• @[email protected]
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    26 hours ago

    One of the great sins of nuclear energy programs implemented during the 50s, 60s, and 70s was that it was too cost effective.

    I don’t see how any of this has any bearing on financial feasibility of power plants.

    For what it’s worth, before the late 90’s there was no such thing as market pricing for electricity, as prices were set by tariff, approved by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission. FERC opened the door to market pricing with its Order 888 (hugely controversial, heavily litigated). And there were growing pains there: California experienced rolling blackouts, Enron was able to hide immense accounting fraud, etc. By the end of the 2000’s decade, pretty much every major generator and distributor in the market managed to offload the risk of price volatility on willing speculators, by negotiating long term power purchase agreements that actually stabilize long term prices regardless of short term fluctuations on the spot markets.

    So now nuclear needs to survive in an environment that actually isn’t functionally all that different from the 1960’s: they need to project costs to see if they can turn a profit on the electricity market, even while paying interest on loans for their immense up front costs, through guaranteed pricing. It’s just that they have to persuade buyers to pay those guaranteed prices, rather than persuading FERC to approve the tariff.

    As a matter of business model, it’s the same result, just through a different path. A nuclear plant can’t get financing without a path to profit, and that path to profit needs to come from long term commitments.

    It can take over a decade to break even on operation, assuming you’re operating at market rates.

    Shit, it can take over a decade to start operations, and several decades after that to break even. Vogtle reactors 3 and 4 in Georgia took something like 20 years between planning and actual operational status.

    Now maybe small modular reactors will be faster and cheaper to build. But in this particular case, this is cutting edge technology that will probably have some hurdles to clear, both anticipated and unanticipated. Molten fluoride salt cooling and pebble bed design are exciting because of the novelty, but that swings both ways.

    • @UnderpantsWeevil
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      15 hours ago

      I don’t see how any of this has any bearing on financial feasibility of power plants

      If you don’t get a high ROI, you’re not going to have lots of investors offering up their cash at low interest rates.

      • @[email protected]
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        14 hours ago

        That was true in the 70’s, too. You always needed a way to show that people would pay the long term prices necessary to cover the cost of construction.

        The big changes since the 70’s has been that competing sources of power are much cheaper and that the construction costs of large projects (not just nuclear reactors, but even highways and bridges and tall buildings) have skyrocketed.

        There’s less room to make money because nuclear is expensive, and cheaper stuff has come along.

        • @UnderpantsWeevil
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          14 hours ago

          You always needed a way to show that people would pay the long term prices necessary to cover the cost of construction.

          Not when the federal government was just building them to generate fissile material and giving the electricity away after that.

          There’s less room to make money because nuclear is expensive

          Upfront costs are expensive. But operational and fuel costs are very low, per MWh. Long term, nuclear is cheaper.