As a courtesy to our colleagues at the INSTITUTE FOR ENERGY ECONOMICS AND FINANCIAL ANALYSIS (IEEAFA) , we provide the recent press release regarding a new study showing that renewable energy is far and away superior to new nuclear power as a means of addressing the climate crisis.

The 23-page Report, Small Modular Reactors Are Still Too Expensive, Too Slow, and Too Risky,  was released on May 29.  Ironically, and after much previous ballyhoo, promotion and huge subsidization of small modular nuclear reactors (SMNRs), on May 30 the Biden Administration put out a press release indicating its new-found support for LARGE reactors.
The Illinois Legislature and Governor Pritzker spent much of the 2023 legislative session debating and then finally expressing support for bringing SMNRs to Illinois (HB2473 SFA-3) over the objections of environmental organizations which made the exact same arguments found in the IEEFA Report — but to no avail.  NEIS pointed out that this debate over the energy future of Illinois left the 12 million people of Illinois largely out of the process of weighing in on whether they actually want a nuclear energy future for Illinois or not.  Letters to the Governor went unresponded; suggested legislation (HB5630) to create a citizen task force to correct this egregious omission falled to be introduced in the Spring 2024 Session despite efforts by Rep. Lilian Jimenez (D.4).  In the meantime prospects for several proposed SMNR designs have diminished considerably, while
 lavish federal financial subsidization has continued.
As the late President Ronald Reagan once quipped, “Facts are stubborn things.”  Now that the facts are out on the obvious and costly limitations of SMNRs, it remains to be seen if the legislature will take corrective measures to bring Illinois’ energy future into line with reality, and opposed to the nuclear fantasies it previously embraced.  It’s difficult to fight climate change or power an economy using fictional ideologies.
Please go directly to the Report authors for information about the Report.  NEIS is available to answer questions related to nuclear power in Illinois.
Be well,
–David Kraft, Director–

Small modular reactors are still too expensive, too slow, and too risky

David Schlissel and Dennis Wamsted
  
T: 216-712-6612
May 29, 2024

Key Takeaways:

Small modular reactors still look to be too expensive, too slow to build, and too risky to play a significant role in transitioning from fossil fuels in the coming 10-15 years.

Investment in SMRs will take resources away from carbon-free and lower-cost renewable technologies that are available today and can push the transition from fossil fuels forward significantly in the coming 10 years.

Experience with operating and proposed SMRs shows that the reactors will continue to cost far more and take much longer to build than promised by proponents.

Regulators, utilities, investors and government officials should embrace the reality that renewables, not SMRs, are the near-term solution to the energy transition.

Despite proponent and industry claims, small modular reactors (SMRs) are still too expensive, too slow to build, and too risky to play a significant role in transitioning away from fossil fuels, according to the latest Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis (IEEFA) report.

For years proponents of SMRs have claimed that the price and construction time of these power plants will be quicker and cheaper than previous nuclear projects. The new IEEFA report finds that the industry is still plagued by cost overruns and schedule delays.

“A key argument from SMR proponents is that the new reactors will be economically competitive,” said David Schlissel, IEEFA director of resource planning analysis and co-author of the report. “But the on-the-ground experience with the initial SMRs that have been built or that are currently under construction shows that this simply is not true.”

The findings of the report should serve as a cautionary flag for all energy industry participants. In particular, the report recommends that:

  • Regulators who will be asked to approve utility or developer-backed SMR proposals should craft restrictions to prevent delays and cost increases from being pushed onto ratepayers.
  • Utilities that are considering SMRs should be required to compare the technology’s uncertain costs and completion dates with the known costs and construction timetables of renewable alternatives. Utilities that still opt for the SMR option should be required to put shareholder funds at risk if costs and construction times exceed utility estimates.
  • Investors and bankers weighing any SMR proposal should carefully conduct their due diligence. Things will go wrong, imperiling the chances for full recovery of any invested funds.
  • State and federal governments should require that estimated SMR construction costs and schedules be publicly available so that utility ratepayers, taxpayers and investors are better able to assess the magnitude of the SMR-related financial risks that they may be forced to bear.
  • Finally, it is vital that this debate consider the opportunity costs associated with the SMR push. The dollars invested in SMRs will not be available for use in building out a wind, solar and battery storage resource base. These carbon-free and lower-cost technologies are available today and can push the transition from fossil fuels forward significantly in the coming 10 years—years when SMRs will still be looking for licensing approval and construction funding.

“The comparison between building new SMRs and building renewable energy couldn’t be clearer,” said Dennis Wamsted, IEEFA energy analyst and co-author of the report. “Regulators, utilities, investors and government officials should acknowledge this and embrace the available reality: Renewables are the near-term solution.”

IEEFA has previously written about the delays and cost overruns in the SMR industry. Today’s report reinforces these findings with even more evidence about the costly and risky nature of SMRs.

David Schlissel

 

David Schlissel is an IEEFA analyst with 50 years of experience as an economic and technical consultant on energy and environmental issues.

 

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Dennis Wamsted

 

Dennis Wamsted focuses on the ongoing transition away from fossil fuels to green generation resources, focusing particularly on the electric power sector. He has 30 years of experience tracking utility transitions and technology developments.

 

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