Today Europe is struggling to build two EPR reactors. To be fair, they are getting there. But progress has been slow and costly.
Today a third EPR reactor is planned for Hinkley Point in Somerset. To ensure Chinese and French backers stay with the project the government has given a £2 Billion guarantee against cancellation as well as guaranteeing a strike price of over £90 MWh
The mooted price for this one reactor is over £20 billion. Even at this eye watering price the government is desperate to see Hinkley C progress because it is the only viable 24/7 emissions free power generation available.
Even if they have to pay this ransom it is still cheaper than onshore wind and hugely cheaper than offshore wind, both of which need fossil fuel backup anyway. So the government has little choice but to pay.
But there is something wrong here.
The last UK nuclear power plant was commissioned only 20 years ago. Sizewell B cost £2 billion or about £4 billion in todays money.
Sizewell B came in under budget. The grid connection (planned in 1987) was for Christmas 1994. It actually happened barely one month late. The build took a mere 7 years. At the time it was lauded as a shining example of how to build large infrastructure projects. (See Independent article here)
But even so, Sizewell B is essentially a prototype. No commercial Light Water Reactor had been built in the UK before. So building to timescale and to budget is even more remarkable.
Eight "Sizewell B's" were planned. If they had been built the power supply outlook in the UK today would be entirely different. But due to extreme political fear mongering, opportunism and anti nuclear hysteria the other seven were canned.
The UK ended up relying on Gas backed up by the likes of DRAX and Longannet both burning vast quantities of imported coal for the next 20 years. The number of subsequent deaths and shortened lives from air pollution must be in the order of 50,000. I'll work it out properly in a future post.
(If you doubt this ball park figure of 50,000 dead read these two papers by some of the worlds leading scientists and figure it out yourself. Karecha & Hansen and Markyanda & Wilson)
So I have to ask: Why is it that in a time scale of twenty years we have gone from producing a nuclear power plant to budget and on time to a bloated massively expensive and chaotic shambles?
Don't forget the Sizewell B plant is an early example of Generation III reactor (See IMechE article here). As near as dammit Sizewell B it is as good as an EPR and at one fifth the price
I reckon we need to take a pause.
Instead of building horrendously complex and expensive EPR's maybe we should go back to the original plan and build a few more "Sizewell B" type PWR's. After all we still have the prototype - and it has been working for 20 years!
Then we can invest the money saved from not building the ludicrously expensive EPR's in Generation 4 nuclear prototyping and research.
This way within 10 years we can have a reliable cheap carbon free power supply from a proven designs and maybe working PRISM and/or LFTR prototype reactors coming
on line.
Well, its just an idea......
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Post posting note:
Thanks to @Davey1233 on twitter there are a few corrections I should add which, while not detracting from the achievement of Sizewell B do restore some of my faith in the EPR.
He correctly points out that Hinkley will be around 3 times the output capacity of Sizewell B and the true "todays" figure for Sizewell should be more like £5 billion not 4. Consequently comparing output power like for like the cost difference shrinks from a ratio of 1:5 to about 1:1.25
So maybe Hinkley C is not quite such a rip off - although I would still suggest the builders are being more than amply rewarded and have managed to secure this lucrative deal simply because the government is over a barrel.
In reality these decisions regarding the construction of nuclear power stations in the UK should have been taken 10 - 20 years ago. Instead the governments of the time simply kow-towed to the ignorance and hysteria of the Green lobby.
We desperately need nuclear power. Without it we could well end up slipping back into dependency on coal - just like they have in Germany. That is in nobodys interest.
Billothewisps posts by Topic
Navitus Bay Wind Park – The Community Wins.
So finally, the monster
is dead.
Navitus bay wind park –
nearly 200 massive turbines threatening to scar the Dorset coast is
no more.
There is a possibility
the developer (NBDL) may try a Judicial Review. But even if they win
it is a long way back.
I think it is worth
looking at this heroic community defence against a foreign corporate
giant. A giant who had effectively limitless resources, yet still
failed.
So why was Navitus Bay
rejected while most other coast-scarring monsters have had the
go-ahead?
A major reason Navitus
Bay was rejected had nothing to do with the amount of seabed damage,
or the job losses that would ensue in the tourist trade and certainly
nothing to do with the extortionate cost and ineffectiveness of the
whole scheme. It was in essence rejected because of its unique
position.
Navitus Bay, beggaring
belief, was going to be built off the World Heritage Jurassic Coast.
Arrogant as ever, the NBDL impact assessment estimated virtually a
nil impact on this special location.
Luckily for us UNESCO
disagreed. The UNESCO report (prepared by the IUCN) comprehensively
junked the self serving NBDL documentation.
After the humiliation
meeted out by the IUCN report most honourable and decent
organisations would have then backed away. But not NBDL.
I suppose they were so
used to seeing government assisted wind farm developers trample over
local concerns they thought they could ignore a UN agency as well. In
most circumstances they would probably have been right.
While the UNESCO
report was devastating, NBDL might still have pulled it off.
But then the brick
wall of community opposition hit them.
National Records were
set. Navitus Bay became the most objected development in UK history.
Thousands of people
poured over the mountain of obfuscated and unclear documentation.
They exposed howlers, errors and half truths. Many of which may well
have been missed by an overwhelmed Planning Inspectorate.
We were particularly
blessed by having the “Challenge Navitus” team. A volunteer
group who literally took the NBDL documentation apart.
We had the local MP's
on-board, and the mainland councils as well. They all made lots of
noise about how terrible this scheme would be.
In essence, Navitus Bay
was defeated by the community.
Without mass community
objection then even this World Heritage Coast scarring monster may
have been approved. The solid and long term opposition to this
planned outrage is to the eternal credit to the people of Dorset.
So if you are
confronted by one of these money hungry coast defiling carpet baggers
always remember your community is probably more powerful and
resourceful than you think. Encourage community objection.
Developers love to
insist that resistance is useless.
It never is.
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