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Page added on May 18, 2012

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Japan trades nuclear power for fossil fuels

Consumption

Energy is the lifeblood of modern economies and there’s no more amazingly useful form of energy than electricity.

That’s why I was initially startled to read the recent news that the last of Japan’s 54 nuclear power plants has been shut down, a turn of events that makes Japan the first major economy of this century to run without operating any such reactors.

The news impressed me because prior to the mega-quake and tsunami of 2011, Japan powered 30 percent of its electrical grid from nuclear plants. Giving up about a third of the electrical power used by a major economy is a convulsive change. (By way of comparison, in the U.S. about 20 percent of our electricity comes from nukes. That’s more than most people realize, but still a full notch less than what Japan had been doing before the quake.)

But big changes in public policy should be no surprise given the size of the nuclear disaster that hit Japan last year. The earthquake and tsunami there sparked problems that became nuclear meltdowns in power plants near Fukushima.

Japan has been making up the power gap it faces by importing more fossil fuels. That approach, of course, increases the world’s production of greenhouse gases, an environmental black eye in the minds of many.

I’ve read that the Japanese have been importing 18 percent more liquefied natural gas than they were before the earthquake, the lion’s share of which has gone to generating electricity.

Recently, I talked all this over with Dr. Don Wall, director of the research reactor at Washington State University. Wall reminded me about how differently we can use natural gas and what those differences can mean in terms of efficiency. A good home furnace, for example, is close to 95 percent efficient.

“But burned to generate electricity, natural gas is only 35 percent efficient. So I think power generation is a horribly wasteful way to use good fuel,” Wall said. “We have lots of uranium, and it makes sense to me to use it to generate electricity in nuclear plants.”

Even with the increase in burning fossil fuels in Japan, power supplies have been tight. Last summer, when electricity demands were high, factories ran at night and during the weekends to help spread out electrical needs. In other words, people had to deal with major disruptions of their lives in order to hold things together over the warm months.

Some analysts see this summer as a test case for the possibility of a no-nuke future in Japan. If the nation can make it through the summer with some sacrifices but no blackouts, many citizens will want to keep the shuttered nuclear plants off-line.

But if that happens, it will be an expensive change. The Japanese economy traditionally ran trade surpluses because the world bought so many Toyotas and the like. But because of the increases in fossil fuel purchases, Japan ran a trade deficit last year for the first time in more than 30 years.

Partly in response to such impacts Yoshito Sengoku, the president of the ruling party in Japan, called ending all nuclear power production the equivalent of “mass suicide.”

The effects of Japan’s 2011 disaster are also being felt in Europe. Dr. Wall noted to me that Germany has been putting the brakes on using its nuclear power plants.

“That’s been a windfall for France because Germany is now purchasing large amounts of electricity from the French,” he said. “According to Le Monde, France has sold over $400 million of electricity to Germany in nine months.”

It’s nice to have a next-door neighbor that can sell you a lot of electricity. But the irony is that France has the strongest nuclear program in the world. Almost 80 percent of all the power generated in France comes from nuclear plants. So Germany may be shuttering its own nuclear power plants, but it is increasing its reliance on such plants next door, at least for now.

“France is the largest net exporter of electricity in the world and it benefits from that fact in all sorts of ways,” Wall told me. “It’s interesting to think we in the U.S. could move in that direction ourselves if we made it a priority.”

Tri City Herald


7 Comments on "Japan trades nuclear power for fossil fuels"

  1. BillT on Fri, 18th May 2012 2:01 pm 

    Japan realizes that if #4 spent fuel pool goes, Japan is history. Not to mention that the West Coast of America is going to take killer doses of radiation. The coverups can only happen because damage from radiation takes years to develop. This disaster will already mean millions of additional cancer deaths in Japan and North America. The radiation is now all around the northern hemisphere. If #4 goes, all bets are off. What would happen if this was a West coast reactor with even more stored used fuel? Many tons more?

  2. Kenz300 on Fri, 18th May 2012 2:37 pm 

    The disaster at Fukishima is far from over. TEPCO is broke and being taken over by the taxpayers of Japan. They will be paying for this disaster forever.

    It is time for Japan to transition to safe, clean alternative energy sources. The entrenched nuclear industry will do all they can to keep their hold on Japan. They no longer have any credibility with the people.

    The spent fuel rod pools are now seen to be as dangerous as the reactors and have not been secured.

  3. Rick on Fri, 18th May 2012 3:11 pm 

    Nukes suck. A bad idea from the beginning. And now the world is stuck with all this dangerous stuff.

    I personally think the nuclear industry is finished.

  4. BillT on Sat, 19th May 2012 1:31 am 

    Kenz, I think that before it is over, the Us Taxpayer will be donating billions to the cleanup. Wait and see.

  5. sparky on Sat, 19th May 2012 2:29 am 

    .
    …tsunami fatalities 19300

    …nuclear fatalities 0

  6. BillT on Sat, 19th May 2012 12:58 pm 

    sparky…the damage is going to take time to develop. Even smokers go for 10-20 years before their cancers become noticeable. Many thousands of Japanese and Americans are already dying from this disaster and don’t know it…yet.

  7. Kenz300 on Sat, 19th May 2012 7:52 pm 

    Japan has some great technology and manufacturing companies. They need to transition to safe, clean alternative energy sources. Wind, solar, wave energy, geothermal and second generation biofuels along with energy conservation and increased efficiency can make up for the loss of nuclear power. Nuclear energy is too costly and too dangerous.

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