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Power Earth

Keep Nuclear Power Plant Open, Urge 79 Scientists, Academics and Entrepreneurs (sanluisobispo.com) 177

A California newspaper covers "pleas" to the state's governor to delay the closure of a nuclear power plant: On Thursday, Dr. Steven Chu, former U.S. Secretary of Energy under the Obama administration and a Nobel laureate, and more than 79 scientists, academics and entrepreneurs sent a letter to [California governor] Newsom urging him to find a way to keep the plant open because of the necessary carbon-free, clean electricity it provides to the state's electricity grid. Diablo Canyon currently provides about 18,000 gigawatt-hours of clean electricity annually, comprising of about 10% of the state's electricity portfolio....

The letter was sent by the nonprofit foundation Save Clean Energy, which was organized primarily to protest the closure of the nuclear power plant.... The letter details how Diablo Canyon is critical to the state's clean energy goals, which the state is legally mandated to meet, and how it seems unlikely the state will be able to meet those goals with the plant's current scheduled decommissioning beginning in November 2024, when the first of its two Nuclear Regulatory Licenses expires.... The movement to keep Diablo Canyon nuclear power plant open has recently gained new traction after a Stanford and Massachusetts Institute of Technology report released in November claimed operating the plant for 10 years beyond its expected closure would significantly help the state meet its clean energy goals.

In a statement sent to The Tribune in December, a spokesperson for Newsom indicated the governor has no intention of delaying the closure of Diablo Canyon. "California has the technology to achieve California's clean energy goals without compromising our energy needs. The pathway is through diverse renewable energy sources, expanded energy storage and grid climate resiliency," Newsom spokesperson Erin Mellon wrote in an email to The Tribune. "Our retail energy providers are already in the process of procuring new energy projects to replace the energy produced by Diablo Canyon."

Thanks to long-time Slashdot reader gordm for sharing the link
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Keep Nuclear Power Plant Open, Urge 79 Scientists, Academics and Entrepreneurs

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  • Let them close it (Score:2, Interesting)

    by iggymanz ( 596061 )

    Let's see what happens when ten percent of a states power generation disappears. Worked out great for Germany, coal power has shot up to number one slot for electricity.

    • Re: (Score:2, Flamebait)

      by stooo ( 2202012 )

      Hmm no. Biggest electricity generation is wind in Germany.
      https://strom-report.de/strom/... [strom-report.de]
      Coal is consistently lowering, every year since 2010.

      • Re:Let them close it (Score:5, Informative)

        by stabiesoft ( 733417 ) on Sunday February 06, 2022 @01:32PM (#62243159) Homepage
        Nope, not late last year. 32% Q32021 vs 26% 2020. Even Germany is price sensitive. https://www.dw.com/en/coal-and... [dw.com] And wind is a problem. TX is very wind friendly. In fact more so than Germany (TX 23% https://www.statesman.com/stor... [statesman.com]) vs Germany 17% (Q3 2021 from above link). The problem for TX (and I believe Germany as well) is often when it is very cold, the wind does NOT blow. This past cold snap was an example. Friday night was the coldest night. Wind gen dropped to around 7GW just when it was most needed. Last night was also cold, but a couple degrees warmer than Friday. Wind was 13GW at the peak consumption 8am moment this morning (57GW load) and closer to 20GW at midnight when the load was less at 51GW. So 6GW increase in demand but supply dropped 7GW. It is also not very predictable, which is a problem because except for peaker plants the plant takes time to ramp up/down. So what you end up with is much more excess capacity when the wind is blowing when unexpected and much less reserve when it is not blowing when you expected. Which in reality means you run more thermal reserve all the time than you would without all the dynamic generation like wind.

        And then you have cases like this past cold snap where ERCOT in order to avoid egg on their face was ramp reserves up to 9GW instead of the more normal 3-5. That reserve comes from keeping fossil fuel plants fired. You really have to watch sites such as ERCOT (https://www.ercot.com/gridmktinfo/dashboards) to get a flavor the realities of power generation/consumption. You see pricing along with consumption/generation over time. I like that ERCOT splits out wind/solar but it would be nice if they split out nuke/hydro/coal/nat gas as well on a time basis to see what else is going on the grid. I've no doubt they have the info.
      • by Uecker ( 1842596 )

        Electricity Production in Germany 2021
        renewables 236.7 TWh
        lignite 108.3 TWh
        coal 54.3 TWh
        nuclear 69.0 TWh
        gas 89 TWh
        oil 4.8 TWh
        other 22.4 TWh
        net exports 19.2 TWh

        Use of coal and lignite iis continuously falling since two decades.

        Official source: https://ag-energiebilanzen.de/ [ag-energiebilanzen.de]

      • There are two ways to look at Germany's power production [cleanenergywire.org]: power generation capacity measured in GW and gross power production measured in TWh. Based on capacity, wind represents 64.1 GW, solar 58.4 GW, and coal 44.0 GW. However, wind and solar capacity is not 24/7, so the gross power production is 117.3 TWh for wind, 51.2 TWh for solar, and 162.2 TWh for coal.

    • by Ichijo ( 607641 )
      Germany didn't have a smart grid.
    • Worked out great for Germany, coal power has shot up to number one slot for electricity.

      It's easy to talk about percentages. Why not instead talk about absolutes since that is ultimately what matters:
      2010 Coal consumption: 3.23 exajoules.
      2012 Coal consumption: 3.35 exajoules (as nuclear power phaseout got serious, oh no it went up marginally and became the number 1 energy source).
      2017 Coal consumption: 3.01 exajoules
      2019 Coal consumption: 2.25 exajoules

      They seem to be having no problem reducing coal consumption while also shutting down nuclear power plants. So yes, it's working out great for G

      • They seem to be having no problem reducing coal consumption while also shutting down nuclear power plants. So yes, it's working out great for Germany.

        Except for being Vladimir Putin's beeatch with their need for Russian gas exports.

        • Welcome to what is know as "the world". Germany has no uranium reserves, so whose bitch you prefer they be by keeping nuclear open?
          Or maybe you're suggesting that it should be a matter of national pride that Germany burns its fuckton of lignite? That would be stupid.

          • Germany has no uranium reserves, so whose bitch you prefer they be by keeping nuclear open?

            Other NATO members, or at least civilized countries who are not a global security threat, would be a better strategic bet. Canada has lots for instance, and no risk of us invading your neighbors either.

          • Germany has _HUGE_ uranium reserves. However they are in the east, so most people never learned that in school.

        • by Uecker ( 1842596 )

          Electricity production from gas in Germany:
          2010 88.8 TWh
          2015 61.5 TWh
          2017 86.0 TWh
          2018 81.6 TWh
          2019 90.0 TWh
          2020 95.0 TWh
          2021 89.0 TWh
          So while varying did not really increase substantially after the nuclear exit. But what most people miss is that gas use for electricity is just a very small part of overall gas use. So having more or less nuclear has essentially no impact about this.
          BTW: While Russia is the largest gas exporter, the US is not far behind.

        • Germany does not need Russians exports.
          Most gas is transported to other countries anyway, we are only the hub.

          Gas is used for heating, and cooking. Gas usage for electricity is extremely low.

            • I do cot click on links that have no comment ... should be clear, or not?

              But if you like to click on links with no comment, try this one: https://bild.de/ [bild.de]

              • I do not click on links that have no comment ... should be clear, or not?

                Seems rather closed minded. Sometimes links say all that needs to be said. In this case you don't even need to click on it - that particular link says all that needs to be said just by hovering your mouse over it.

                "germanys-reliance-on-russian-gas-limits-europes-options-in-ukraine-crisis"

                As for your link, I guess time will tell. Nordstream 2 should not exist, should never have even been contemplated. Would be nice if Biden can shut it down. Comes at no cost to America or Americans. Germans, well,

    • coal power has shot up to number one slot for electricity.
      No it has not. It is at the lowest it ever was. And you were corrected about your mistake minimum 100 times. So: you simply plain lying by reiterating your "wrong believe" or what ever you want to call it.

  • ..however, the problem in this case is that Diablo Canyon, if I remember correctly, is build on a faultline, and therefore is vulnerable to damage from an earthquake. It'd be throwing the dice whether it'll be okay for 10 more years.
  • Earthquakes (Score:3, Informative)

    by Smonster ( 2884001 ) on Sunday February 06, 2022 @01:26PM (#62243151)
    Nuclear power certainly is part of the carbon free solutions to power. Anyone arguing otherwise is not being rational. It should be all of the above. However, it needs to be located in areas with plenty of water and minimal earthquake risks. The Diablo Canyon plant does not fit the bill. And frankly neither does pretty much any place else in California.
    • Anyone who thinks California should be importing power has clearly forgotten what happened with Enron.
      • Re: Earthquakes (Score:4, Insightful)

        by thegarbz ( 1787294 ) on Sunday February 06, 2022 @03:08PM (#62243467)

        Anyone who thinks California should be importing power has clearly forgotten what happened with Enron.

        Are you attempting to counter a technical discussion with stupidity in the financial sector? Don't do that. That is whataboutism. Solve the problems which allowed Enron to happen, don't just abstain from the technical solution that works perfectly fine all over the world.

        Trading power isn't rocket surgery, brain science, or even magic.

  • by gordm ( 562752 ) <gordonmcdowell@gmail.com> on Sunday February 06, 2022 @03:22PM (#62243515) Homepage

    Carbon Footprints carbon lifecycle 2021 study by UNECE LCA
    https://unece.org/sites/defaul... [unece.org] ...put nuclear at 6g CO2eq /kWh.

    The UNECE 2020 is represented here on Wikipedia with a nice table (2nd table down):
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

    It shows nuclear as THE LOWEST CARBON source of electricity /kWh. That's LIFECYCLE.

    I see some comments here about some particular part of the nuclear lifecycle that the poster assumes UNECE overlooked? No, that's typical anti-nuclear FUD.

    LIFECYCLE means LIFECYCLE. Nuclear IS LOW CAROBN. According to UNECE, it is THE LOWEST.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      The second table down is for the EU, and doesn't account for decommissioning because at the time of the report it hadn't been completed yet. In fact much of it won't be completed in our lifetimes, e.g. the UK's old reactors won't be cleaned up until near the end of the century in the most optimistic case.

      The IPCC table, the first one, is much more useful. As you can see it gives a range of values for nuclear, depending mostly on the fuel cycle. It can be on a par with wind energy, but can also be much much

  • Pro-nuclear spam from an astroturf operation, anybody?
  • Desalination plants on the coast too
  • Such a tiny number means there is not good reason to keep it running beyond some specialized interest by some people.

  • by Snotnose ( 212196 ) on Sunday February 06, 2022 @05:12PM (#62243869)
    Classic case of do what I say, not what I do. Look at his mask wearing. He almost got impeached last year for not wearing one (he really needs to thank Larry Elder for surviving that recall, had Larry not been the top runner for replacement Gavin would have sweated a lot more). Look at the Rams playoff game last week, it's clear he wasn't wearing a mask most of the time.

    I live in San Diego, our energy prices have skyrocketed recently. I'm in a 1 bedroom apartment, nothing has changed in the last 2 years, but my SDG&E bill has gone from about $25/month last year to $55 last month.
    • Hmm. I have a relative in San Diego that told me to "watch out" for sky-rocketing electric bills. Soon, LA followed, and a company called "Enron" entered the news-cycles. I wonder if SD is a canary? I will keep this in mind as I budget for the next year.

  • Keeping the old nuclear plants alive past their expected life may be necessary but it does seem dumb. At the time most of these plants were designed the technology was still quite immature. The plants are old and could very well have surprises. What is needed is a program to build new plants that can, like wartime production, be manufactured quickly and deployed to replace the plants still burning fossil fuels. Wind and solar will not fill the bill, unless one is prepared to be planet-bound and revert to an

    • If wind was enough for the voyages of our forefathers, it should be enough for our children ;)

  • Covid-19: Trust the science Nuclear Energy: Don't trust the science Which science are we to believe?
  • ... but this is a religious matter, not a matter for facts and logic.

    Saint Solar and Our Lady of Hydro are not going to tolerate your energy apostasy. All things nuclear are of the evil one.

  • Any rational person will realize fairly soon (insightful people have realized it for at least 20 years) that nuclear fusion (barring some unexpected breakthrough in fission in the next 30 years which would be foolish to count on as that would be, well, "unexpected") must be part of the solution if the world is going to dramatically cut CO2 emissions.

    It will seem really foolish to be building new nuclear plants and waiting for them to come online while we are still in the process of decommissioning Diablo Ca

    • by dcw3 ( 649211 )

      You won't see fusion powering anything in your lifetime. Some day, yes, but it's a long way off still. It's been promised for decades and progress has been slow.

  • CA, and the West, needs to add a great deal of desalinated water. Add in.the need to shut down their nat. Gas power.

"If it ain't broke, don't fix it." - Bert Lantz

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