Feds eye small nuclear reactors for key role in U.S. energy policy
Jun 19 - Global Data Point
The reactors are less than 300 megawatts in capacity and usually
manufactured away from the place they're operated. A handful of
companies are working to design such reactors, though none is ready for
operation yet. Proponents say the reactors, less than a third the size
of a reactor at a standard power plant, could bring the greenhouse gas
and other benefits of nuclear power with a lower cost.
But the same problems that have slowed development of full-size nuclear
reactors to nearly a halt -- safety and cost -- could keep delaying or
even kill the potential for small modular reactors to take off.
The nuclear industry's congressional supporters see a role for the
federal government in enabling development of small reactors
.
"I have long supported and advocated for the development and deployment
of small modular reactors," Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R- Alaska ), chairwoman
of the Energy and Natural Resources Committee , said last month at an
industry conference.
"The potential for this technology in my home state of Alaska is very
exciting -- the size, power potential, and ability to add unit by unit
could be a game changer for small, remote communities that currently pay
extremely high energy costs or to supply power to our military bases,"
she said.
Murkowski said that the federal government has to make sure it doesn't
stand in the way of small reactors, or they might not be viable.
Sen. Lamar Alexander (Tenn.), who chairs the spending subcommittee panel
with authority over energy, said at a recent hearing that federal
research spending should prioritize small modular reactors, part of the
GOP lawmaker's goal to double energy research funding.
Alexander is also a lead sponsor of the Competes Act, which has similar
energy research goals.
The Obama administration is also on board with pushing further
development of small reactors, arguing that it's an essential step to
making major cuts in carbon emissions.
The Energy Department nuclear energy office has named the reactors as
one of its highest priorities for research and development, along with
helping get some of the designs licensed by the Nuclear Regulatory
Commission (NRC).
"Small modular reactors offer the advantage of lower initial capital
investment, scalability, and siting flexibility at locations unable to
accommodate more traditional larger reactors," the Energy Department
stated recently. "They also have the potential for enhanced safety and
security."
The department is working on multiple fronts to help out the industry.
It's dedicating $452 million over six years to help reactors get
licensed, partnering with mPower America to develop a reactor with a
goal of operation by 2022 and working with NuScale Power on its own
reactor development, a program worth $217 million .
The Energy Department also has an industry-wide program aimed at
assisting with licensing.
The nuclear power sector has argued in recent years that the NRC needs
to update its safety regulations to accommodate small reactors,
including reduced licensing fees and more flexibility in staffing
levels, emergency planning zones and other rules.
The NRC says it's ready to start considering applications for small
reactors, and NRC Chairman Stephen Burns told lawmakers in April that
his agency has budgeted to review one application in fiscal 2016.
In May, the NRC voted to adopt a sliding scale for reactor license fees,
which would provide for lower costs for small reactors.
However, the prospect of changing rules for small reactors is troubling
to nuclear safety and security advocates such as the Union of Concerned
Scientists .
Edwin Lyman , a senior scientists with the group, said small reactors
have no safety or security advantages when compared with larger ones.
But since they would produce less power, there is pressure to scale down
the requirements.
"The simple fact is that SMRs have a significant cost penalty compared
to large reactors on a per-megawatt basis because of diseconomies of
scale," Lyman said.
"No utility will want to buy them unless they can be exempted from a lot
of costly regulations that large reactors must meet," he continued. "But
in light of the Fukushima disaster, one must be very wary of the safety
claims made by the nuclear industry, especially for reactor designs that
have never been built or tested."
The Tennessee Valley Authority is hoping to have the first operational
small modular reactor, though the timeline is in flux.
The utility says it's planning to buy up to four reactors to install at
its Clinch River site near Oak Ridge, Tenn.
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