UK:
Fifty new nuclear plants could be goal in official energy plans
Documents
submitted to Department of Energy and Climate Change raise questions
regarding future energy policy
RT,
21
December, 2013
Up
to 50 nuclear power stations could be built under plans being looked
at by the government. The remarkable figure – 10 times the number
the government is openly discussing – is revealed in documents
submitted to the Department of Energy and Climate Change by one of
its own advisory bodies.
The
documents are likely to raise questions as to what extent the
government's energy policy is weighted in favour of nuclear and away
from renewables such as wind turbines. It comes as Brussels begins an
investigation into whether Britain is providing up to £17bn of
potentially illegal public guarantees for the first nuclear power
plant in a generation, Hinkley Point C in Somerset, which aims to
provide 7% of the country's electricity.
In
a submission to a consultation on geological waste disposal, the
Committee on Radioactive Waste Management has said an upper limit of
75 gigawatts of nuclear power is "being examined" by the
DECC in London.
The
current programme announced by ministers is to build 12 reactors to
supply 16 gigawatts at five sites. The higher figure equates to more
than 50 new large-scale modern reactors. The committee has been given
the task of assessing the number of disposal facilities that might be
required for the waste that will be produced by new nuclear power
stations. It notes that the 16-gigawatt programme is only the "first
tranche" and is "substantially below the 75 gigawatts upper
limit being examined in [the Department of Energy and Climate
Change]".
The
upper limit echoes a scenario outlined by the energy department in a
2011 report, outlining its vision for a low-carbon future. It
suggested 75 gigawatts of nuclear power – enough to provide 86% of
UK electricity – could be brought on line by 2050. "Nuclear
energy is vital for our energy security and we want it to be part of
the energy mix in the future, alongside renewables and clean coal and
gas," a department spokeswoman said. "It's important to
model potential scenarios to plan for our future energy needs, but we
haven't set any targets for the amount of new nuclear to be
developed."
But
Dr David Lowry, an environmental policy consultant and nuclear
specialist, said the 75-gigawatt scenario was a "nuclear
fantasia at it worst", and failed to explain how huge amounts of
radioactive waste generated by the plants would be stored.
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