Don't Nuke the Budget!
Don't Nuke the Budget!
Harvey Wasserman
July 28,
2011
America's budget crisis has the world economy at the brink. Social Security, Medicare, aid for needy children, environmental protection and much more are being chopped.
Yet Congress and the White House may still want to use our money for fund atomic power.
Specifically, $36 billion in loan guarantees may still be on the table for building new nukes. Millions more are slated for "small modular reactors" and other atomic boondoggles.
A national campaign---including an August 7 "MUSE2" concert---is underway to help stop this. With your help, we can win.
Some realities:
• More US
energy is now generated by renewables than nuclear power, according to the latest Energy Information
Administration report, and the balance is continuing to
shift to green sources.
• Solar cells are now cheaper
and faster to install than new nuclear, and will soon be
cheaper than coal, according to General
Electric.
• After a half-century, US atomic power
cannot attract private investment for new reactors, cannot
obtain sufficient insurance against a major disaster and
cannot deal with its wastes.
• At least one
Congressional study shows the likelihood of default on
reactor loan guarantees to be at least 50%.
• The US Nuclear
Regulatory Commission's official post-Fukushima report
advocates major upgrades in safety and temporary waste
storage which the industry is fighting because the costs
would force shut numerous aging, dangerous reactors,
including nearly two-dozen virtual clones of Fukushima Unit
One.
• Two reactors in Nebraska have just barely
escaped major disasters due to flooding, although upstream
dams still pose a significant danger.
• The only
reactor now under construction in France has admitted to at
least another billion dollars in cost over-runs and new delays that will push
its projected opening until to at least five years after the
original target date.
• France's new nuke under
construction in Finland is also billions over budget and
years behind schedule.
• Japan, Germany, Switzerland,
Italy and Sweden have committed to phasing out all reactors
and converting to renewables.
• A major new study in Japan has shown
atomic power to be the highest-cost source of
electricity.
• Nearly three-quarters of Japan's
reactors are now shut, and all could be down by next summer.
• Reactors make global warming worse, and this
summer's devastating heat waves have escalated their
ecological impact, forcing ill-timed shutdowns.
• The
owners of Georgia's Vogtle project, with $8.33 billion in
federal guarantees, are fighting to make sure cost overruns are
paid by consumers, not the company.
• Despite
losing a major court decision and fierce public opposition,
Entergy has decided to buy more fuel for the Vermont Yankee
reactor, raising the stakes in a legal and political
showdown with major national implications.
The $36 billion in loan guarantees once proposed by Obama for the 2012 budget come as every penny is being slashed from programs for veterans, the young, elderly and impoverished, as well as for protecting the environment and researching new technologies.
Given the economic failure of atomic power, it's likely no new reactors will be built here without these giveaways.
In 2007 the Bush Administration proposed a $50 billion guarantee package that was defeated by a national grassroots movement.
Key to that campaign was NukeFree.org, founded by Bonnie Raitt, Jackson Browne and Graham Nash. With MoveOn.org, Greenpeace, Nuclear Information & Resource Service, BeyondNuclear, Physicians for Social Responsibility and other national and regional groups, they delivered 120,000 signatures to Congress and sponsored a lobby day that helped shrink the guarantees to $18.5 billion.
Now Raitt, Browne, Nash, John Hall, David Crosby, Kitaro and others will be part of a MUSE2 concert at Shoreline Amphitheatre south of San Francisco on August 7. The all-day show will benefit Japanese disaster victims and recall the hugely successful 1979 Musicians United for Safe Energy "No Nukes" Concerts that rocked New York City after the accident at Three Mile Island.
MUSE2 and the stop-the-guarantees campaign aim to finish the job of burying an ever more unsustainable atomic industry.
Today the guarantees are missing from House Appropriations bill, but could re-surface in the Senate. Some believe the turmoil around the budget will preclude the Senate from doing an appropriations bill, and that the guarantees might surface in a Continuing Resolution. "For the guarantees to resurface, some pro-nuclear Senator will have to try to slip them in," says Michael Mariotte of NIRS. "But we'll be watching."
And a fully empowered national movement could be in good position to kill those guarantees and the unwanted future of US nuclear power along with them.
Slashing social services, environmental protection and so much more to pay for new nuclear plants is not the way to a sustainable green-powered Earth. Your action at this critical moment could make all the difference.
Harvey Wasserman edits http://NukeFree.org and is author of SOLARTOPIA! OUR GREEN POWERED EARTH. He helped co-found Musicians United for Safe Energy.