"By
suppressing better ways to meet climate goals, evidence suggests entrenched
commitments to nuclear power may actually be counterproductive"
While
it's been touted by
some energy experts as a so-called "bridge" to help slash carbon
emissions, a new study suggests that a commitment to
nuclear power may in fact be a path towards climate failure.
For
their study, researchers at the University of Sussex and the Vienna School of
International Studies grouped European countries by levels of nuclear energy
usage and plans, and compared their progress with part of the European Union's
(EU) 2020 Strategy.
That
10-year strategy (pdf),
proposed in 2010, calls for reducing greenhouse gas emissions by least 20
percent compared to 1990 levels and increasing the share of renewable energy in
final energy consumption to 20 percent.
The
researchers found that "progress in both carbon emissions reduction and in
adoption of renewables appears to be inversely related to the strength of
continuing nuclear commitments."
"With
reference to reductions in carbon emissions and adoption of renewables, clear
relationships emerge between patterns of achievement in these 2020 Strategy
goals and the different groupings of nuclear use," they wrote.
For
non-nuclear Group 1 countries, the average percentage of reduced emissions was
six percent, and they had an average of a 26 percent increase in renewable
energy consumption.
Group
2 had the highest average percentage of reduced emissions at 11 percent, and
they also boosted renewable energy to 19 percent.
Pro-nuclear
Group 3, meanwhile, had their emissions on average go up three percent, and
they had the smallest increase in renewable shares—16 percent.
"Looked
at on its own, nuclear power is sometimes noisily propounded as an attractive
response to climate change," said Andy Stirling, professor of science and
technology policy at the University of Sussex, in a media statement. "Yet
if alternative options are rigorously compared, questions are raised about
cost-effectiveness, timeliness, safety, and security."
"Looking
in detail at historic trends and current patterns in Europe, this paper substantiates
further doubts," he continued. "By suppressing better ways to meet
climate goals, evidence suggests entrenched commitments to nuclear power may
actually be counterproductive," he said.
The
new study focused on Europe, and Benjamin Sovacool, professor of energy policy
and director of the Sussex Energy Group at the University of Sussex, stated,
"If nothing else, our paper casts doubt on the likelihood of a nuclear
renaissance in the near-term, at least in Europe."
Yet
advocates of clean energy over on the other side of the Atlantic said the
recent plan to
close the last remaining nuclear power plant in California and replace it with
renewable energy marked the "end of an atomic era" and said it could
serve as "a clear blueprint for fighting climate change."
NRDC
president Rhea Suh wrote of
the proposal: "It proves we can cut our carbon footprint with energy
efficiency and renewable power, even as our aging nuclear fleet nears
retirement. And it strikes a blow against the central environmental challenge
of our time, the climate change that threatens our very future."
The
new study was published in the journal Climate Policy.