Why Nuclear Power Can't Solve Climate Change by Itself
Nuclear power might be part of a Green New Deal, but it cant meet all U.S. energy needs. When the fate of the planet is at stake, a single precedent starts to seem like a blueprint. Most Americans, as far as pollsters can tell, want the United States to honor its commitment under the Paris Agreement on climate change. According to that pact, the United States must, by 2025, cut its carbon emissions 26 percent below their all-time peak. That will be hard. To make the Paris goal, the U.S. would have to cut carbon by 2.6 percent every year for the next seven years. And it has simply never cut its emissions that fast in such a sustained way before. In fact, since the end of World War II, only one country has pulled off such a feat: France. Starting in 1974, France undertook an extensive build-out of its nuclear-power industry, and slashed its carbon emissions by an average rate of 2.9 percent every year from 1979 to 1988, while still growing its economy. No country has done anything like that before or since. It has the promise of a good strategy. And last week, its just what the center-right commentator Andrew Sullivan ordered. Writing in New York , Sullivan argued that the United States should undertake a massive nuclear energy program as a radically moderate answer to climate change. Unlike renewables, nuclear power doesnt cease to work when the sun sets or when the wind stops blowing. It is already technologically feasible, and its been quickly scaled up in the past. The ambition of a nuclear expansion could match that of the Green New Deal, except with all the twiddly socialism bits removed. To his credit, Sullivans case for nuclear power includes long lists of its drawbacks. New nuclear plants are very expensive to build. Nuclear accidents, while extremely rare, are extremely expensive to remediate (if they can be remediated at all). But because the well-being of humanity is in jeopardy, these cons should bow to the pros, Sullivan says. After all, he asserts, nuclear power can potentially meet all our energy demands. Isnt it nice to think so? Sullivans sincere concern for the issue is welcome, and he is right to compliment the no-half-measures aspiration of the Green New Deal. He is also correct to argue that a nuclear build-out could lower the United States carbon emissions. But, alas, nuclear power is not a full answeror even half an answerto climate change. It simply cannot meet all of the U.S.s energy demands. And by casting a nuclear build-out as a kind of moderate climate counteroffer, he reveals a misunderstanding about the Green New Deal itselfand what makes it notable. Let there be no mistake: Nuclear power plants can generate enormous amounts of carbon-free electricity. A rapid increase in nuclear energy would slash emissions from the power sector, as the French example makes clear. Even today, Frances carbon densityits carbon emissions per capitaranks well below that of Germany, the United Kingdom, and the United States, according to the Global Carbon Atlas . But you cant put a nuclear reactor in a tractor-trailer or a steel plant. Nuclear can only reduce emissions from the power sector, and the energy system is bigger than just electricity, says Sam Ori , the executive director of the Energy Policy Institute at the University of Chicago. While I think nuclear has real potential as a means to decarbonizing electricity, you still have a lot of sectors to worry about. In fact, electricity makes up a smaller and smaller part of the climate problem. Right now, the power sector contributes only about a third of annual U.S. carbon emissions related to energy production. When you factor in land change and agriculture (read: deforestation and all those pesky cows), electricity is responsible for only about a quarter of annual U.S. emissions. And its share is declining. Carbon emissions from the U.S. power sector have fallen 28 percent since 2005 . Meanwhile, emissions from other parts of the economytransportation, agriculture, industryhave fallen by only 5 percent. Even if you figure out electricity, you still have to figure out industry. You still have to figure out transportation, Ori told me. Although we have partial answers to some of the problems posed by those sectorseveryone could buy electric cars, for instance, and charge them off the new nuclear-powered gridwe dont have total ones. We still have no electrified way of moving around freight. Electrified air travel remains notional . All the nuclear plants in the world could not reduce the importance of oil in steel production . Solving all these problems will require some kind of public policy, Ori said; even electric cars wont replace their gas-powered brethren without a regulatory nudge. Sullivans nuclear build-out has nothing to say about such challenges. Yet a Green New Deal does. If you look at Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortezs actual Green New Deal resolution , youll see that its vision extends far beyond the power sector. It pledges to invest in U.S. industry and manufacturing so as to remove pollution and greenhouse gas emissions ... as much as is technologically feasible. It makes an almost identical promise for the agricultural sector. The resolution is notably imprecise in how it will accomplish those goals, but it was written as a list of goals , not policies. At least it recognizes that those sectors exist. ( The Washington Post editorial boards efficient, effective, and focused Green New Deal also makes passing mention of them.) So why does Sullivan believe that nuclear power constitutes a radically moderate counteroffer? I suspect he believes that it represents a concession on the part of environmentalists. For years, No nukes was the unifying demand of Big Green groups. In his piece, Sullivan claims that nuclear power was left out entirely from the Green New Deal, which he calls staggering. He links to a Popular Mechanics article that says the same thing. The problem is that it was included in the Green New Deal. Ocasio-Cortezs proposal demands 100 percent clean, renewable, and zero-emission energy sources. The watchwords here are clean and zero-emission , both coded language for nuclear power. I have covered debates over nuclears inclusion in the Green New Deal, and I agree that its status is shaky: The activist group Sunrise Movement has sometimes decried it and sometimes endorsed it. But the most detailed version of a Green New Deal online , from the leftist group Data for Progress, recognizes the importance of clean sources such as nuclear. And the author of that report told me explicitly on Twitter : I support more nuclear. The fact is that many environmentalists have already made the concession to nuclear power that Sullivan demands, precisely because they believe that climate change is so dangerous as to be worth the trade-offs. And because many environmentalists are also progressives, they might also recognize the big-government allure of nuclear power. It is interesting to me that conservatives flock to nuclear power. They point to France! I cant get over that, Ori told me last week, sounding bewildered. Its a state-run industry in France. The way they were able to get to 80 or 90 percent nuclear is that they didnt worry about market forces. They just did it. It was, in other words, industrial policy . So even if Sullivan misses the mark, the larger irony shouldnt be lost. Once, the environmental movement rallied under the banner of No nukes. Now, in its hunt for precedents for the Green New Deal, it must admire Gallic nuclear appeal.