Houston Chronicle

GAINING STEAM

- By Nathaniel Bullard BLOOMBERG Bullard is BloombergN­EF's chief content officer.

2020 was the first year pin which renewable power generation surpassed nuclear power generation.

Energy giant BP has been publishing its annual review of global energy statistics for seven decades. (I’ve been reading it — and digesting its data — for about a fifth of that time.)

The latest edition published in July is, understand­ably, quite focused on the largest year-onyear decline in primary energy consumptio­n since 1945. But there’s another finding worth noting: 2020 was the first year in which renewable power generation (excluding hydro) surpassed nuclear power generation.

In 1965, the year BP’s data begins, nuclear generated 24 terawatt-hours of power, while wind, solar, geothermal and biomass generated 15 terawattho­urs. That was as close as the two categories would be again until 2019.

The gap between the two widened for four full decades, but with nuclear generation basically flat since the turn of the century and renewables continued to grow, the latter caught the former in 2020.

Renewables have continued to grow by adding hundreds of geothermal plants, thousands of biomass turbines, a-third-of-amillion wind turbines, and more than a billion photovolta­ic modules, installed across numerous global markets. The sector hasn’t shown a single annual decline in more than 50 years.

Nuclear is basically the opposite: a single technology with a small number of plants in an even smaller number of markets.

Many discrete decisions — whether to embark on a massive expansion in one market, say, or to shut down generation for years in the wake of disaster — helped drive down the sector’s growth.

Then, in 2011, came the Japanese nuclear fleet response to the Tōhoku earthquake and ensuing tsunami, and along the way the shutdown of six plants last year in the U.S, Sweden, Russia and France.

The nuclear fleet’s growth trajectory is basically flat in the 21st century, with only four more plants operationa­l now than in 2001.

Nuclear plants are also pretty old. Most were designed for a 40-year useful life, and a lot of them are approachin­g that age now — a full 45 percent are between the ages of 31 and 40. There are more nuclear plants older than 46 than there are those under 6.

One heartening sign for nuclear power is the relative abundance of the youngest plants. There are four times as many nuclear plants five years or younger as there are between the ages of 11 and 15, and twice as many as those aged 16 to 20.

But plant age is a trailing indicator, not a leading indicator. It takes years, sometimes a decade or more, to bring a nuclear plant into full operation, which means that there’s a significan­t lag between when constructi­on starts and when the finished facility is connected to the grid. New nuclear constructi­on in the U.S. is also running over schedule and over budget, for many reasons.

It’s important to remember that from a climate perspectiv­e, nuclear and renewables are not in competitio­n. There will be enough growth in electricit­y demand to support significan­t expansion of every zero-carbon power generation technology.

Nuclear could even wind up being essential to deep decarboniz­ation in other sectors.

BloombergN­EF recently published three scenarios for reaching a net-zero emissions energy sector by 2050, and one of them assumes a massive deployment of small, modular nuclear reactors designed to complement wind, solar and battery technologi­es.

That scenario includes nuclear power applied not just to electricit­y, but also to manufactur­ing hydrogen. A number of early stage companies are testing these smaller, more modular nuclear generation technologi­es, which is a promising start.

Still, getting nuclear power back on the growth curve is a decade-long process. The best time to have done it would have been 10 (or 20) years ago. The second-best time is right now. We should hope that the nuclear sector can again grow somewhat like renewables. We would all be better off for it.

 ?? Jerry Lara / Staff file photo ?? Last year was the first in which renewable power generation such as wind and solar (but excluding hydro) surpassed nuclear power generation.
Jerry Lara / Staff file photo Last year was the first in which renewable power generation such as wind and solar (but excluding hydro) surpassed nuclear power generation.

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