the new, untested Westinghouse AP1000—and are
located in states that allow utilities to recover costs from ratepayers
years before reactors actually produce electricity.
They represent different construction scenarios, however. Levy 1 and 2
would be a new “greenfield” power plant that would not begin to operate
until sometime after 2021; the Vogtle project is an expansion of an
existing plant that is projected to become operational around 2016. They
also have different financing mechanisms. The Vogtle project will
receive two federal subsidies: an $8.3 billion loan guarantee and
production tax credits. Progress ratepayers would cover all of the Levy
project’s costs.
If history is any guide, the cost estimates for both plants are likely
to increase dramatically over time, Vancko said. The anticipated cost
and rate impact for the Vogtle project, in particular, could increase
significantly. Georgia Power routinely cites outdated cost estimates
despite significant changes in economic and regulatory conditions over
the past five years. At the same time, the company has refused to
publicly disclose cost and schedule data for the project, hindering any
independent analysis of the company’s justification for building the two
new reactors.
“This lack of transparency, combined with the fact that nuclear cost
estimates have skyrocketed since the plant was first announced, puts
Georgia Power ratepayers at significant risk for major price hikes in
the coming years,” Vancko said.
The Synapse report found that other options are readily available in
Florida and Georgia that could meet energy demand and be implemented at
a lower cost with far less risk to ratepayers. Energy sales growth in
both states has slowed considerably compared with earlier company
projections, making it possible to meet future retail energy sales
growth through increased energy efficiency and renewable energy
development.
The Synapse analysis found that both Florida and Georgia have
significant room to improve their energy efficiency investments. In
2010, Georgia ranked 37th and Florida ranked 30th among the states
across six energy efficiency categories.
The Florida Public Service Commission (PSC) recently approved a
significantly scaled-back demand-side management plan for Progress
Energy that will capture at most 2 percent energy savings over a 10-year
period. If Progress Energy were to pursue an efficiency target of 15
percent cumulative load reduction over the same time frame, it could
maintain its energy load below peak 2006 levels based on its 2010
forecast retail sales. Georgia Power, meanwhile, has no energy
efficiency targets, although the state has large, untapped energy
efficiency potential.
Both Florida and Georgia also have significant potential to develop
renewable energy resources, but neither state has meaningful renewable
energy standards. Studies have shown that achievable renewable capacity
in Florida could account for 4 to 16 percent of electricity sales in
2020, while the renewable energy potential in Georgia could meet much of
the state’s future energy needs—as much as 27 percent of 2008 retail
electricity sales.
Available efficiency and renewable alternatives are not only capable of
meeting projected demand growth for each state at a lower cost than
adding new nuclear capacity, they also would reduce each state’s carbon
emissions. Neither Florida nor Georgia have established carbon-reduction
goals, Vancko pointed out, but the ability of clean energy resources to
reduce these emissions is an important consideration when comparing the
overall impact of these options with the proposed nuclear projects. The
Synapse analysis shows that CO2 abatement through energy efficiency,
natural gas and some renewable energy options would be less expensive
and much less risky than increasing either state’s reliance on nuclear
energy.
“We can’t know with certainty the final cost of any of the options we
evaluated in this report, but we do know that the overall trend for
nuclear projects—and other large-scale construction projects for that
matter—is one of increasing costs, while the overall trend for energy
efficiency and renewable energy projects is one of decreasing costs,”
said Max Chang, the Synapse report’s lead author. “Florida and Georgia
policy makers should reexamine their decision to place the considerable
risks of new nuclear construction on ratepayers when there are
cost-effective, environmentally sustainable alternatives available to
meet their states’ energy needs. Pursuing these alternatives would
enable Florida and Georgia to reliably meet demand growth and reduce
carbon emissions at lower cost and with less risk than those posed by
the proposed Levy and Vogtle projects.”
The Union of Concerned Scientists is the leading U.S.
science-based nonprofit organization working for a healthy environment and a
safer world. Founded in 1969, UCS is headquartered in Cambridge, Massachusetts,
and also has offices in Berkeley, Chicago and Washington, D.C. To subscribe or
visit go to: http://www.ucsusa.org
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