The News Sentinel
Wednesday, March 10, 1999
Guest Column
Nuclear Power is another 'unfunded liability'
Chris Williams of Indianapolis is executive
director of the Citizen Action Coalition of Indiana
The United States faces an economic
crisis as a result of nuclear energy policies, which may produce as much
as $54 billion worth of liabilities for taxpayers and consumers. At
present, Congress is reconsidering "mobile Chernobyl"
legislation that would send thousands of nuclear waste shipments barreling
across the U.S. to a stop-gap storage site in Nevada. I hope the media
will use this as the starting point for a broader investigation into the
wisdom and fairness of current nuclear policies.
One unavoidable aspect to nuclear power
is that, once a nuclear plant ceases to operate, its radioactive hulk must
be dismantled and entombed in a process know as
"decommissioning". the irradiated fuel that powered the reactor
must also be isolated for a period best described as "forever".
Because these procedures occur after the plant ceases to produce anything
of value, customers who buy nuclear-generated electricity pay into
decommissioning and waste storage funds as part of their monthly bills.
This is threatened by schemes to
deregulate the electric industry. Once consumers get to shop for
electricity like they shop for long-distance phone service, demand for
nuclear-generated electricity will plummet due to its high cost. This will
result in plants closing earlier than planned, reducing decommissioning
and waste-storage income.
The difference between what must be paid
and what is actually collected will be nuclear power's "unfunded
liability". A study funded by the Citizens Action Coalition
Education Fund says that, of the 102 nuclear plants operating by
investor-owned utilities, competitive pressures could force as many as $54
billion in unfunded liabilities.
This has ramifications even for
nuclear-free states such as Indiana. AEP's Cook nuclear plant, off-line
since Sept. 1997, is located in Michigan. yet 65 to 70 percent of its
power has been consumed by Hoosiers. According to the CACEF study, Cook is
likely to generated an unfunded nuclear waste liability of as much as $1.6
billion, and an unfunded decommissioning liability of almost $2
billion.
The Citizens Action Coalition Education
Fund believes future producers of nuclear power should be responsible for
all the costs associated with nuclear power. Past producers should be
responsible for any unfunded liabilities they have created. Taxpayers
should not be asked to subsidize the producers of nuclear power and
customers should not be asked to bail out utilities which have made
uneconomic and unwise investment decisions.
CACEF Study
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