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Obama's Atomic Blunder
As Vermont seethes with radioactive contamination and the Democratic Party crumbles, Barack Obama has plunged into the atomic abyss.
In the face of fierce green opposition and withering scorn from both liberal and conservative budget hawks, Obama has done what George W. Bush could not---pledge billions of taxpayer dollars for a relapse of the 20th Century's most expensive technological failure.
Obama has announced some $8.3 billion in loan guarantees for two new reactors planned for Georgia. Their Westinghouse AP-1000 designs have been rejected by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission as being unable to withstand natural cataclysms like hurricanes, tornadoes and earthquakes.
The Vogtle site was to originally host four reactors at a total cost of $600 million; it wound up with two at $9 billion.
The Southern Company which wants to build these two new reactors has cut at least one deal with Japanese financiers set to cash in on American taxpayer largess. The interest rate on the federal guarantees remains bitterly contested. The funding is being debated between at least five government agencies, and may well be tested in the courts. It's not clear whether union labor will be required and what impact that might have on construction costs.
The Congressional Budget Office and other analysts warn the likely failure rate for government-back reactor construction loans could be in excess of 50%. Energy Secretary Stephen Chu has admitted he was unaware of the CBO's report when he signed on to the Georgia guarantees.
Over the past several years the estimated price tag for proposed new reactors has jumped from $2-3 billion each in some cases to more than $12 billion today. The Chair of the NRC currently estimates it at $10 billion, well before a single construction license has been issued, which will take at least a year.
Energy experts at the Rocky Mountain Institute and elsewhere estimate that a dollar invested in increased efficiency could save as much as seven times as much energy than one invested in nuclear plants can produce, while producing ten times as many permanent jobs.
Georgia has been targeted largely because its regulators have demanded ratepayers put up the cash for the reactors as they're being built. Florida and Georgia are among a small handful of states taxing electric consumers for projects that cannot come on line for many years, and that may never deliver a single electron of electricity.
Two Florida Public Service Commissioners, recently appointed by Republican Governor Charlie Crist (now a candidate for the US Senate), helped reject over a billion dollars in rate hikes demanded by Florida Power & Light and Progress Energy, both of which want to build double-reactors at ratepayer expense. The utilities now say they'll postpone the projects proposed for Turkey Point and Levy County.
In 2005 the Bush Administration set aside some $18.5 billion for reactor loan guarantees, but the Department of Energy has been unable to administer them. Obama wants an additional $36 billion to bring the fund up to $54.5 billion. Proposed projects in South Carolina, Maryland and Texas appear to be next in line.
But the NRC has raised serious questions about Toshiba-owned Westinghouse's AP-1000 slated for Georgia's Vogtle site, as well as for South Carolina and Turkey Point. The French-made EPR design proposed for Maryland has been challenged by regulators in Finland, France and Great Britain. In Texas, a $4 billion price jump has sparked a political upheaval in San Antonio and elsewhere, throwing the future of that project in doubt.
Taxpayers are also on the hook for potential future accidents from these new reactors. In 1957, the industry promised Congress and the country that nuclear technology would quickly advance to the point that private insurers would take on the liability for any future disaster, which could by all serious estimates run into the hundreds of billions of dollars. Only $11 billion has been set aside the cover the cost of such a catastrophe. But now the industry says it will not build even this next generation of plants without taxpayers underwriting liability for future accidents. Thus the "temporary" program could ultimately stretch out to a full century or more.
In the interim, Obama has all but killed Nevada's proposed Yucca Mountain nuclear waste dump. He has appointed a commission of nuclear advocates to "investigate" the future of high-level reactor waste. But after 53 years, the industry is further from a solution than ever.
Meanwhile, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission has reported that at least 27 of America's 104 licensed reactors are now leaking radioactive tritium. The worst case may be Entergy's Vermont Yankee, near the state's southeastern border with New Hampshire and Massachusetts. High levels of contamination have been found in test wells around the reactor, and experts believe the Connecticut River is at serious risk.
A furious statewide grassroots campaign aims to shut the plant, whose license expires in 2012. A binding agreement between Entergy and the state gives the legislature the power to deny an extension. US Senator Bernie Sanders (I-VT) has demanded the plant close. The legislature may vote on it in a matter of days.
Obama has now driven a deep wedge between himself and the core of the environmental movement, which remains fiercely anti-nuclear. While reactor advocates paint the technology green, the opposition has been joined by fiscal conservatives like the National Taxpayer Institute, the Cato Institute and the Heritage Foundation.
Reactor backers hailing a "renaissance" in atomic energy studiously ignore France's catastrophic Olkiluoto project, now $3 billion over budget and 3 years behind schedule. Parallel problems have crippled another project at Flamanville, France, and are virtually certain to surface in the US.
The reactor industry has spent untold millions lobbying for this first round of loan guarantees. There's no doubt it will seek far more in the coming months. Having failed to secure private American financing, the question will be: in a tight economy, how much public money will Congress throw at this obsolete technology.
The potential flow of taxpayer guarantees to Georgia means nuclear opponents now have a tangible target. Also guaranteed is ferocious grassroots opposition to financing, licensing and construction of this and all other new reactor proposals, as well as to continued operation of leaky rustbucket reactors like Vermont Yankee.
The "atomic renaissance" is still a very long way from going tangibly critical.
- Posted in

81 Comments so far
Show AllNo surprises here. Nuclear energy was actually one of his campaign promises that his devotees obviously approved of. Why would he expect the majority to be against it?
One reason that both the Dubya Regime and Obama Regime have pushed hard to accomodate India's nuclear ambitions is to enable expanding the manufacture of nuclear plant equipment in India (equipment that will be exported to the US and other countries) to increase the nuclear industry's profits.
Is there a private insurance company willing to insure a nuclear power plant?
To my knowledge, there is not a single insurance company on planet Earth that is foolish enough to insure a nuclear power plant.
You can listen all day long to politicians talking about how safe these things are. Yet the insurance companies, who are probably the worlds best experts on risk, will never expose themselves to the risk involved with nuclear power.
No private insurance company insures nuclear reactors anywhere be they in power plants, ships, submarines, etc. They are all insured by taxpayers. If reactors could be privately financed without taxpayer guarantees, and insured by private insurers, they would be powering commercial ships, not just military ships.
One issue that has been overlooked is the cooling water for reactors. In recent years when Georgia had a drought, nuclear power plants' cooling water needs took precedence over domestic and agricultural water needs.
Water scarcity will be a more dire issue than energy scarcity in the 21st century and the new nuclear plants will be using more water in the summer at the same time it is most needed for domestic and agricultural purposes.
This guys Presidency is reaching a critical mass of failure.
I think that at this point, the Democratic party's only hope for retaining control of the White House is to nominate someone else in 2012.
We all know how well that strategy worked for the Democratic Party when LBJ realized that he could not win in 1968.
Only because Bobby was murdered.
Humphrey only turned against the war in the final month of the campaign while Nixon through his backdoor channel was telling the North that he'd give them a better deal if they'd stall peace negotiations.
-"In the face of fierce green opposition and withering scorn from both liberal and conservative budget hawks, Obama has done what George W. Bush could not---pledge billions of taxpayer dollars for a relapse of the 20th Century's most expensive technological failure. "
Now to be fair, Obama does say that these radioactive waste generators are part of his "green" agenda so I don't know what all the fuss is about.
It does beg the question: Why doesn't Obama understand that Iran's new reactors are part of that country's green plan?
Sure - $$$$$$$$$. Little green frogskins.
If only I could believe that the democrat party was really beginning to "crumble".
The rest of the article is informative, but I really want the "crumble" part to be real!
Mainly because that would mean there would, I hope, be fewer republicans in government!
Vote green.
The biggest traitor of the new century is Barack Obama. Let his name go down with Clarence Thomas in infamy!
Obama is more inclusive than Thomas. Thomas only wants to screw other black people. Obama, on the other hand, is apparently trying to screw everyone.
not the uberrich
; - ) ) ) ) ) ; - ) ) ) ) ) ; - ) ) ) ) )
No liberal has the right to protest a Green Party vote in 2012--not after this despicable announcement. Obama has been having to lie so much, that he's actually become a weaker speaker---he's stumbling over his words more and more even as he becomes more experienced and accustomed to power.
You can count on Democrat apologists blaming Nader, the green party and everybody except themselves when President Palin is inaugurated on 1/20/13.
Hate to say "I told you so", but it was ineveitable that Obama would be compelled to "go nuclear", whether he initally wanted to do so or not (maybe say, like HST?).
After alienating his left-center "base" in so many ways, whose full support he would need to be re-elected, he's made a "mad" dash for what he believes to be the "political center", which necesarily involves a "clean break" with anything that smacks of "leftist" or "socialist" underpinnings.
Obama may believe that whatever "tough-guy" credentials he lacks in foreign policy (just ask Cheney), he can compensate for by adopting a "tough-guy" energy policy--nuclear reactors--no matter how hypocritical that may appear to some as he sends Ms. Clinton on a mission to close the door to Iran's desire to do the same.
At the same time the impression is given that one of Obama's primary motivations for choosing this route is to "stop global warming". Please, Mr. President, we're smarter than that!!!
The best way to call Obama out politically is for someone who opposes nuclear energy/subsidies and is a member of the "base" to declare his candidacy for President--not as a primary challenge as some would suggest, but as an avowed "green socialist" candidate. Let the othes be seen to meld together as the RepugniDems. The Vermont-Yankee tritium leak would made a perfect backdrop and motivating event for the younger crowd to get involved.
Technically, we have the power to stop nuclear expenditures, as well as the useless CCS by supporting more economic, renewable alternatives, that would be quick to develop, e.g. the Atmsopheric Vortex Engine vortexengine.ca (aka Plan B). So let's get out there and do it!!
Republicans will not vote for Obama no matter how many domestic or foreign "tough guy" actions he takes, or even if he sends free pizza and ice cream to their families' homes every week from now until Nov. 2012.
With millions of swing voters still out of work in 2012, very few of them will vote for Obama.
Perception is reality.
"We" know that there will still be millions of unemployed in 2012, but the "tone-deaf" Obama handlers still believe in their "old-time-religion" of fiscal stimulus. They also still think the "center third" of the voting population is political ground that it should be possible to defend. They will be appealing to a coalition of those who believe, or can be convinced, that the nuclear options is a "green" technology, and others who have conflated the issue with a reduction of "dependence on foreign oil".
"Hard" Republicans are no more than 30% of the voters. I think Obama "went-to-school" on the Lieberman tactic of appealing to "centrists" in a possible three-way-race.
Do you really think Obama's embracing of nukes appeals to centrists? As a long-time centrist I'm disgusted with this position. I thought Obama was after the liberal voter who loves everything France and the EU do, including their big-time support of nuclear energy. Am I misreading the liberal mindset? Didn't Obama campaign in favor of nuclear energy? Please, someone, explain!!!
Gotta work on the spin here. The Headline should have read something like:
"Obama supports construction of deadly terrorist target with taxpayer funding"
He'll get the full support of and all the votes from all the construction unions on this. All they can see is "jobs now" and who can blame a person out of work for that? They are not thinking in terms of the dangers of nuclear power. Fortunately for me, I'm already sixty years old. There aren't likely to be any new nuke plants online before I die, so all I have to worry about is the existing ones operating years beyond their intentional design life. Wow. I sound kind of selfish don't I? Well, isn't that the American traditon? Every man for himself? The rugged individualist? No god damned socialism for me? The free market? Get all you can get and get it now? Greed is good?
Nevermind that wind and solar would provide just as many jobs and would produce electricity at a fraction of the cost of nuclear energy, but with none of the dangers. Let's not think this out. Let's just act.
How much is Obama spending on that reactor planned for Iran?
harvey wasserman---there is no private insurance for atomic reactors nor will there be. estimates for chernobyl, which was remote in a poor country, are now in the $500 billion plus range. can you imagine a parallel event in westchester county or the central valley of california? this is the ultimate boondoggle. we MUST (and can) make sure these new reactors don't get built....no nukes/4 solartopia....
Harvey Wasserman
Always glad to hear your voice again! Last time in person being in Chicago with lucky linda lou and all those kindred spirits.
Please inform the public about the Gaseous Diffusion Plant in Paducah, Kentucky.
This monstrosity used to use 40% of the state of Kentucky electrical to process the fuel rods. So they built 2 coal fired plants on the Illinois side to accomplish this. Now there are 300 wells contaminated with radioactivity and this is EPA stats.
Also a small mountain of nuclear waste barrels hanging out.
Tell the good folks about the three process operators who mutated and all eventually died. One operator named Joe Harding survived for a while and traveled about this region telling all about the evils of nuclear energy back in the early 70's and showing his personal mutation that being toe nails emerging from his elbow.
Also explain the Price/Anderson Act. Nuclear power is so dangerous that the industry
needs an act of congress just to stay in operation.
Thanks for putting this evil jeeny back in its coffin!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Sioux Rose
I recommend people watch SILKWOOD again. Not only was Meryl Streep her usual magnificent self (as an actress), but watching the people working at a local nuclear plant get exposed to low grade radiation, and the humiliating showers they're placed into even though the damage goes way past the skin level was a renewed education in all the reasons why NOT to mess with this toxic stuff. It's amazing to live in the "Sunshine state" (albeit experiencing the coldest winter I've ever seen since I moved to Florida in l986) where the name alone works as a great commercial ad for SOLAR power. Florida should be leading the nation in developing this technology! And that Levy County is trying to open another nuclear plant, it's a sick joke.
Harvey,
I applaud you for being on of the only writers besides GGreenwald who actually reads ppls comments. Thank you so much, I appreciate having a heavy(Harvey?)-hitter on the comments team. Also I heard Billy_4 comment the other day that the two Vogtle plants have recieved private insurance. True or untrue? If it is untrue, then Billy_4 is blacklisted in my book because while I totally disagree with him, at least he admitted he was a troll and I thought this would at least keep him honest. Could it be he was just worming his way into a priviledged position in the disinformation game? It is always those you trust who will stab you in the back.
True and untrue.
Certainly power plants have insurance policies. However, since government has sharply limited their possible liability (as well as covering for infractions and injury), the plants are never insured for anything approaching full liability for their actions.
No private company has ever agreed to insure a plant for anything approaching the actual risk.
Billy often provides technically accurate information and may well be sincere in what I take to be his conceptual mis-appraisal of the industry.
thank you, that was much my suspicion, that the reduced liability by law broughtthe risk to the nuke company into range for insurance. what a crock! Funny how closely that parallells the health care insurance industry, where the people pay huge amounts for insurance that does not even come close to fully protecting us from the damages we can reasonably expect to incur. And I guess they are "fully insured" because either way the price will be paid, regardless of how small a fraction the nuke co. shells out.
During the Clinton administration we Americans had to worry about Larry Flynt stooping to the level of Kenneth Starr. How long before we'll need to worry about Kenneth Starr stooping to the level of Barack Obama? A couple weeks?
If President Obama ends up being chased by huge mobs of white and black Americans, is he allowed to take sanctuary in the embassy of Kenya?
Obama probably already bought a ranch in Paraguay just like Dubya and Cheney did in case the heat gets turned up. Paraguay has the best no-extradition policy in the world.
With what these reactors will cost, we could carpet the damn country in solar and windpower.
I lived in Wa state during the wppss debocle. It was the first default by a state on its bonds. I moved to NM later only to hear about the Palo Verde plant being built next door. Another debocle.
Cost plus contracts which are insane in any language, I guess enough time has gone by for Obama to think he can jam these boondogle down our throats once again.
Unfortunately Washington State Governor Chris Gregoire has been veal penned by Rahm and last week announced that she is now also promoting expanding nuclear power. She lived in Washington during the WPPSS meltdown and should know better than anybody the risk she will subject her constituents to.
Perhaps she figures that she might as well put reactors at Hanford since it is already a nuclear waste-land.
I remember years ago the assurances of how "safe" Hanford was, that there was no chance of contamination becoming a problem, now I hear they are out picking up radioactive rabbit poop.
I'm afraid there is wretched fear mongering here akin to the fear mongering that Iran may have dangerous nuclear reactors and U enrichment programs. This fear mongering is one cause for the great expense required to build power nuclear reactors. Despite Wasserman's assertions, nuclear reactors have had a commendable record for providing low cost power safely. It is perhaps not incidental that Wasserman presents no reliable figures for his claims of sicknesses and deaths from radiation emanating from nuclear reactors.
commedndable record? are you an idiot? or just a troll? The only thing commendable is the nuclear lobby's squelching of nuclear-negative information. Even the EPA's undoubtedly high safety (and industry influenced) figure of 20,000 picocuries per liter for tritium is being dramatically exceeded at Yankee and others. You are obviously a product of the "if i say it is so, that makes it so" cult. Take for example, your assertion that nuclear provides cheap power, what a joke. Even on the face of it only taking initial financing into consideration, you present a bald faced lie. You are obviously an industry funded troll, I have never seen you here before comment on anything and this is exactly the type of tactic we have to come to expect in this corporate driven media and information industry. Go away. Nobody here believes you (except Bill_y4 and pdj..., Bill being a nuclear engineer with obvious interests in influencing opinion and pdj... who has expressed some progressive sentiments but whom I still believe has some self-interest in his expressed belief in the safety of nuclear.) You guys hate future generations of humans. I can think of no other explanation. Safe! Clean! What the fuck! do you think we are idiots?!?! GO AWAY!
By the way, just the mining of Uranium by itself makes nuclear unclean and unsafe and by itself kills people involved in the mining and locals who live nearby. You are not even close to the basket. Can you say AIRBALL?!?! I repeat: GO AWAY AND INFLUENCE SOME TEA-BAGGERS, THEY MIGHT BELIEVE YOU!
Your high-schoolish, ad hominem attack makes it look like he's right. It appears that your cheap attack is to change the subject and attempt to discredit him personally because you can't counter his points.
Getting angry and pounding the table is the ONLY reasonable reaction in lots of situations. This is one of them.
no offense Bill and I wish anger management worked, as stated above, the sociopathic outrages of our corporate dominated government (and the well educated appologists thereof) are hard to take calmly.
"Despite Wasserman's assertions, nuclear reactors have had a commendable record for providing low cost power safely."
You mean like at Chernobyl? And Three Mile Island? And literally dozens of other less well known sites?
Were the record commendable, it would likely be public.
Sioux Rose
MKB: Most U.S. nuclear plants are around 35-40 years old, and so NOW is the time when the maintenance costs are going to pile up; and due to erosion of pipes, the dangers will begin to arise on a more regular basis. Also, there is the problem of what to do with all the radioactive waste, like exposed fuel rods. Some of these have been smelt down into weapons, and since there is now evidence they emit tiny particles of plutonium once actually exploded (all over Iraq), this suggests a grave evil associated with dispensing with spent fuels! Generations of Iraqis will likely hold the scars of genetic damage. So your attempt to suggest the technology is safe does not take into account the "life expectancy" of these plants, and the fact that those who built them took the money and ran... away from the costs of figuring out a safe way to dispense with the dangerous detritus. So now the whole thing has become The Pandora's Box no one wants to honestly discuss or deal with.
http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1295/is_n10_v62/ai_21200692/
Actually by far the greatest danger of ingesting plutonium is the fact that it is a substantially more poisonous chemical than arsenic.
I bet Burke Georgia is predominantly black. More enviornmental minority cancer victims.
As of the census
Census
A "census" is the procedure of systematically acquiring and recording information about the members of a given population. It is a regularly occurring and official count of a particular population.In other words every 10 years...next one would be in 2010 The term is used mostly in connection with...
of 2000, there were 22,243 people, 7,934 households, and 5,799 families residing in the county. The population density
Population density
Population density is a measurement of population per unit area or unit volume. It is frequently applied to living organisms, and particularly to humans. It is a key term used in geography....
was 27 people per square mile (10/km²). There were 8,842 housing units at an average density of 11 per square mile (4/km²). The racial makeup of the county was 51.00% Black
Race (United States Census)
Race and ethnicity in the United States Census, as defined by the United States Census Bureau and the Federal Office of Management and Budget , are self-identification data items in which residents choose the race or races with which they most closely identify, and indicate whether or not they are...
or African American
Race (United States Census)
Race and ethnicity in the United States Census, as defined by the United States Census Bureau and the Federal Office of Management and Budget , are self-identification data items in which residents choose the race or races with which they most closely identify, and indicate whether or not they are...
, 46.90% White
Race (United States Census)
Race and ethnicity in the United States Census, as defined by the United States Census Bureau and the Federal Office of Management and Budget , are self-identification data items in which residents choose the race or races with which they most closely identify, and indicate whether or not they are...
, 0.23% Native American
Race (United States Census)
Race and ethnicity in the United States Census, as defined by the United States Census Bureau and the Federal Office of Management and Budget , are self-identification data items in which residents choose the race or races with which they most closely identify, and indicate whether or not they are...
, 0.26% Asian
Race (United States Census)
Race and ethnicity in the United States Census, as defined by the United States Census Bureau and the Federal Office of Management and Budget , are self-identification data items in which residents choose the race or races with which they most closely identify, and indicate whether or not they are...
, 0.01% Pacific Islander
Race (United States Census)
Race and ethnicity in the United States Census, as defined by the United States Census Bureau and the Federal Office of Management and Budget , are self-identification data items in which residents choose the race or races with which they most closely identify, and indicate whether or not they are...
, 0.63% from other races
Race (United States Census)
Race and ethnicity in the United States Census, as defined by the United States Census Bureau and the Federal Office of Management and Budget , are self-identification data items in which residents choose the race or races with which they most closely identify, and indicate whether or not they are...
, and 0.97% from two or more races. 1.42% of the population were Hispanic
Race (United States Census)
Race and ethnicity in the United States Census, as defined by the United States Census Bureau and the Federal Office of Management and Budget , are self-identification data items in which residents choose the race or races with which they most closely identify, and indicate whether or not they are...
or Latino
Race (United States Census)
Race and ethnicity in the United States Census, as defined by the United States Census Bureau and the Federal Office of Management and Budget , are self-identification data items in which residents choose the race or races with which they most closely identify, and indicate whether or not they are...
of any race.
There were 7,934 households out of which 38.40% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 45.40% were married couples
Marriage
Marriage is a social union or legal contract between individuals that creates kinship. It is an institution in which interpersonal relationships, usually intimate and sexual, are acknowledged by a variety of ways, depending on the culture or demographic...
living together, 22.80% had a female householder with no husband present, and 26.90% were non-families. 23.60% of all households were made up of individuals and 9.50% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 2.77 and the average family size was 3.27.
In the county the population was spread out with 31.30% under the age of 18, 9.10% from 18 to 24, 27.30% from 25 to 44, 21.40% from 45 to 64, and 10.90% who were 65 years of age or older. The median age was 33 years. For every 100 females there were 90.30 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 84.60 males.
The median income for a household in the county was $27,877, and the median income for a family was $31,660. Males had a median income of $29,992 versus $19,008 for females. The per capita income
Per capita income
Per capita income means how much each individual receives, in monetary terms, of the yearly income generated in the country. This is what each citizen is to receive if the yearly national income is divided equally among everyone. Per capita income is usually reported in units of currency per year...
for the county was $13,136. About 23.80% of families and 28.70% of the population were below the poverty line, including 39.00% of those under age 18 and 29.80% of those age 65 or over.
Stock up on monkey wrenches.
This line "a dollar invested in increased efficiency could save as much as seven times as much energy than one invested in nuclear plants can produce, while producing ten times as many permanent jobs" needs to be spelled out. Until then, nuclear hangs on with fossil fuels and everything else stays on the back burner.