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California Lawmakers Extend the Life of the State's Last Nuclear Power Plant (npr.org) 101

Citing searing summer temperatures and expected energy shortages, California lawmakers approved legislation aimed at extending the life of the state's last-operating nuclear power plant. From a report: The Diablo Canyon plant -- the state's largest single source of electricity -- had been slated to shutter by 2025. The last-minute proposal passed by the state legislature early Thursday could keep it open five years longer, in part by giving the plant's owner, Pacific Gas and Electric (PG&E), a $1.4 billion forgivable loan. California, like other U.S. states and countries, has been struggling to reduce its climate-warming emissions while adapting to a rapidly warming world. Record-breaking heat waves have stressed the state's increasingly carbon-free electrical grid in recent years, triggering rolling blackouts as recently as 2020. Grid operators, fearing a similar crash, issued a statewide alert to conserve energy last month.

The state has set the goal of getting 100 percent of its electricity from clean and renewable sources by 2045. Advocates for Diablo Canyon claim that target will be difficult to achieve without the 2,250 megawatt nuclear power plant. Diablo Canyon generated nearly 9 percent of the state's electricity last year and roughly 15 percent of the state's clean energy production. Maintaining operations at Diablo Canyon will keep our power on while preventing millions of tons of carbon from being released into the atmosphere," said Isabelle Boemeke of the group Save Clean Energy. "This is a true win-win for the people of California and our planet." Nuclear power has seen a resurgence in recent years as the climate crisis has worsened and governments increase efforts to cut climate-warming emissions. The Biden administration launched a $6 billion effort earlier this year aimed at keeping the country's aging nuclear plants running.

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California Lawmakers Extend the Life of the State's Last Nuclear Power Plant

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  • 1 or 2 or both?

    • by Anonymous Coward
      OK. So they keep it running a few more years. Then what?

      This still doesn't solve the underlying problem: The utility companies operating nuclear power plants are enormously corrupt and criminally incompetent.
      • then we're not allowed to charge our EVs except on approved holidays.

      • Re: (Score:2, Troll)

        by MacMann ( 7518492 )

        This still doesn't solve the underlying problem: The utility companies operating nuclear power plants are enormously corrupt and criminally incompetent.

        These are the same corrupt and incompetent utilities that are producing electricity by wind, sun, and rain. How does closing Diablo Canyon fix that problem?

        They keep the plant running for a few more years so they have more time to fix the issues of corrupt and incompetent utilities that can't produce enough energy by other means. I'm thinking the corruption and incompetence is not in the utilities but in the government. Keeping Diablo Canyon running buys time to clean out the government too.

        Wherever the

        • The problem is the nuclear plant is built very near two seismic fault lines.

          • The problem is the nuclear plant is built very near two seismic fault lines.

            Was this problem just discovered? If you know about it then I assume so does every legislator that approved this loan. Yet they got the loan anyway. So, it must be that the risks of the seismic fault lines is considered acceptable for the plant to continue operating.

            Every nuclear power plant is built to withstand an earthquake. The risks of earthquakes was put under review all over the world after the quake that caused the meltdowns at Fukushima. If Diablo Canyon did not meet these strict requirements

  • Despite, https://hardware.slashdot.org/... [slashdot.org]

    Kick the can down the road.
  • I'm surprised this article hasn't been bombed by the NeverNukers. "Muh expensive! Muh would rather burn down the planet than use a form of power that works _now_ and has killed fewer people over its lifetime than coal will in the next month! Muh muh muh!"
    • Are against it because without huge amounts of government money being given the private businesses the private businesses will skip the maintenance but keep the plant running eventually causing a disaster. That's exactly what happened at fukushima.

      We're not exactly thrilled about our tax dollars going free and clear to a private company in exchange for nothing but a promise to keep supplying electricity. It would seem the reasonable thing would be to get shares in the company were investing in but you k
      • by Swervin ( 836962 )
        I think you mean Mississippi, not Missouri. Jackson Mississippi is the city having water issues currently.
      • You're worried about money when the planet is burning. Gotcha.
        • If money was no object we'd have wind and solar. It's been 10 years since they've been able to supply our energy needs. Bernie Sanders proposed the green New deal but a handful of dipshits put some social justice warrior crap in a preamble bill so every single person on this forum decided it was woke and gave up on it.

          I do wish the left knew when to keep their damn mouth shut. I get it that it's annoying that people get upset over the concept of social justice because FOX News tells them to and people c
          • If money was no object we'd have wind and solar.

            If money were no object then why do you believe wind and solar would win out? If the selection criteria were not cost then what would we base our decisions to build upon? CO2 emissions perhaps? There's a number of studies to look at on this and wind does well enough, but not solar, at least not the silicon based solar that is so common. Look at Wikipedia for a summary of some of those studies: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
            That link takes you to the 2014 IPCC study, scroll down for the 2020 study.

            If

      • Fukushima's biggest flaw happened before the plant was even built, when engineers said they needed a huge sea wall and the people building it said they'd pay for half of what was asked. What is needed is a heavily-regulated engineering team that can shut these things down the second they think someone's cutting corners.
        • they had decades to build that seawall And no shortage of engineers telling them to build it. They skipped building it because it was expensive. They knew they needed it before the plant even went up. Businessmen will skip on required safety and maintenance every chance they get because they know they're never going to be held accountable and they get the pocket the money for themselves and they don't have to live near the disasters they create it.

          Adam fucking Smith talked about all of this a long time
      • Technologically I really like the idea of nuclear, surely as an engineer some next gen stuff. And then you come along with this very realistic, listen this is how capitalistic managers twist these things, scenario and I'm back on the fence... A few days ago, very pro wind power news got into the media here in Switzerland. With 3000 turbines, practically all power could be wind generated. With 1000 turbines, the whole country would already be very very green. Then I read up and found that in the last 2.5 dec
    • They are busy making sure their EV is set to charge at 9pm..
  • by greytree ( 7124971 ) on Thursday September 01, 2022 @03:39PM (#62844231)
    Build nukes until we beat global warming.
    Then work out something better.
    THEN shut them down ?

    And the people who fucked this up and shut them down early and left the world dependent on fucking Putin will apologise to us all ?

    Good.
    • We did it 10 years ago when wind and solar were at the point where they could supply base load power even in places with a lot of cloud cover and little wind. But just like hyperloop so long as the magic carrot of nuclear power plants is dangled in front of you that can keep you distracted from the actual solutions while fossil fuel companies continue to profit. It's all a trick to get us to not actually spend the money rolling out the technology we spent so much time and effort building because powerful sp
      • by sfcat ( 872532 )

        We did it 10 years ago when wind and solar were at the point where they could supply base load power even in places with a lot of cloud cover

        So never then? Because wind and solar can't make baseload power now. That is why CA has a duck curve for a pricing structure. That is why CA is restarting this NPP. That is why PG&E doesn't have enough money left over to trim trees. That is why German power is so dirty. That is why French power is so clean. Does reality even exist for you? All of those decisions that you blame on PG&E were actually made by the state regulators. Please stop posting about power generation, you have no idea wh

        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          Baseload is an outdated concept, so says the guy who used to run the UK's national grid: https://energypost.eu/intervie... [energypost.eu]

          Think about what we could have. Over-build renewables so that you are covered 99.9% of the time, with some storage or maybe even the odd gas plant to cover the once or twice a year you need them. Now you have masses of cheap energy for everyone, and it can easily be net zero. Why would you not want that? Why insist on paying 6-7x as much for nuclear power, in 20 years time by which point

          • Baseload is the reality of the world that we live in as it's running and must be taken into account. If we're going to get rid of it a sane transition plan would be required. And it looks to me like right now we are suffering from a lack of such a plan, and it seems like that will only get worse, especially in the short term. Let's wait until we get rid of it to say it's an outdated concept.

            One (two?) reason that you might not want to live in your world of pure overbuilt renewables is the land use and scale

    • by stooo ( 2202012 )

      nope, you have it the wrong order.
      - Build renewables
      - Extend slightly running nukes
      - Shutdown nukes before the explosion.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      It's too late to build nukes, even if they were affordable. The only outfit building them in Europe is EDF, and they are quoting 20 years for one.

      Plus nukes aren't ideal for developing countries. They are expensive and need a lot of infrastructure, as well as strong regulation. Not the sort of thing you can set up overnight.

  • We won! (Score:2, Informative)

    Logic, science, economics and environment won today. Next let's build 20-25 GW's of new nuclear energy. NuScale reactors would be a great purchase. We can tie it to public pension funds (like the UK) which will make those pensions solvent for century.
    • by ksw_92 ( 5249207 )

      No, the panic over the overstressed power grid won today. The current mega-super-heat dome of doom event here plus the fact that the legislature was in get-the-f-outta-dodge mode last night is what got this done, not reason. One more plank for next-gen Govenator to hammer into place for his run for the POTUS chair.

      I'm happy it got done but it just kicks the can down the road, like so many other policy decisions lately.

    • New nuclear may be ok. Diablo is sort of old; construction began in 1968, with roughtly 16 years of construction for each of the two units. It cost $14 billion to construct (adjusted for inflation). And like most nuclear plants of the past it is extremely expensive to operate. The rationale to shut it down was a bit flawed - assumptions that renewables would increase and therefore the Diablo Canyon would only be needed half time, which makes it more expensive to operate than it makes in profit. Remembe

      • by sfcat ( 872532 )

        PG&E planned to decommission, not the state

        Um what? Then why was it Newsom announcing the closure of Diablo Canyon instead of a PG&E PR rep? Also, that's a decision the state regulators have final say in, not PG&E. PG&E has always argued that it needed to keep Diablo open. Not sure how you got the idea that they wanted to close it. Diablo has about 20 years left in its scheduled life and it is PG&E's only source of CO2 free baseload power. It is very profitable when you compare it to only its operational costs. In order to kil

  • by prisoner-of-enigma ( 535770 ) on Thursday September 01, 2022 @03:42PM (#62844239) Homepage

    What's galling is California, in their relentless zeal to zero out carbon emissions, is ignoring how much nuclear power can and is contributing to their ability to decarbonize. It's nothing but stupid anti-nuclear fearmongering that has driven the shutdown schedule of these plants.

    Wind, solar, and hydro make poor base load generators. Nuclear is ideal for that scenario yet it's being treated as if it's just as bad as coal, oil, and gas.

    • The technology is old though. There is new stuff, but just like the old nuclear plants the cost of construction is massive. Historically, Hydro has been the best base power, the only snag is climate change causing droughts which makes hydro less reliable than it has been in the past.

      It also isn't fearmongering that lead to this shutdown, but economics. The $1.4 billion loan is to encourage PG&E to keep it open.

  • How much capacity do you get for 1.5B or renewables? Say you give random houses a power wall and solar system and require it be completed in 3 years. How much would that offset? Say it was all utility level wind farms, how much would that generate for 1.5B. Offshore?

    • It doesn't get much in house hold renewables at all. Not when the wind isn't blowing or sun is shining brightly, battery capacity is pretty much insignificant in comparison to yearly energy generation. New generation added each year could charge the new storage of all types including cars, in under 30 minutes. (It was 12 minutes a few years ago). Plus, it will never ever makes sense to do house hold power generation and storage. You want to spread out both generation and storage geographically to avoi
      • Seems like daytime car-charging is an obvious part of the solution. Most cars are parked most of the day. People are always saying how hard it will be to get charging in every apartment complex; ok so put charging in parking lots that run mostly in the daytime when the sun is strong.
    • Re: (Score:1, Troll)

      by MacMann ( 7518492 )

      How much would this money get in renewable energy? Not quite one Ivanpah Solar Power Facility.
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

      For comparison this same money would get about 1/10th of a Watts Bar Nuclear power plant.
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

      Why spend ten times as much for the nuclear power plant? Because it produces more than ten times as much energy per year. And it produces energy at night.

      One common complaint of nuclear power is that it takes so long to get them built. We see the US Navy buil

      • We see the US Navy build nuclear powered aircraft carriers in four years, and this is during peacetime.

        The first steel for the new USS Enterprise (CVN-80) was cut in 2017. If there are no disruptions, it won't be delivered until 2028 at the earliest, 11 years after construction began.

        Reactors for naval vessels are not suitable for civilian use. They don't have the same protection mechanisms, they use highly-enriched uranium, and they have a lot of highly secret components. It is unlikely that the US government would approve their use, with objections coming from numerous departments. While the president can

      • Each of the two units at Diablo Canyon took 16 years to construct...

    • by guruevi ( 827432 )

      Based on industry standards, about 750 MW nameplate capacity which have about 10-25% capacity factor (so 75-150 MW ideally) and that is not including the land, add to that about 2.5 acres of land per MW nameplate capacity and this will operate between 10 and 15 years before being scrapped. And also, the batteries, will probably double that cost.

      But presuming energy is stored in unicorn farts, this is $20M/MW or $2M/MW/year for usable energy.

      A new 1000MW Westinghouse nuclear reactor (one of the most expensiv

    • by sfcat ( 872532 )

      How much capacity do you get for 1.5B or renewables? Say you give random houses a power wall and solar system and require it be completed in 3 years. How much would that offset? Say it was all utility level wind farms, how much would that generate for 1.5B. Offshore?

      Let's see, solar is $3/watt and this is about $1.5/watt. With renewables you only get power a small fraction of the time (which is why it is unsuitable for baseload). Nuclear on the other hand is the most reliable source of power we have. So to match Diablo with renewables it would take 18x the amount of money (nuclear availability is 9x that of renewables and this plant is half the cost per watt). So to replace Diablo with renewables would cost about $27b and that is only if you ignore storage complete

  • Nuclear in CA (Score:2, Insightful)

    by King_TJ ( 85913 )

    Frankly, with their "Green" push to go all electric vehicles by a set date and everything else, it's crazy CA doesn't get busy building new nuclear power plants; much less a decision to keep an existing one going another 5 years.

    A lot has happened with regards to improved reactor designs since all of these aging ones across America were put online. The "waste" from these could literally be the fuel for a new generation of plant.

    People keep talking about the prohibitive expense, but then they turn around and

    • Stop making sense, it only angers the climate crisis banshees which makes them scream louder.

    • Most of the governmental decisions in California make sense if you realize they operate under the following paradigm:

      "I only do what appears popular, and do not care about actual outcomes".

  • by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Thursday September 01, 2022 @03:46PM (#62844255)
    "forgivable loans"? The loans are *always* forgiven. Like those PPP loans taken by Congressman complaining about Biden's $10k in studen loan forgiveness.

    We give taxpayer money to private individuals all the time. Usually the top 20k families. Stop pretending we don't.
    • * In the case of PPP Loans, the particular value of "always" is 83%.
      • In that case we should just rescind biden's student loan debt forgiveness and give the money to Ted Cruz and Mitch McConnell instead. Thank you for showing me the error of my ways.
  • Nuclear power is one of the most reliable ways to provide power for the base load.
    If we want to transition to a primarily electric consumer fleet, we need more nuclear power, not less.
    and we need to take the time and spend the money to reprocess spent fuel to make it usable again.
    Dig up all of the waste and reprocess it into fuel for more efficient modern reactor designs that can run on reprocessed spent fuel.
    Move forward, not backward.
    • For about 10 years now. That's why no nuclear power plants are being built. Without enormous government subsidies they're just not profitable. And the government has had too much austerity to waste money on money losing projects like nuclear power plants. Governments will pay a bit of money to keep existing plants going longer but there's no way in hell you're going to get anyone to sign off on a new nuclear power plant when they can just build a wind farm or a solar plant and get just as much power for les
    • by ksw_92 ( 5249207 )

      You want to see something eye-opening? Look at Cal-ISO's supply page: https://www.caiso.com/TodaysOu... [caiso.com]
      NatGas is the largest power provider. Solar does its usual diurnal thing. Hydro ramps up a little but can't get too far (we're in a mega-drought). Fission? The supply is rock steady through the whole day....a flat line of supply of about 2GW.

      Yes, hone the renewables tech. But for the love of all that is holy give us a base line we can riff off of so we can watch "Whiplash" again.

      • I find it interesting that the battery line shows they charge up from about 8:00 AM to 4:00 PM then ramps up to a peak about 7:00 PM and then ramps down for some small ups and downs through the night. This night time up and down, charge and discharge, on the batteries appears to be the utilities putting everything else in a steady state and using only batteries to manage the small changes in demand. Maybe that is some kind of testing or conditioning of the batteries.

        Toggle to the "stacked" chart and the "

  • From the fine article:

    "Safety cannot take a back seat in our quest to keep the lights on and reduce global warming emissions."

    Safety is never first as Mike Rowe, the "Dirty Jobs" guy, likes to point out. What comes first is getting shit done. Safety comes second, maybe third after making a profit. If safety were first then nothing would get done. If there was no profit in what we do then we could not get things done for very long because we'd run out of money. Once those things are satisfied then we can worry about safety.

    I'm sorry, safety must take a back seat on keeping the lights on. In fact reducing

    • In fact reducing the global warming emissions is going to have to take a back seat to keeping the lights on.

      This is what is happening all over, the reason why coal and gas use is surging to all time highs. Because the world needs power for lights and heat and industry, and if any of those go away for too long you no longer have civilization.

      Better we start building lots of nculear plants now, so we can actually get away from coal and gas in a reasonable timeframe. It is not possible to do that with solar

    • If safety were first then nothing would get done. If there was no profit in what we do then we could not get things done for very long because we'd run out of money.

      Have you ever set foot in a nuclear plant? I have on several occasions to calibrate equipment that was slightly contaminated and was not able to leave the premises. Safety is taken very seriously.

      • I didn't claim that safety means nothing. I'm pointing out that safety is never a higher priority than getting work done. The safest power plant is having no power plant. But we need that power plant to get work done. So we have to balance safety with getting things done. Safety comes in second, maybe third. Always.

        These people screaming over nuclear power safety don't realize just how safe nuclear power has become over the many years we've been using it. Safety is taken seriously at a nuclear power

      • A bit too serious, I had one of those exposure indicators tripped without even setting foot in a facility. They are notoriously unreliable.

      • You are misinterpreting the comment you replied to. Your experience actually supports what they said.

        The nuclear plants you've been in actually exist, right? They were built, and they were operating?

        Arguably, it would have been safer not to build them. But they built them anyway, because we need power. They took some safety risks in order to get electricity. Therefore, because they built the plant in the first place, that's putting providing power ahead of perfect safety.

        First, provide power. Second, do so

    • In fact reducing the global warming emissions is going to have to take a back seat to keeping the lights on.

      This is what a lot of the climate change alarmists don't understand. They want to make radical changes to how the world works with no thought as to the consequences of such actions; if you destroy a society's ability to keep functioning, then your green policies won't mean anything as they're tossed along with everything else in order to turn the lights/water back on.

      In fact, you do more damage to your agenda the more radical your policies.

      Ultimately any climate change policies need to be economically feas

    • by Ichijo ( 607641 )

      Will there be clean water to drink if there's no electricity for pumps to run?

      Running the pumps is something that can be done during the day when the sun is out producing electricity. Pump the water to a high place, perhaps a giant elevated water tank [wikipedia.org], and you'll have water pressure 24/7 even when the power goes out due to a wildfire or something.

    • mr burns is to cheap to fix his plant and bribes his way out stuff.

    • Which is why it's so damned expensive. It's also why it's completely impossible to do economically now that wind and solar have gotten as cheap as they have and both can provide base load power. The nuclear age never came and it never will.

      As for your points about safety I would rather survive a week without power then have to flee my city like the people of Fukushima did. I don't trust my government and my businessmen enough to let them build and run nuclear power plants even if it wasn't a stupid econ
  • common sense actually won for once in California.

    • Give it a minute.

      Some asshat group will sue and get an injunction to go ahead and close the plant.

    • by q_e_t ( 5104099 )
      What is going to be more interesting is how the market works longer term. Companies sell energy retail but don't always generate it, or even if they also generate some, they tend to have to buy it in at times to cover SLAs to customers, and do so at a given price. With more intermittent sources being sure they can meet an SLA will be difficult, especially given that the retail companies will want to spend the least amount for power. Unless consumers vote with their dollars in a free market like California f
  • We all know that California is going to come to a bad end with either a MAJOR earthquake or a mega flood. And now the nukes are there to make the outcome of either more 'interesting'...

    Here's hoping I'm wrong!

  • If they had about a dozen of those, they would have enough power, to run everything, including recharging all of those silly EV's.
    • Those "silly EVs" are all you will be allowed to buy in sunny California after 2035. I expect Washington and Oregon will ban them with the same deadline, us Left Coast states like to stick together! Here's the fun thing about EVs: unlike $5/gallon gas, solar for recharging is FREE.
      • By the same logic of "free" solar power we have "free" gasoline. All that oil is in the ground, all we have to do is dig up this "free" energy and distill it down to "free" gasoline. Right?

        Solar power is far from free. It costs a lot of money in land, labor, and materials to collect that solar power and turn it into useful work. You can make an argument that solar power is lower cost, but you can't call it free. If solar power is free then gasoline must also be free. It's all energy that's just there

  • What could possibly go wrong!

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