Nuclear Plant Operators Too Low On Cash To Shut Down

digg Share this on Facebook Huffpost - Nuclear Plant Operators Too Low On Cash To Shut Down stumble reddit del.ico.us RSS

DAVE GRAM and FRANK BASS | 06/17/09 06:31 AM | AP

I Like ItI Don’t Like It
This June 9 2009, photo shows the Vermont Yankee nuclear plant in Vernon, Vt. More than half of the nation's 104 nuclear reactors are not saving enough to pay for their dismantling and removal of radioactive materials when they stop operating, according to documents and interviews. Regulators are expected to release a report later this week that will describe shortfalls at 30 of the nation's 104 nuclear plants and ask operators for details about how they plan to resolve the problem. Entergy Corp. is seeking a 20-year license extension for Vermont Yankee, and is hoping to have enough money in the fund to decommission the plant in the 2030s. (AP Photo/Toby Talbot)

VERNON, Vt. — The companies that own almost half the nation's nuclear reactors are not setting aside enough money to dismantle them, and many may sit idle for decades and pose safety and security risks as a result, an Associated Press investigation has found.

The shortfalls are caused not by fluctuating appetites for nuclear power but by the stock market and other investments, which have suffered huge losses over the past year and devastated the plants' savings, and by the soaring costs of decommissioning.

At 19 nuclear plants, owners have won approval to idle reactors for as long as 60 years, presumably enough time to allow investments to recover and eventually pay for dismantling the plants and removing radioactive material.

But mothballing nuclear reactors or shutting them down inadequately presents the most severe of risks. Radioactive waste could leak from abandoned plants into ground water or released into the air, and spent nuclear fuel rods could be stolen by terrorists.

During the past two years, estimates of dismantling costs have soared by more than $4.6 billion because rising energy and labor costs, while the investment funds that are supposed to pay for shutting plants down have lost $4.4 billion in the battered stock market.

The power companies have been hammered by the same declining market returns as colleges, companies and private investors. Industry critics say reactor owners weren't saving enough even before the financial collapse, and that federal regulators have not held the industry to a high enough standard.

Federal regulators are expected to release a report later this week that will describe shortfalls at 30 of the nation's 104 nuclear plants and ask operators for details about how they plan to resolve the problem.

The amount of money set aside for dismantling the plants has decreased at nearly four of every five reactors, according to an AP analysis of financial records provided every other year to the Nuclear Regulatory Commission. The government could force plant operators to set aside more money.

Story continues below
advertisement

Plant owners say they have several ways to close the gap. In addition to idling the plants, the government can simply extend licenses to operate them. And investments could recover in the years to come. Industry officials say a 6 percent annual rate of return is a reasonable long-term goal.

Most nuclear plants will be operating for several more decades and will be able to recoup their fund losses, said Steve Kerekes, a spokesman for the Nuclear Energy Institute, a trade group.

Nuclear power critics say those plans are not enough.

"No one at the NRC wants to acknowledge what is absolutely obvious to us, that the funds are inadequate and that the industry has bare assets," said Arnold Gundersen, a retired nuclear engineer and decommissioning expert.

Those critics say the industry is making assumptions about their investments that do not account for another market collapse, political obstacles to getting the licenses renewed and unforeseen safety problems that could make nuclear power less palatable.

Last week, British officials reported on a 2007 leak in a cooling tank at the decommissioned Sizewell-A nuclear plant. If the leak had not been promptly discovered, officials said, nuclear fuel rods could have caught fire and sent airborne radioactive waste along the English coast, harming plant operators or the public.

The average cost of dismantling a nuclear reactor is now estimated now at $450 million. The average plant owner has about $300 million saved up for the job. Typically, the money is raised through a small surcharge on electric rates.

NRC records show utilities are trying to close the gaps:

_Owners at 19 plants have won approval to mothball reactors for as long as 60 years. A method called Safestor has been approved for reactors including the three Palo Verde units in the Arizona desert and the Three Mile Island 1 reactor near Harrisburg, Pa.

Under this method, radioactive fuel is removed from the reactor and the spent fuel storage pool and is stored in dry casks on plant property. Plant systems are drained of water, and the remaining radioactivity in the plant is left to decay until the facility is dismantled.

But some analysts worry the utility companies that own nuclear plants might not even exist in six decades.

"Our concern is that they'll just walk away from it," said Jim Riccio, a Greenpeace nuclear policy analyst. "It's like a sitting time bomb. The notion that you can just walk away from these sites and everything will be hunky-dory is just not true."

_The operators of 54 nuclear plants, or more than half in the U.S., have already received 20-year license extensions. Sixteen more are being reviewed, and the commission expects to receive 21 more applications in the next several years. To date, the NRC hasn't turned down any license extensions.

While companies ask for extensions for other reasons _ primarily to keep producing power and making money _ some companies have explicitly told shareholders they will use license extensions to meet their decommissioning obligations.

_Some plants are calculating growth projections for their investments with an annual return of 6 percent. While that is roughly what leading market indexes make over decades, the NRC found plant owners lost an average of 13 percent over the past two years.

In Texas, state rules govern utilities' investments, said Ashley Monts, a spokeswoman for Luminant Corp., which owns two nuclear plants near Glen Rose, Texas. Five years before a plant is set to close, she said, Luminant is required to have 60 percent of the cost available. Two and a half years out, the gap must be completely closed.

Luminant has about $385 million set aside to close its two plants in 2030 and 2033. Two years ago, that figure was $439 million. The cost of decommissioning the reactors is $824 million, almost $90 million than was estimated before.

_Plant operators appear to benefit from NRC rules that don't require them to set aside money to store old nuclear fuel, demolish buildings, or return the plant sites to pristine states. Although some states require a full site restoration, the federal government does not.

The Callaway Unit 1 reactor near Fulton, Mo., reported in March that meeting the NRC savings target for decommissioning would leave it far short of the real cost of cleaning up the site.

It began with a story similar to those told by other plants: The cost to meet the minimum federal requirement for decommissioning rose from $358 million to $406 million in two years. Its savings to pay for it dwindled from $268 million to $236 million.

But a detailed study of the cost of decommissioning Callaway showed something far worse: The federal savings target was about $288 million less than what it would actually cost for a full dismantling, cleanup and safe storage of spent nuclear waste.

The waste disposal problem has become especially acute since the federal government scrapped plans to store nuclear waste at a secure facility in Yucca Mountain, Nev. Instead, radioactive fuel rods are now stored in large concrete and steel canisters on plant grounds that are guarded around the clock and tested often for leaks.

The Vermont Yankee plant, in southeastern Vermont along the banks of the Connecticut River, was hailed as the future of power production for New England when it opened in 1972. Its license is set to expire in 2012, and its decommissioning fund has less than half the money expected to be needed.

As recently as December 2007, the fund held $416 million. Now it stands at about $384 million _ a rebound from where it stood a few months ago but not even close to the estimated $932 million it will eventually cost to dismantle the plant.

Entergy Corp. is seeking a 20-year license extension for Vermont Yankee, and is hoping to have enough money in the fund to decommission the plant in the 2030s. Jay Thayer, the plant's vice president for operations, said that if the decommissioning fund continues to perform poorly, the company may ask for permission to idle the plant for as long as 60 years under the Safestor program. That would put off the dismantling until 2092.

___

On the Net:

Nuclear Regulatory Commission: http://www.nrc.gov

Vermont Yankee: http://www.safecleanreliable.com/

Greenpeace: http://www.greenpeace.org

Nuclear Energy Institute: http://www.nei.org/

Luminant Corp.: http://www.luminant.com

VERNON, Vt. — The companies that own almost half the nation's nuclear reactors are not setting aside enough money to dismantle them, and many may sit idle for decades and pose safety and securit...
VERNON, Vt. — The companies that own almost half the nation's nuclear reactors are not setting aside enough money to dismantle them, and many may sit idle for decades and pose safety and securit...
Report Corrections
 
Comments
19
Pending Comments
0
iPhone App Promo

Want to reply to a comment? Hint: Click "Reply" at the bottom of the comment; after being approved your comment will appear directly underneath the comment you replied to

View Comments:
- quiviran I'm a Fan of quiviran 25 fans permalink

Investment in the stock market is not savings. Ask around, you'll find lots of people who will confirm that. It's a bet that you don't know the odds on, a bet that you'll be able, at some point in the future, to find someone who will be willing to pay more than you did for the stock. Good luck with that.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:38 PM on 06/20/2009
- MikeDu I'm a Fan of MikeDu 151 fans permalink
photo

I could never understand where the recent push to nuclearize electricty was coming from. The usual suspects would be industry lobbyists, but there is no credible nuclear industry in the U.S.. If Obama adopted McCain's insane plan for 45 nuclear plants we wouldn't be able to find anyone to to design and build them!

Its very likely 100(-) years from now ocean waves are going to lapping at the doors of east-coast nuclear reactors from NH to FL and there's going to be an immense pile of of sealed drums of radioactive materials submerged in salt water.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:33 PM on 06/19/2009
photo

You can listen to an interview with Jim Riccio on June 15, 2009 about Vermont Yankee and the state of the nuclear industry at http://www.vermont.be/personalandpolitical/webready_MP3/2009_06_15_jimriccio.mp3.

Thanks for listening
Stephanie Fraser

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:07 PM on 06/18/2009
- RTIII I'm a Fan of RTIII 89 fans permalink

This article just goes to illustrate the insanity of "nuclear power" - at least as practiced by these united states...
.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:49 PM on 06/18/2009

The costs of decommisioning nuclear plants and dirty coal plants scrubbers will continue to rise.
ratepayers will be held liable.
get off the grid ASAP then you are not a ratepayer (slave)

http://www.solarnavigator.net/lead_acid_batteries.htm

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:04 PM on 06/18/2009

In Georgia, with 95 degree heat, we are pursuing nuclear energy. Our utililty companies have all the power. Solar doesn't even come up as an option for the citizens of Georgia. We could have solar on every home, commerical and public building. No, we are pursuing nuclear energy and paying for it in advance with our tax money.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:32 PM on 06/17/2009
- andhakari I'm a Fan of andhakari 7 fans permalink

You're not paying for disposal of the wastes, and you're not paying for the decommissioning of the plant. All you'll do is pay for living in a place that's too hot for Yankees and will soon be too dry for anyone.
Georgia sold out to the carpet baggers.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:38 AM on 06/18/2009
- Tom95134 I'm a Fan of Tom95134 54 fans permalink
photo

And didn't we just hear from the Republicans in Congress that the only way to get out from under foreign oil is to build more nuclear plants?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:00 PM on 06/17/2009
- SamKnause I'm a Fan of SamKnause 76 fans permalink

I was just thinking the same thing. I think they want to build 100 new ones.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:03 PM on 06/17/2009
- wdw505 I'm a Fan of wdw505 74 fans permalink

here we go again another bailout

laughing

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:35 PM on 06/17/2009
- eichler1 I'm a Fan of eichler1 5 fans permalink

So the obvious question is: Why are these operators allowed to gamble with the decomissioning funds in the stock market? That's totally irresponsible. Are they allowed to go to Vegas and play the slots, too? That money should be in ultra-low-risk investments.

If the operators don't have enough money to decommission the reactors, then the executives should be forced to cough up the difference.

It's time to make capitalists responsible for their actions.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:21 PM on 06/17/2009

This comment sounds like the people in washington is running the place.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:39 PM on 06/17/2009
- Badbone I'm a Fan of Badbone 11 fans permalink

What an ignorant statement. The decom cost has increased seven-fold from 20 years ago. They aren't gambling with these funds, the government has simply pulled the rug out from under them.

Think about it. What if the price of your car loan went up 700% in 20 years? Would you be "irresponsible" for having a hard time paying it?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:46 PM on 06/18/2009

I don't see why they can't just skip town and send us the keys. Thanks for the billions and thanks for Price-Anderson! http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Price-Anderson_Nuclear_Industries_Indemnity_Act

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:17 PM on 06/17/2009
- wadenelson1 I'm a Fan of wadenelson1 242 fans permalink
photo

Once again taxpayers will get stuck with the bill for an industry that has NEVER ONCE shown commercial viability.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:43 PM on 06/17/2009
- alvdh1 I'm a Fan of alvdh1 24 fans permalink

Let's not forget the ratepayers. That little surcharge on your utility bill is another form of taxation. Free markets do not exist for utilities in 48 states. Utilities are guaranteed a rate of return on their investment (ROI) through state public utility commissions that have the acronym of PSC or PUC. Let's further explore the benefits and negative attributes of the ROI model. The ROI provides a capital structure to allow utilities to float debt and raise rates to raise capital for new pwoer plant construction. In theory, this is a good thing because large power plants are expensive to build and operate. In reality, it creates a monopoly or an oligopy.

We have all played the Parker Brothers game called:" Monopoly". We also know the outcome for the people who are able to acquire and control the most properties. They rule monopolistic roost.
Therein lies the problem with a monopoly. The ratepayers do not have a choice to choose another supplier of electricity. With government support and PUC ordered rate hikes, utilities can charge the ratepayers for the cost of construction, cost overruns for poor design and construction management, interest for their debt offerings and fluctuating commodity prices. It is a defacto license to steal from the ratepayers.

Couple this scenario to government subsidies for the nuclear power plants, then imagine the double taxation effect from ratepayers now experiencing double taxation to have large centralized nuclear power stations where ratepayers are paying for everything mentioned above. See next post.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:39 PM on 06/17/2009
- alvdh1 I'm a Fan of alvdh1 24 fans permalink

Now the taxpayer pays all of the following, including but not limited to, uranium mine cleanup costs, fuel transportation costs, fuel processing costs, fuel fabrication costs, Homeland Security costs, Nuclear Regulatory Commission costs, radioactive waste storage costs for millenia and under funded decommissioning costs as a result of ill advised investtments in the stock market for decommissioning costs.

The net result of the inefficiencies of the ROI model is now clearly evident. The utilities never lose because they have no competition and therefore, no need for a free market. The ratepayers and taxpayers work in tandem to support the utilities and in its worst case the nuclear utilities. The fact that the utilities appear to have had a rough ride on the stock market with what are reserves allocated by ratepayers for decommissioning costs, is nothing short of reprehensible behavior by the utilities, the regulatory bodies and the federal government.

This will not be a new bailout, but rather a continum of perpetual ratepayer and taxpayer support of an nuclear industry that cannot operate on its own. If the taxpayer actually new that they have been bailing out the nuclear industry, who by the way maintained that nuclear power would from its infancy be to cheap to meter, how much it has cost them through utilitiy rates and taxes would view GM's needs as a drop in the bucket compared to the nuclear addiction. See next post.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:11 PM on 06/17/2009
Comments are closed for this entry

 You must be logged in to comment. Log in  or connect with 

Connect