The Promise 10

  • Subscribe to our RSS feed.
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Digg

Friday, 1 November 2013

Nuclear Energy Futures Up at World Energy Congress

Posted on 13:17 by Unknown

Wec-logoInteresting words from the OECD:

Luis Echavarri, director general of the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development's Nuclear Energy Agency, told the World Energy Congress that a survey by the intergovernmental organization of industrialized nations found that 25 of its 34 member nations planned to build more nuclear power plants.

That is despite some nations, including Germany, Italy and Switzerland, having decided to phase out nuclear power after a powerful earthquake and tsunami triggered equipment failure and a prolonged release of radioactive material at the Fukushima nuclear power plant in March 2011.

I’d be less interested if this were a nuclear energy meeting – you expect this kind of thing at that kind of thing – but the World Energy Congress does not have a pro- or anti-agenda – well, sort of, as we’ll see. Still, the speakers are nuclear-specific. It’s how they’re being specific that’s interesting:

Danny Roderick, chief executive of US-based nuclear technology and equipment provider Westinghouse Electric, said the company had eight units under construction and its order backlog suggested the figure would increase to more than 30 in five years.

"In the past six months, we have seen more interest in new plants globally than in the past three to four years," he said.

And from China:

Wang Jun, chief engineer of State Nuclear Power Technology, which is responsible for negotiations on the importation of new nuclear technology, said the Sanmen project, the first of its kind to be commercialized, had faced "some challenges".

He said that after the Fukushima disaster, Westinghouse had performed safety checks on the project, which was validated by State Nuclear Power Technology's independent review. "If the Fukushima scenario happens with AP1000, we can say there will be no large release of radiation," he said.

---

Now, to be fair, the World Energy Congress does seem relatively conservative, fairly wedded to an image of the industry as a static entity:

Although there was a brief call for R&D spending on energy storage technologies, the communiqué [the welcoming address to the Congress] tried to rubbish as 'myths' the notion of peak oil and the idea future global energy demand will be met by renewables as well as claiming global greenhouse gas (GHG) emission reduction targets will be impossible without carbon capture and storage technology (CCS).

That’s either counter intuitive or a bracing corrective, depending on your point of view, but it does seem extremely rearguard.

Another 'myth', according to the WEC, is that GHG reduction targets are achievable, with the organization stating its research predicts emissions will almost double in the most optimistic scenario and could quadruple by 2050, adding current business models cannot cope with the increased share of renewable generation and decentralized systems.

That really doesn’t comport with an increase in nuclear energy implementation, and it takes a large unknown – how economically rising countries will fuel their own industrialization – and kind of tosses it aside. But it is possible the Congress is selling a solution through alarmism:

The principal solution proposed by the WEC – which notes the world's energy 'center of gravity' has shifted outside countries in the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development to nations like China, India, Brazil and Russia – is a wholesale change in focus from energy supply issues to demand management, with the associated incentives, technological advances and policy support such a paradigm shift would entail.

Think grid, not fuel. The future will require that both fuel and grid issue take first seat in the climate change band, but let’s assume the Congress’s seemingly pinched view caused some productive conversation – the start of dialogue, not a woeful forecast graven in stone.

---

The World Energy Council, which hosts the Congress, was founded in 1923. Its motto is “To promote the sustainable supply and use of energy for the greatest benefit of all people.” – very noble indeed. The Congress is held every three years in a different member country, this year in Daegu South Korea, 2007 in Montreal. The last Congress in the U.S. was in 1998 in Houston.

Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to Facebook
Posted in Nuclear Energy | No comments
Newer Post Older Post Home

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)

Popular Posts

  • More of The Best Nuclear Energy News of 2013
    1. The 60th anniversary of Atoms for Peace (and NEI, too) – President Dwight Eisenhower gave the Atoms for Peace speech before the Unite...
  • Shift in Clinton Plant Refueling Cycle Increases Efficiency
    NEI’s Top Industry Practice Awards recognize innovation in the nuclear energy industry. Presented at NEI’s annual conference, the awards h...
  • A Man, A Plan, A Canal–Panama! – Oh, and A Floating Reactor, Too
    Floating nuclear energy stations, highlighted by the Russian effort noted below, are not a new phenomenon and represent a further develo...
  • Nuclear Fusion and Imploding Porcupines
    When the sun makes energy through nuclear fusion, it has the benefit of not having to pay real cash for the energy expended to make more...
  • Nuclear Debate at the Daily Show
    Yesterday, Bloomberg News wrote a story on NEI’s ad campaign and highlighted one TV spot that will air on, among other programs, Comedy Ce...
  • Going to Mars – and Quickly – With Nuclear Energy
    The White House ’s petition site, called We the People , has gained some attention over the last couple of months because – well, let’s just...
  • America’s STEM Crisis Is No Conspiracy Theory
    I can attest that the STEM crisis is real and is causing challenges for the nuclear energy industry. My experiences contradict the conclusi...
  • Energy Plants: An Open and Closed Case
    Oregon's Boardman Coal Plant Our friends over at Coal Power have done a real service, taking a look at energy generation plants set to c...
  • Patrick Moore’s Economic Justice
    Patrick Moore, ex-Greenpeace, sees in nuclear energy an interesting argument for what he terms “environmental justice,” which is true enough...
  • Song of SONGS: The Moral Dimension of Nuclear Energy
    The San Diego Union-Tribune offers an exceptionally interesting op-ed on the closing of San Onofre (which is about midway between San ...

Categories

  • #CNOSummit
  • 123 agreement
  • 2012 Elections
  • 2012 India Blackout
  • 2012 Nuclear Energy Assembly
  • 2013 Nuclear Energy Assembly
  • 2013 State of the Union
  • 316b
  • 60th Anniversary
  • 9-11
  • ABC
  • Advanced Research Projects Agency
  • advertising
  • Africa
  • Agreement States
  • aircraft impact
  • Al Gore
  • Alabama
  • Alan J. Kuperman
  • Albania
  • Alec Baldwin
  • Alex Flint
  • Allison Macfarlane
  • Amber Lyon
  • Amber Lyons
  • Ameren Missouri
  • American Electric Power
  • American Power Act
  • American Wind Energy Association
  • Andrew Revkin
  • Anil Kadkodkar
  • Ann Bisconti
  • AP1000
  • Apple
  • AREVA
  • argonne national lab
  • Arizona Public Service
  • Arizona Strip
  • Arkansas Nuclear One
  • Arnie Gundersen
  • Associated
  • Associated Press
  • Atomic Industrial Forum
  • atoms for peace
  • Australia
  • Babcock and Wilcox
  • Bangladesh
  • Barack Obama
  • Barclays
  • baseload
  • battery 500
  • Belgium
  • Berlin
  • Bezdek
  • Bhopal
  • Bill Gates
  • Billie Garde
  • Billy Jack
  • Bisconti
  • Blogging
  • Blue Castle
  • blue fin tuna
  • Blue Ribbon Commission
  • bluefin tuna
  • Bob Bishop
  • Bolivia
  • Breakthrough Institute
  • BREDL
  • Britain
  • Brown's Ferry
  • Browns Ferry
  • Bulgaria
  • butterflies
  • California
  • California Energy Commission
  • Callaway
  • Calvert Cliffs
  • Canada
  • cancer
  • Cape Cod Times
  • Carbon Emissions
  • carbon tax
  • Caroline Cochran
  • CASEnergy Coalition
  • Center for Advanced Energy Research
  • cesium
  • Charles Till
  • Charlotte
  • China
  • Chip Pardee
  • Chris Crane
  • Clean Energy
  • clean energy standard
  • climate change
  • Clinton Nuclear Power Station
  • Cloud Atlas
  • CNN
  • coal
  • cold fusion
  • Columbia Journalism Review
  • common language
  • Congress
  • Constellation Energy
  • cooling tower
  • cost recovery
  • crocodiles
  • Crystal River
  • CSIS
  • Curio
  • Curiosity
  • CWIP
  • Cyber Security
  • Czech Republic
  • D.C. Cook
  • Daily Kos
  • Daily Show
  • Dale Klein
  • Dan Lipman
  • data centers
  • David Allard
  • David Fitzpatrick
  • David Lochbaum
  • debate
  • defense
  • Denmark
  • Department of Atomic Energy (India)
  • Department of Energy
  • Department of Homeland Security
  • Department of the Interior
  • Design Basis Threat
  • Diego Garcia
  • Dominion
  • Dominion Resources
  • Dominion Virginia Power
  • Dr. Patrick Moore
  • Dr. Robert Peter Gale
  • Drew Griffin
  • Duane Arnold
  • Duke Energy
  • Dwight Eisenhower
  • Earth Day
  • earthquake
  • East Coast Earthquake
  • economic benefits
  • Ed Halpin
  • EDF
  • Edison
  • education
  • efficiency
  • EIA
  • Einstein Medical Center Montgomery
  • Elaine Grossman
  • electric vehicles
  • electricity
  • emergency alert system
  • emergency planning zone
  • emergency preparedness
  • emergency response
  • energy
  • energy diversity
  • energy information administration
  • Energy Northwest
  • Energy Secretary Chu
  • Entergy
  • Entergy Arkansas
  • environment
  • Environment America
  • EPA
  • EPZ
  • Eric Lax
  • Eric Schmitz
  • Ernest Moniz
  • ERO
  • Eskom
  • ethical investing
  • european union
  • Exelon
  • Exelon Nuclear
  • Export-Import Bank
  • Facebook
  • Fairewinds Associates
  • FBI
  • filtered vents
  • Financial Reporter
  • Finland
  • First Energy
  • FitzPatrick Plant
  • FLEX
  • Florida
  • Florida Power and Light
  • Florida State Senate
  • Fluor
  • food critic
  • Forbes
  • Fox News
  • FPL
  • France
  • Francois Hollande
  • Fred McGoldrick
  • Friends of the Earth
  • Frontline
  • Fukushima Daiichi
  • Fukushima Daini
  • fusion
  • Gallup Poll
  • GAO
  • GE Hitachi Nuclear Energy Award
  • General Atomics
  • Georgetown University
  • Georgia
  • Georgia Power
  • Germany
  • Ghana
  • Ginger Zee
  • Global Nuclear Energy Partnership
  • Global Security Newswire
  • gold standard
  • Google
  • Gov. Jerry Brown
  • Governor Jay Nixon
  • Governor Mitt Romney
  • Great Britain
  • Green Bay
  • Green Energy
  • Green Party
  • greenhouse gases
  • Greenpeace
  • Gregory Jaczko
  • grid reliability
  • Ground Water
  • Gunther Oettinger
  • Gwyneth Cravens
  • Hanford
  • Health Physics
  • Health Physics Society
  • heat wave
  • Helen Caldicott
  • Henry Sokolski
  • Heritage Foundation
  • Higher Education
  • Holtec International
  • House Committee on Energy and Commerce
  • House Foreign Affairs Committee
  • HR 2449
  • Hurricane Sandy
  • hydrogen
  • Hyperion
  • IAEA
  • ibm
  • Idaho
  • Idaho National Lab
  • IEA
  • IEEE
  • Illinois
  • incentives
  • India
  • India Ink
  • Indian Point
  • IndyCar
  • INPO
  • Inside Climate News
  • inspiration
  • international trade
  • Iowa
  • Iran
  • Italy
  • ITER
  • Ivan Penn
  • James Hansen
  • James Howard
  • James Lovelock
  • Janette Sherman
  • JANSI
  • Japan
  • Japan. PBS
  • Japanese earthquake
  • Jeff Donn
  • Jim Asselstine
  • Jim Slider
  • Jim Tusar
  • JJ Abrams
  • jobs
  • John Kerry
  • Jon Stewart
  • Jordan
  • Joseph Mangano
  • Jr.
  • Junichiro Koizumi
  • Kashiwazaki-Kariwa Nuclear Plant
  • KEPCO
  • Kewaunee
  • Kuwait
  • KV Racing Technology
  • laser enrichment
  • leadership
  • Lehman Brothers
  • Levy County
  • liberal politics
  • license renewal
  • licensing
  • Lithuania
  • Los Angeles Times
  • low-level nuclear waste
  • Ltd
  • M.V. Ramana
  • Maine
  • Mark Bittman
  • Mark Cooper
  • Mark Hibbs
  • Mark Lynas
  • Mark Tercek
  • Mars
  • Marv Fertel
  • Maryland
  • Massachusetts
  • Matt Wald
  • Megatons to Megawatts
  • meteor
  • methane
  • Michael Moore
  • Michael Shellenberger
  • Michigan
  • Mid-American Energy
  • Mike Childs
  • minnesota
  • missouri
  • MIT
  • Mitsubishi
  • Monica Trauzzi
  • Mothers in Nuclear
  • movie review
  • MOX Fuel
  • mPower
  • MSNBC
  • NA-YGN
  • Namibia
  • Naomi Oreskes
  • NARUC
  • NASA
  • Nathan Myhrvold
  • National Academy of Sciences
  • National Association of Manufacturers
  • National Mining Association
  • National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
  • Natural Gas
  • Nature Conservancy
  • NBC
  • NEI
  • NEI.org
  • Nemo
  • Nevada
  • New Hampshire
  • New Jersey
  • New Mexico
  • new nuclear plants
  • new plant licensing
  • New York Times
  • NextEra Energy
  • Nicholas Sarkozy
  • NIRS
  • No Nukes
  • nonproliferation
  • North Anna
  • Northwestern University
  • NRC
  • Nuclear
  • nuclear arms reduction
  • Nuclear Energy
  • Nuclear Energy Assembly
  • Nuclear Energy Institute
  • Nuclear Energy;
  • nuclear energy.
  • nuclear engineering
  • nuclear exports
  • nuclear option
  • nuclear plant
  • nuclear plant design
  • Nuclear plant security
  • nuclear power
  • Nuclear Power Corporation of India
  • Nuclear Proliferation Prevention Project
  • nuclear reactor
  • nuclear regulatory commission
  • Nuclear Safety Inspections
  • Nuclear Suppliers Group
  • nuclear supply chain
  • nuclear waste
  • nuclear waste fund
  • Nuclear Waste Policy Act
  • nuclear weapons
  • nuclear workforce
  • NuScale Power
  • NY AREA
  • Oconee
  • OECD
  • ohi
  • Oil
  • oil sands
  • Oklo
  • Onagawa
  • Ontario Power Generation
  • Opinionator
  • Oregon
  • Oyster Creek
  • pacific ocean
  • Pakistan
  • Palisades Nuclear Power Plant
  • Palo Verde Nuclear Power Plant
  • Pandora's Promise
  • Part 810
  • Patrick Moore
  • Paul Allen
  • Paul Genoa
  • PCAST
  • Pennsylvania
  • Peter Bradford
  • petition
  • PG&E
  • Pilgrim
  • Pilgrim Nuclear Power Startion
  • Pilgrim Nuclear Power Station
  • Plamt Vogtle
  • Plant Vogtle
  • Plutonium
  • Poland
  • policy
  • polls
  • President Obama
  • Presidential Debates
  • pressurized thermal shock
  • Progress Energy
  • progressive politics
  • Progressives for Nuclear Progress
  • Public Health
  • public opinion
  • public service announcement
  • Quad Cities
  • R. William Borchardt
  • Rachel Doss
  • Rachel Maddow
  • racing
  • radiation
  • radio media tour
  • radioisotope thermoelectric generator
  • Rancho Seco
  • Reddit
  • refueling outage
  • regulation
  • Renault
  • renewable energy
  • renewables
  • Rep. John Shimkus
  • Rep. Mike Simpson
  • research reactors
  • Revolution
  • Richard Branson
  • Richard Myers
  • Richard Rhodes
  • Riverkeeper
  • Robert Alvarez
  • Robert F. Kennedy
  • Robert N. Charette
  • Robert Stone
  • Rolls-Royce
  • Rosatom
  • Russell Gocht
  • Russia
  • safety
  • safety culture
  • San Diego Union-Tribune
  • San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station
  • Savannah River Site
  • SCANA
  • SCANA. VC Summer
  • Scientific American
  • Scotland
  • Seabrook Nuclear Power Plant
  • Section 123 Agreements
  • security
  • Sen. Jeff Bingaman
  • Senator Barbara Boxer
  • Senator Harry Reid
  • September 11
  • Sequoyah Nuclear Power Plant
  • Sharknado
  • Shaw Group
  • Sierra Club
  • Simona De Silvestro
  • Singapore
  • slovakia
  • Small Modular Reactor
  • small reactors
  • solar
  • solar energy
  • Solyndra
  • South Africa
  • South Australia
  • South Carolina
  • South Korea
  • South Texas Project
  • Southern California Edison
  • Southern Company
  • space travel
  • Spent Fuel Pool
  • Stanford University
  • State Department
  • State-of-the-Art Reactor Consequence Analyses (SOARCA)
  • Station Blackout
  • steam generators
  • STEM
  • Steve Byrne
  • Steve Kerekes
  • Steven Chu
  • Stewart Brand
  • storage
  • subsidies
  • Summer nuclear station
  • Sundance
  • Suvrat Raju
  • Switzerland
  • tanks
  • television
  • Temelin
  • Tennessee Valley Authority
  • Tepco
  • TerraPower
  • Thailand
  • The Guardian
  • The New Yorker
  • The Simpsons
  • Thorium
  • TIME Magazine
  • TIP Award
  • Tom Fanning
  • Tom Farrell
  • Tom Laughlin
  • Tom Moore
  • Tomioka
  • Tony Alexander
  • Tony Pietrangelo
  • Toronto
  • Tritium
  • Trojan
  • Tufts University
  • Tugg
  • Turkey
  • Turkey Point
  • TVA
  • U.S. News and World Report
  • U.S. P.I.R.G.
  • UAE
  • UBS
  • UCS
  • Underground
  • Underground Piping
  • union of concerned scientists
  • United Arab Emirates
  • United Kingdom
  • University of Florida
  • University of Missouri
  • University of South Carolina
  • University of Texas at Austin
  • uprates
  • uranium
  • Uranium Mining
  • USEC
  • Used Fuel
  • Used fuel pool
  • used nuclear fuel
  • Utah
  • Vatican City
  • Vermont
  • Vermont Yankee
  • Victor Gilinsky. Vietnam
  • Vietnam
  • Virginia
  • Visaginas
  • vogtle
  • Wall Street
  • Wall Street Journal
  • warheads
  • Washington Post
  • waste
  • waste confidence
  • Waste Isolation Pilot Plant
  • water consumption
  • Watts Bar
  • We The People
  • welding
  • Westinghouse
  • White House
  • wind
  • wind energy
  • Windham County
  • wipp
  • Wisconsin
  • Women In Nuclear
  • World Bank
  • World Energy Outlook
  • world nuclear association
  • World Nuclear Fuel Conference
  • Yucca Mountain
  • Yukiya Amano
  • zion

Blog Archive

  • ▼  2013 (241)
    • ►  December (12)
    • ▼  November (11)
      • Maybe Yes Maybe No for Nuclear Energy in Bolivia
      • Absent a Repository, Nuclear Waste Fee Suspended
      • The Distraction of Coal at COP19
      • The Irrational Now and the Catastrophic Later: Nu...
      • The Right Context for Nuclear Energy
      • “I think nuclear will have to be an option.”
      • Born Among Goats: Nuclear Energy and the Liberal P...
      • With Pandora's Promise in Hand, CNN Shining Light ...
      • Climate Change/Nuclear Energy Letter Receives Broa...
      • Four Noted Climate Change Scientists Say: More Nuc...
      • Nuclear Energy Futures Up at World Energy Congress
    • ►  October (26)
    • ►  September (24)
    • ►  August (12)
    • ►  July (13)
    • ►  June (31)
    • ►  May (19)
    • ►  April (23)
    • ►  March (23)
    • ►  February (23)
    • ►  January (24)
  • ►  2012 (259)
    • ►  December (12)
    • ►  November (11)
    • ►  October (24)
    • ►  September (17)
    • ►  August (27)
    • ►  July (22)
    • ►  June (28)
    • ►  May (23)
    • ►  April (33)
    • ►  March (25)
    • ►  February (28)
    • ►  January (9)
Powered by Blogger.

About Me

Unknown
View my complete profile