NEW YORK (October 17, 2011) – A wide
range of safer, cleaner energy options is available to replace
Indian Point Energy Center if the nuclear plant is not
relicensed in 2015, according to an independent analysis
commissioned by the Natural Resources Defense Council and
Riverkeeper. Thanks to an energy generation surplus it can be
done at no impact to the reliability of the region’s electricity
supply and at modest cost. A related new NRDC analysis of the
costs and consequences of an accident at Indian Point also
reveals it could cause a catastrophe far worse than the
Fukushima disaster in Japan.
“The world watched the nuclear crisis in Japan with fear and
heavy hearts; no one wants to see a repeat here in one of the
most densely populated regions of the country,” said NRDC
President Frances Beinecke. “Fortunately, we have a wealth of
safer energy sources ready to go that can fully replace the
power from Indian Point. When we consider the human and economic
costs of a nuclear crisis in New York, and the host of benefits
from investing in clean energy, the solution is common sense.”
NRDC’s new risk analysis compares the human and financial
costs of the Fukushima disaster to the potential risks of a
nuclear crisis at Indian Point, and reveals that the U.S.
Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) still underestimates the
danger posed to Indian Point from seismic activity. An accident
at one of Indian Point’s reactors on the scale of the recent
catastrophe in Japan could send a fallout plume south to the New
York City metropolitan area, require the sheltering or
evacuation of millions of people, and cost 10 to 100 times more
than Fukushima’s disaster.
Fortunately, a wide range of alternative energy options are
available today that can replace the full electricity capacity
provided by Indian Point Energy Center. Findings show that
energy efficiency and renewable energy sources such as wind and
solar, alone could meet energy demand in the region. And there
is additional capacity available through new transmission
projects and by making existing natural gas power plants much
more efficient.
Safer Energy Alternatives – Available and Ready to Go
A new report prepared for NRDC and Riverkeeper by economics
consulting firm Synapse Energy Economics examines energy
alternatives to Indian Point. The report finds that there is
currently a surplus of electricity capacity in the regions near
Indian Point, including New York City, and that even if the
Indian Point units were closed when their current operating
licenses expire by 2015, there would be no need for new electric
capacity to meet reliability requirements until 2020. The
replacement options identified in the report are either already
underway or can be implemented well before then.
The report,
Indian Point
Energy Center Nuclear Plant Retirement Analysis; Replacement
Options, Reliability Issues and Economic Effects,
identifies the following conservative estimates of alternative
energy sources that are available to replace Indian Point’s
2,000 MW of electric capacity by 2020:
- About 1,550 MW in savings from new energy
efficiency resources in the Indian Point region,
beyond those that are already planned. Additional savings
are available in the rest of the state.
- Nearly 600 MW of renewable energy capacity to
meet peak electricity demand (and up to 3,000 MW
total capacity) by 2015. In total, more than 6,000 MW of
renewable energy projects like wind and solar are already in
the planning process in the state.
- 8,000 MW from proposed new transmission lines
to bring power to New York City from upstate New York and
other regions, including the already approved 660 MW Hudson
Transmission Line, and nearly 2,000 MW of lines are already
well along in the approval process.
- More than 1,000 MW from increased efficiency at
existing, outdated natural gas plants in New York City,
which involves updating their technology to increase power
output and reduce air emissions and other pollution.
Replacing Indian Point’s capacity can be done on time and
without significant cost increases to consumers. Many of the
projects and initiatives are already underway, and will be built
whether Indian Point closes down or not. Our report estimates
that this transition will likely add about $1 to $3 per month to
consumers’ bills on the low end, or $4 to $5 per month on the
high end. The more reliance on energy efficiency, the lower the
costs will be, and customers who participate in new energy
efficiency programs will be able to lower their bills.
“The more you learn about Indian Point, the more you know it
must close,” said Robert Kennedy Jr., Chief Prosecuting Attorney
for Riverkeeper and Senior Attorney at NRDC. “It’s too old, near
too many people, and too vulnerable to fire, earthquake, outside
attack and a host of other potential disasters. What’s more, we
simply don’t need Indian Point’s dirty, dangerous power: current
surpluses are sufficient to consign Indian Point to the scrap
heap when its licenses expire if not sooner. By the time we
start to need more power – in 2020 – we’ll have at least another
4,500 megawatts in replacement energy and efficiency savings in
place. New York is safer, more secure and simply better off
without Indian Point.”
Risk and Consequence of a Severe Accident at Indian
Point
Indian Point Energy Center is located on the Hudson River in
Buchanan, N.Y., in Westchester County, just 34 miles north of
the center of Manhattan.
NRDC’s report is the first to compare the human and financial
costs of the Fukushima disaster to the potential risks of a
nuclear catastrophe at Indian Point. It provides new information
about the risk and consequences of an accident at this facility,
including maps of radiation plumes.
Of the 104 operating U.S. nuclear reactors, it finds that
Indian Point’s two reactors present extraordinary risks
for three reasons: First, the Indian Point units are located in
a seismically active area without sufficient protection against
losing electricity during earthquakes or other natural disasters
like flooding, hurricanes or tornadoes. Second, very large
populations could be exposed to radiation in the event of a
major accident. And third, owners Entergy Nuclear Northeast have
applied to the federal government for permission to continue to
operate these units for another 20 years beyond their engineered
40-year lifespan.
An accident at only one of Indian Point’s reactors on the
scale of the recent catastrophe in Japan could require the
sheltering or evacuation of up to 5.6 million people in the
metro area, putting them at increased risk for cancer and
genetic damage due to radiation exposure. The plume could
contaminate a swath of land to uninhabitable levels of radiation
down to the George Washington Bridge.
An accident nearly 10 times worse than Japan’s – where there
is a meltdown at only one of Indian Point’s reactors, releasing
radiation on the scale of Chernobyl – could put New York city
residents at risk of 25 times higher radiation doses than a
Fukushima-sized accident, requiring the administration of stable
iodine tablets to 10 million people. In the aftermath of an
accident on this scale, if Manhattan were downwind from the
reactor, it would become too radioactively contaminated to live
in. This more severe accident could also put thousands at risk
for potentially fatal radiation sickness in the Hudson Valley.
Finally, the estimated cost alone for cleanup and
compensation for the crisis at the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear
plants is at about $60 billion and counting, and NRDC estimates
that an accident at Indian Point could cost 10 to 100 times
more. The costs of a severe accident at Indian Point would be
significantly higher here because of the value of real estate
and economic activity that would be lost in its wake.