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It’s Time to Close California’s Nuclear Power Plants
The facts all point to this “inconvenient truth” -- the time has come to shut down California’s two nuclear power plants as part of a swift transition to an energy policy focused on clean and green renewable sources and conservation.
The Diablo Canyon plant near San Luis Obispo and the San Onofre plant on the southern California coast are vulnerable to meltdowns from earthquakes and threaten both residents and the environment.
Reactor safety is just one of the concerns. Each nuclear power plant creates radioactive waste that will remain deadly for thousands of years. This is not the kind of legacy that we should leave for future generations.
In the wake of Japan’s Fukushima nuclear plant meltdown, we need a basic rethinking of the USA’s nuclear energy use and oversight. There is no more technologically advanced country in the world than Japan. Nuclear power isn’t safe there, and it isn’t safe anywhere.
The perils to people are clear. In a recent letter to the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, Senators Barbara Boxer and Dianne Feinstein noted that “roughly 424,000 live within 50 miles of the Diablo Canyon and 7.4 million live within 50 miles of the San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station.”
As someone who was an Obama delegate to the 2008 Democratic National Convention, I believe it would be a tragic mistake for anyone to loyally accept the administration’s nuclear policy. The White House is fundamentally mistaken in its efforts to triple the budgeting of federal loan guarantees for the domestic nuclear power industry, from $18 billion to $54 billion.
Our tax dollars should not be used to subsidize the nuclear power industry. Instead, we should be investing far more in solar, wind and other renewable sources, along with serious energy conservation.
The Nuclear Regulatory Commission is a nuclear-friendly fox guarding the radioactive chicken coop. The federal government has no business promoting this dangerous industry while safe and sustainable energy resources are readily available.
The fact that federal law imposes a liability cap of about $12 billion on a nuclear power accident is a reflection of the fact that those plants are uninsurable on the open market.
As a candidate for Congress in the district that includes Marin and Sonoma counties, I intend to make this a major campaign issue. It remains to be seen whether my one declared opponent, Assemblyman Jared Huffman, will join me in urging a rapid timetable for the closure of California’s nuclear power plants.
Huffman has ties to California’s nuclear-invested utility PG&E. Between 2007 and 2009, according to campaign finance data compiled by nonpartisan Maplight.org, he received $11,100 from PG&E, which owns and operates the Diablo Canyon nuclear plant.
While Huffman and other state lawmakers in February signed a letter to a federal commission on America’s nuclear future citing seismic “concerns which deserve to be more closely examined,” the time for equivocation on nuclear power is long past. We don’t need yet more study on whether to operate nuclear plants on fault lines.
People want bold and responsible leadership as we face up to the well-documented realities of nuclear power on this fragile planet.



20 Comments so far
Show AllWhat about the Indian Point plant on the Hudson River? A plant which has exceeded its 29 year license and has applied for a renewal (which the NRC is likely to grant). If it had a meltdown, New York City would have to be evacuated.
"If it had a meltdown, New York City would have to be evacuated."
_________________________
Oh, THAT will never happen!
Unless, of course, it does.
But you may rest assured that there are abundant half-assed, preposterous, inadequate contingency plans in place to guarantee the required peremptory, mendacious official reassurances, then second-guessing, breast-beating, rueful hindsight, scandalous revelations, interminable litigation, and general horrific mayhem with a half-life longer than any of the radioactive substances that are released.
So let's not worry our pretty little heads over it.
Like we don't pay enough for imported electricity in California now! Shit now I'll have to live in the dark cause i can't afford my electric.. Hell with the old, sick on ventalators right!
What an elitiest scumbag! I hope you live long enough to be eldery and on a short income!
>^^<
And just how much do you think you and the rest of the world will pay when one of those plants melts down in the next California quake? It's not a question of 'if' those plants meltdown after an earthquake, it's a question of 'when'. How many more of these 'accidents' have to happen before people realize that there's no flipping room for any error whatsoever when dealing with nuclear power?
While OS needs no defense from me I think you should reread the post in question and edit your comment. I always look out for elitism yet found none in that effort.
California can have a FAIR voter initiative and referendum on this, with no 2/3 majority requirements to pass or Big Money corruption. If it were up to the people and not up to politicians, it would pass.
eze,
I don't think a voter initiative would work to shut down either of the California plants. I believe, if they have a NRC license, they can continue to operate with impunity.
Vermont might be able to shut down its only plant but the laws in Vermont are unique to that situation.
Bill
With Norman's anti-nuclear history it's ironic that he's announced his candidacy for Congress as a demo. Maybe he believes that the party can be changed from within. I fear his experiences haven't evolved into wisdom.
He supported Obama. He fits right in.
So we close them now. Then what? Do we have an acceptable alternative, ready to go on line and make up the loss in power generation, or do we already have surplus generaring capacity and won't miss these nukes?
Here's the story line. The people demand research into 2 cent per kwh nonphotovoltaic solar electricity production. Patent in process!!
The government replies, "But we just gave Halliburton a billion dollars and they didn't come up with anything!"
The people say, "No, mentor the real inventors, the people with the meritorious good ideas."
The government replies, "Which company do they work for? Exxon? BP? Caltech??"
- - -
Hello to the nuclear industry's low-paid boiler-room bloggers.
Uh, Hi Paul.
That is easy.
We could shut down every nuclear plant and "generate" the shortfall with conservation. But there is no monthly charges for that so it will not happen.
Add solar to the mix and we would be far ahead. But again, without the montlhy "fix" that the utilities need, it is a slow road indeed.
Consider that we are still heating our water and drying our clothers with 19th century electric resistance heating, while we depend on the most expensive, dangerous, and irresponsible source of electricity ever conceived, no wonder we are in such deep trouble.
Sure, I can show you the bills in 10yrs I cut 2/3 and my bill is up over 2/3 because no new power plants have been built and California has to import most of it's electricty.
>^^<
There really needs to be some kind of reservation for anti-everything nuts to live in peace.
Hello, Lot's of wind and sun and California fun without the Nukes, Bud. The whole middle of the State is ripe for windmills and panels. We could lead the Nation to energy freedom! Provide jobs while were at it.
I would like to see all nuclear power plants closed down, but how exactly is this "swift transition to an energy policy focused on clean and green renewable sources and conservation" to be done? You say you got a real solution, we'd all love to see the plan.
Although it's good to now his probable opponent believes that there are seismic “concerns which deserve to be more closely examined.” I'd also like to see the plan for how long the close examination should continue, when conclusions should be required, and what then?
This is a California issue, but it should be a national one. Interesting that Obama is busy engaging the birthers rather than calling for closures of these nuclear disasters in wait.
I think all reactors should be shut down, worldwide, not just in California.
People won't give up energy though, life is too dependent on it, so we have to come up with an alternative and get it in place quickly, and make as seamless a switchover as possible, that is the only way people will give up reactors.
The nuclear industry will fight that, however.
If we want to pay triple for our electrical usage then close those two plants. Obviously there are very real dangers associated with the use of nuclear generation, but, just as obviously, before closing those plants we have to build alternatives to them.
As Diablo Canyon earns two million dollars a day for PGE, seven days a week, three hundred sixty five days a year ( minus three days this year for "refreshing the plant") any calls for its closure are going to fall on deaf ears.
PG&E's Diablo Canyon Nuclear Power Plant built on the ocean-side in San Luis Obispo was "a major ancient village site & burial ground, containing evidence of 9 thousand years of continuous habitation by the Chumash...'discovered' in the process of excavating for the reactors".
Of course the tribes were the 1st to put up a fight against the plant...