Full Report
America’s energy future is at stake
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America is facing an energy crisis. Energy costs are rising. Pollution from fossil fuel use threatens our health and contributes to global warming. And America’s dependence on imported energy puts our economy and national security at risk.
Americans have a clear choice this November in the presidential election. Sen. Barack Obama has been a leader in embracing a new energy future for America—one in which we use energy wisely and get more of our energy from clean, homegrown renewable sources. His opponent, Sen. John McCain, on the other hand, has pushed Big Oil’s agenda in Congress, has worked to block clean energy solutions for America, and has consistently voted against policies to encourage renewable energy.
Possibly even worse, Sen. McCain has embraced a risky and reckless scheme to build as many as 100 new nuclear power plants across the country—a scheme that could cost taxpayers hundreds of billions of dollars and do too little to solve America’s energy problems.
Sen. McCain’s nuclear plan: An economic and environmental disaster
Cost: The mother of all subprime loans
Nuclear power plants are exceedingly expensive. The most recent estimates of the cost of new nuclear power plants range from $6 billion to $12 billion per plant. Bloomberg News used industry figures to arrive at a conservative $7 billion per reactor, and estimated that Sen. McCain’s initial 45 new power plants could cost at least $315 billion to build.[1] Moreover, the cost of building nuclear reactors has risen dramatically in recent years—increasing 185 percent between 2000 and 2007.[2]
Much of the money for those reactors is likely to come out of the pockets of taxpayers. The private sector has been reluctant to invest in nuclear power, meaning that taxpayers will need to take on the risk of default to get the plants built. The Congressional Budget Office assumes that 50 percent of all nuclear loan guarantees are likely to default.[3] The construction of 45 plants would leave taxpayers on the hook for more than $126 billion in nuclear loans. If the full 100 plants in Sen. McCain’s plan are built using government-backed loan guarantees, taxpayers could be on the hook for more than $280 billion in failed nuclear loans.[4]
This plan means that every household in America could ultimately end up paying $1,100 to more than $2,400 for failed nuclear loans.[5]
Timing: No new electricity until 2019
America needs to start solving its energy problems right away. But nuclear power plants are extremely complex and require long lead times to build. According to the Nuclear Energy Institute (the nuclear industry’s trade association), the total time to bring a new nuclear power plant online (from applying for a construction permit until the first electricity is generated) is at least 10 years.[6] Even if the first of McCain’s nuclear power plants is started on Inauguration Day, the first electricity from that plant won’t be generated until 2019. By contrast, clean energy alternatives such as energy efficiency, wind and solar power can begin delivering energy quickly. Efficient products can start saving energy in the time it takes to screw in an energy-saving light bulb, while solar panels and wind turbines can be manufactured and installed on timelines ranging from a few months to a couple of years.
Jobs: Not nearly enough
Sen. McCain claims that building 45 new nuclear power plants will create 700,000 jobs.[7] This estimate is wildly different from any real-world estimate of job creation from nuclear plants. By his estimate, each plant will create nearly 16,000 jobs.[8] By contrast, the largest currently planned new nuclear plant, Calvert Cliffs Unit 3 in Maryland, would, by the company’s own testimony, generate 4,000 temporary construction jobs and only 360 permanent jobs.[9] If Sen. McCain is talking about only temporary construction jobs, his estimate is off by at least a factor of four. If he is talking about permanent jobs he is off by a factor of 43. Using the real-world example of the proposed Calvert Cliffs reactor, these are enormously expensive jobs. At our previous estimate of $7 billion per reactor, the temporary construction jobs come at a cost of $1.75 million per job,[10] whereas the permanent jobs are created at a cost of $19 million per job.[11]
Water consumption: Way too much
Many areas of the United States—particularly the West—have too little water to go around. Nuclear power plants use more water than most other types of electricity generation.[12] The operation of 45 nuclear power plants would use 200 billion to 350 billion gallons of water per year.[13] Sen. McCain’s plan ignores the practical impact on local water supplies; it’s one more reason why private investors are unwilling to put their own money behind these projects.
Nuclear waste: Another Yucca Mountain-sized dump, increased shipments through our communities
Nuclear reactors produce dangerous highly radioactive waste in the form of spent fuel. Nuclear waste is one of the most dangerous substances ever created by humans, remaining hazardous for at least a quarter of a million years.[14] No country in the world has developed an effective, safe and permanent way to dispose of this waste.
Sen. McCain’s nuclear power plan would create vast amounts of nuclear waste—enough to fill a second nuclear waste repository the size of the controversial Yucca Mountain dumpsite.
Using recent industry estimates for waste generation from new reactors, we estimate that 45 new reactors would produce 900 to 1,350[15] metric tons of additional waste per year. The licensed operation of 45 reactors for 60 years would mean 54,000 to 81,000[16] metric tons of additional spent fuel that would need to be permanently stored in a geologic repository. If 100 new reactors were constructed, then a total of 120,000 to 180,000 metric tons of spent fuel would be created.
The only proposed site under consideration for the geologic storage of spent fuel in the United States is at Yucca Mountain in Nevada, which has numerous technical problems and is not suitable for highly radioactive waste.[17] But even if Yucca Mountain were to open in 2017, all of its storage capacity is already spoken for. The site will hold waste that already exists and waste that will be created by existing plants before the dump is opened.
Under Sen. McCain’s plan, 54,000 to 180,000 metric tons of additional spent fuel would be generated, meaning that the United States would either need to increase the capacity of Yucca Mountain by 85 to 280 percent, or need to build one to three more similar repositories elsewhere in the country to store the waste.[18] In the 1980s, before choosing Yucca Mountain, Nevada, as the nation’s only high-level waste dump, the Department of Energy had studied sites in Texas, Washington, Georgia, Maine, Minnesota, New Hampshire, Virginia, Wisconsin and North Carolina as potential nuclear waste dumps—suggesting that they could be candidates for a future nuclear waste dumps under the McCain plan.[19]
Many proponents of nuclear power—including Sen. McCain—suggest that reprocessing spent fuel will reduce the need for nuclear waste storage. His statement is untrue. In fact, the current proposal for reprocessing—to separate plutonium from spent fuel and use it as fuel in the type of reactors that we have today—will mean that less waste could be stored in the same amount of space. This type of spent fuel would be so much more radioactive that it would have to be spaced farther apart in a repository. Moreover, reprocessing creates other waste streams that would have to also be stored in a repository. Finally, according to the National Academy of Sciences, reprocessing the radioactive waste that has been generated already at existing nuclear plants would cost $500 billion.[20] Since the nuclear industry has no interest in paying for it, taxpayers could end up picking up the tab yet again.
In order for radioactive waste to be stored at a geologic repository, it will have to travel on roads, rails and barges through large portions of the country. Nuclear waste transportation to Yucca Mountain would affect the road and rails of 44 states. According to the Department of Energy’s plan for the waste from existing reactors, there would be more than 22,000 shipments by rail and truck and almost 3,000 barge shipments over 38 years, averaging out to about 658 shipments per year.[21] (For maps of local nuclear waste transport routes see: http://www.ewg.org/node/20912.) Under Sen. McCain’s plan, the millions of Americans living along nuclear waste transport routes could see up to three times as many shipments of waste through their cities, towns and neighborhoods, with accidents in transport inevitable.
Clean energy: A better way to solve America’s energy problems
If building 100 new nuclear power plants isn’t the answer, what is? America has many ways we can use energy more wisely and get more of our energy from clean, homegrown renewable sources.
For example, by improving the energy efficiency of our homes and businesses, America could cut its use of energy by 25 to 30 percent over the next two decades—while saving money.[22] Meanwhile, America has enough renewable energy potential to supply all of our electricity needs. America has doubled its wind-power generating capacity in just the last two years,[23] and also doubled the amount of energy we generate from solar panels on rooftops.[24]
Investing in clean energy can also renew America’s economy. Renewable energy alone accounts for more than 440,000 jobs in the United States.[25] And investing in energy efficiency and renewable energy keeps our energy dollars at home rather than sending them overseas.
By every measure—cost, safety, environment and economic impact—a clean energy solution makes more sense for America than a massive expansion of nuclear power.
Cost: Clean energy is cheaper than nuclear power
Energy efficiency and renewable energy such as wind are much cheaper sources of energy than nuclear and don’t carry the attending problems of radioactive waste generation and safety concerns. The graph above shows that energy efficiency, in fact, often has a negative cost, saving more money than is spent. While Sen. McCain touts nuclear as a solution to global warming pollution because it emits no carbon dioxide, the chief global warming pollutant, both energy efficiency and wind are far more cost-effective at reducing global warming pollution.[26]
Timing: Clean energy can provide relief right now
While new nuclear power plants will take 10 years to come online, energy efficiency and renewable energy such as solar and wind can begin solving our energy woes much more quickly. Energy efficiency measures, such as switching to compact fluorescent light bulbs. take minutes, while weatherizing a house usually takes less than a month. Installing solar panels on a roof takes about one week, while constructing a large, concentrating solar plant takes a little more than a year.[27] Depending on their size, wind projects can take one to five years.
Jobs: Clean energy will jump-start our flailing economy
Unlike Sen. McCain’s outlandish claims of job creation from nuclear power plants, many recent studies have shown the job creation potential of clean energy alternatives such as renewable energy and energy efficiency. According to one recent study, investing $100 billion in energy efficiency and renewable energy over two years would create more than 2 million new jobs over that time span—many of them good-paying jobs in construction and manufacturing.[28]
State-by-State Job Creation from $100 Billion: U.S. Green Recovery Program (figures are for 34 states)
|
State
|
Total Job Creation for State from Program
|
|
Alaska
|
4,959
|
|
Arizona
|
37,234
|
|
Arkansas
|
19,534
|
|
California
|
235,198
|
|
Colorado
|
32,849
|
|
Florida
|
123,756
|
|
Illinois
|
83,710
|
|
Indiana
|
43,353
|
|
Iowa
|
21,057
|
|
Kansas
|
19,142
|
|
Maine
|
9,132
|
|
Maryland
|
36,739
|
|
Massachusetts
|
42,530
|
|
Michigan
|
61,394
|
|
Minnesota
|
37,429
|
|
Missouri
|
43,047
|
|
Montana
|
6,335
|
|
Nebraska
|
12,766
|
|
Nevada
|
15,021
|
|
New Hampshire
|
9,245
|
|
New Jersey
|
57,228
|
|
New Mexico
|
13,717
|
|
New York
|
131,991
|
|
North Carolina
|
62,015
|
|
North Dakota
|
4,380
|
|
Ohio
|
80,360
|
|
Oregon
|
27,307
|
|
Pennsylvania
|
86,385
|
|
South Carolina
|
28,064
|
|
Tennessee
|
44,942
|
|
Virginia
|
56,459
|
|
Washington
|
42,690
|
|
West Virginia
|
12,149
|
|
Wisconsin
|
37,165
|
The environment: Clean energy is less dangerous and more effective against global warming
Clean energy poses none of the risks to public safety and the environment as nuclear power. And because clean energy solutions—and particularly energy efficiency—are less expensive, we can make more progress in reducing global warming pollution, and do it faster, than we can through a massive expansion of nuclear power.
Sen. John McCain: Despite his claims, failure on clean energy
At the first presidential debate of 2008, John McCain said, “I have voted for alternate fuel all of my time...No one can be opposed to alternate energy.” Had John McCain’s words been true, we would be farther down the road to a new energy future.
In the 110th Congress, Sen. McCain failed to vote on a host of key energy measures before Congress. In 2007, McCain failed to support efforts to increase gas mileage standards for cars, promote alternative fuels, and cut gasoline consumption in America.[29] McCain failed to vote for strong energy efficiency standards for appliances, equipment and lighting,[30] and he failed to vote on measures that would support clean, renewable energy and create millions of new jobs in America.[31] Sen. McCain has also voted against a renewable electricity standard, similar to those now in place in 26 states, that would increase America’s production of clean, homegrown energy.
As a result of these and other votes, John McCain earned a 0 percent pro-environment score from Environment America in 2008 and has a lifetime pro-environment voting record of 30 percent.[32]
Barack Obama: For a clean energy future
Sen. Barack Obama understands the tremendous potential of clean energy technologies to protect our environment, address global warming, and reinvigorate our economy. Sen. Obama has a concrete plan to fast-track clean and renewable energy in the United States. Specifically, he will:
- Invest $150 billion over 10 years in clean energy to create 5 million new “green jobs.”
- Ensure that America is getting 10 percent of its power from renewable sources within four years and 25 percent by 2025.
- Set an aggressive goal to reduce electricity consumption by 15 percent below projected levels by 2020 through aggressive policies to promote energy efficiency—the quickest, cheapest way to address America’s energy challenges.[33]
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About Environment America
We all want clean air, clean water and open space. But it takes independent research and tough-minded advocacy to win concrete results for our environment, especially when powerful interests stand in the way of environmental progress. That's the idea behind Environment America. We focus exclusively on protecting our air, water and open space. We speak out and take action at the local, state and national levels to improve the quality of our environment and our lives.
Paid for by Environment America at www.EnvironmentAmerica.org.
Not authorized by any candidate or candidate's committee.