Watts Bar's launch is "a symbolic gesture” - an
extraordinarily dumb one
The first new nuclear reactor in the United States in 20 years
went live on October 19 in Tennessee, in what at least one nuclear expert is
calling the "last gasp of a dying industry."
The Watts Bar 2 reactor, which began construction decades ago
but faltered, only picking up again in the last four years, is now producing
electricity for 650,000 homes and businesses, the Chattanooga
Times Free Press reported.
At $4.7 billion, the project is "arguably one of the most
expensive, most over-budget, oldest reactors to be started in human
history," Friends of the Earth senior strategic adviser Damon Moglen told Common
Dreams.
"It's a testament to the failure of the nuclear industry, rather than the
resurgence."
"It's the last gasp of the nuclear industry trying to prove they are still alive in the sense of opening new reactors," Moglen said. "There is just absolutely no justification for the stunning sums of money and time and energy poured into this reactor" instead of renewable, cost-competitive energy.
The unit "illustrates the problem faced by nuclear power in
the United States and suggests why nuclear power won't play much of a role in
the future," Dave Lochaum, director of the Nuclear Safety Project at the
Union of Concerned Scientists, told Common Dreams.
He noted that there are four other reactors under construction
in South Carolina and Georgia, which are "behind schedule and over-budget.
The current costs, likely to increase even further, are over $6 billion
each."
"One can purchase lots of renewable energy sources for $6
billion," Lochaum said.
Watts Bar 2 is now the seventh reactor under the operation of
the Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA), a federal utility. However, Free
Press reporter Dave Flessner
wrote, "TVA, which once planned to erect 17 nuclear reactors, has given up
on 10 of those and has no plans on the drawing board for any additional nuclear
plants for the first time in a half century."
In fact, power demands in the area have come to a standstill as
solar and wind power becomes increasingly mainstream, Flessner reported.
As Moglen said, it's a sign that there are "clearly 21st
century ways in which we can produce clean safe, greenhouse gas-free energy
that is cost competitive, and doesn't have the added risk of nuclear
proliferation...and the long-term dangers of nuclear waste. I think the startup
of Watts Bar is symbolic of the complete and abject failure of the nuclear
industry."
"We have an ethical and cultural and social imperative to
be designing clean energy and we know how to do that," Moglen added,
pointing to the historic agreement reached in June between Pacific Gas
and Energy (PG&E) and a slew of environmental and labor groups to shut down
the Diablo Canyon reactor in California and replace it with renewable energy
utilities and storage units.
Construction on Watts Bar began in 1973 and was paused in 1985, then
restarted again in 2007. The project's spotty record—which includes the longest construction
history of any reactor
in the world—belies the nuclear industry's slow collapse, experts say.
In fact, as the Bulletin of Atomic Scientists wrote in October 2015, "Rather than
exemplifying a fine technological achievement, the history of Watts Bar Units 1
and 2 is a cautionary tale of the worst pitfalls of nuclear power and the
federal regulatory system."
With Tennessee's reactor now built and the money sunk, the next
step will be demanding a "full-scale debate" about energy policy in
the next administration, Moglen said, citing a recent article by environmental activist and 350.org
co-founder Bill McKibben that demanded a World War II-style mobilization
against climate change.
"That's one of the things this next administration is gonna
be responsible for," Moglen said. "I think the public is actually
concerned in a world marked by local and regional and international terrorism
that the issue of nuclear proliferation is potentially one of our worst
nightmares... [Watts Bar's launch is a] symbolic gesture. It's very sad that
this is the last gasp of the industry because it looks like such an
extraordinarily dumb one."