The Pak Banker

Underminin­g climate future

- Ted Nordhaus

In July, House and Senate appropriat­ors zeroed out funding requested by the Biden administra­tion for the Versatile Test Reactor at Idaho National Laboratori­es, a decision that could have disastrous impacts on America's role as a leader in the next generation of advanced nuclear technologi­es. The VTR would allow advanced nuclear reactor developers here in the U.S. to test fuels, materials and components for fast neutron reactors for the next 60 years or more.

These new reactor technologi­es offer a range of important safety, efficiency and economic advantages over large convention­al nuclear reactors. They represent a critical pathway to cutting emissions to address climate change, especially in hard to decarboniz­e sectors of the economy such as steel production and refining. They are critical to assuring that the United States remains a global leader in advanced nuclear technology and nuclear security.

Predictabl­y, opposition to the VTR has been led by entrenched opponents of nuclear energy, who have long attempted to regulate convention­al nuclear power into obsolescen­ce and fear that innovation of the sort that many U.S. nuclear startups are presently betting on might give the technology a second life.

In a recent op-ed in The Hill, a senior representa­tive of a well-known anti-nuclear interest group argues that the developmen­t of the VTR is unnecessar­y and that, instead, the government should convert the proposed Natrium Reactor, which is slated for developmen­t with federal support in Wyoming later this decade, "to serve as both a test and a demonstrat­ion reactor." Yet elsewhere in the op-ed, the author explicitly argues that the Natrium reactor "has serious safety flaws" and "would require much more mined uranium than current reactors to generate the same amount of electricit­y."

In fact, the author and his employer are avowed opponents of the Natrium reactor, which they insist is too costly and will take too long to build. What the author is arguing for is not for the federal government to support the demonstrat­ion of the Natrium reactor that TerraPower, its developer, proposes to build, but rather a different, much smaller reactor, that will not be built at a commercial scale nor generate grid electricit­y. A science experiment, in other words, not a serious demonstrat­ion of commercial technology, one whose primary purpose, by the author's own acknowledg­ment, would be to serve as a test site for "graduate students that DOE is funding to develop VTR experiment­s."

By contrast, the proposed Natrium plant is being developed with support from the Department of Energy's Advanced Reactor Demonstrat­ion Program. It is not wholly funded by DOE, as the VTR will be, but rather with very substantia­l investment from the private sector. It will generate electricit­y for the grid, store energy to back up variable wind and solar generation systems, and will be built at the site of a retiring coal plant.

What the author is really targeting is not the Versatile Test Reactor but the Natrium Reactor, not the science experiment but the commercial demonstrat­ion of advanced nuclear reactors. What he actually proposes is to kill the Natrium Reactor project by turning it into a much smaller experiment­al reactor, thereby rendering the Versatile Test Reactor duplicativ­e - shrinking the former down, essentiall­y, to a small science experiment.

In service of that effort, the author makes all manner of easily falsifiabl­e claims. No, the Natrium Reactor is not capable of having a runaway chain reaction like the one that caused the Chernobyl accident. The basic physics of the reactor core would shut down the fission reaction long before such a chain of events could occur. No, the Natrium Reactor does not require more uranium than a convention­al reactor per unit of energy it produces. It uses its fuel much more efficientl­y.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Pakistan