Sayonara Nukes
The Japanese government in early September unveiled a new
national energy policy which aims to phase-out nuclear power by 2040, but it is
a policy so riddled with contradictions as to be almost meaningless as a
predictor of future energy uses.
Surprisingly, the government chose not to put a number on
nuclear powser’s contribution. It was widely thought that it would adopt a
split-the-difference figure of 15 percent as nuclear power’s contribution to
the total electricity mix. The previous plan had projected 30 percent, growing
to 40 percent.
Former prime minister Naoto Kan ordered the reappraisal in
the immediate aftermath of the Fukushima Daiichi disaster that began with a massive
earthquake and tsunami on March 11, 2011..
Rather than set a number, it proposed a series of
guidelines: 1). No nuclear power plant would be allowed to operate beyond its
40-year life span; 2). Any restarts of the currently idled plants would need approval
of the newly established independent Nuclear Regulatory Agency; 3). No new
plants will be constructed. If strictly adhered to, that should mean that
virtually all nuclear power will be eliminated around 2040.
One of the ironies about the plan is that it will implies
more, not fewer, nuclear power plants in operation at least in the short term. That’s because Japan is very close to a
zero option now. At present, only two plants are producing power; 48 other
plants are idle (not counting the four badly damaged Fukushima Daiichi plants.
That means some way will have to be found to sort out which
of the plants will be allowed to go back online and which ones will be slated
for decommissioning. Considering the amount of flak that the government took
this summer to get just two back in operation, it may not be an easy situation
to manage politically.
The new policy that calls for no new nuclear power plants to
be built was almost immediately contradicted by a statement that the policy did
not mean new plants that were in the process of being built. On the day of the
deadly earthquake and tsunami, three new plants were under construction, either
in early stages or, in one case, virtually complete.
The new government seemed to be saying that work could eventually
resume on these three units. Assuming they don’t come on line until, say 2014
at the earliest, and have a 40-year life span that would push the day of
reckoning past 2050, a very long time span in which almost anything could
happen that might change the equation.
Another anomaly in the new energy policy is its proposal to
retain reprocessing of spent fuel, at least in the near future. The procedure
in which usable uranium and plutonium are recaptured and recycled into new fuel
would seem out of place in a nuclear phase-out scenario.
The policy statement, obviously tries to reconcile several
conflicting points of view. They include public opinion, which is still running
strongly against continued use of nuclear power in Japan. Anti-nuclear
demonstrators keep a vigil outside the prime minister’s office to drive this
home.
That is offset by concerns of business interests, led by the
main business lobbying group, Keidanren, that there will not be enough power to
keep the factories running without retaining at least some nuclear power
capability.
There are concerns of localities that are heavily dependent
on nuclear power for taxes, especially those of Aomori prefectures on the
northern tip of Honshu island, the location of several important nuclear-
industrial complexes, most significantly the Rokkasho nuclear fuel reprocessing
center.
It is understood that prefectural concerns weighed heavily
in the policy’s statement of continuing support of reprocessing. It was bolstered
by implied threats that the prefecture would stop accepting spent fuel from
Japan’s nuclear projects. The prefecture’s spent fuel pool is now largely full of
spent fuel awaiting reprocessing.
Beyond these parochial concerns is Japan’s precarious energy
situation. Massive imports of liquified natural gas have already contributed to
the country’s first trade deficit in years. It is not for nothing that the
country invested so heavily in nuclear power, as it has almost no fossil fuels
in its own borders, much that it does import comes from volatile parts of the
world.
July was the first month in more than 30 years that Japan
did not import a single barrel of crude oil from Iran. Washington has been increasing
the pressure on Tokyo to steadily decrease its reliance on Iranian oil as part
of its increasing pressure on Tehran without doing very much to help Japan replace
these lost resources. Japan was once Iran’s second largest customer after
China.
U.S, Deputy Secretary of Energy Daniel Poneman has also
voiced worries about how a nuclear power phase-out might rebound on other
countries. If the world’s third largest economy continues to snap up fossil
fuel, energy prices all over the world will be impacted, he reportedly told a high
level visiting official sent to explain the new policy to Washington.
That official, Seiji Maehara, responded that Japan might set
a target, but might fall short of fully committing to it. A strict nuclear
phase-out would inspire fossil fuel producers to jack up prices, he said. Japan
is already paying top dollar to imports tons of liquefied natural gas to keep
the lights on.
Of course, to many in Japan all of this points to a need to
double down on renewable energy, mainly wind and solar, which today account for
a fraction of the energy mix. A major proponent is the country’s richest
business man, Masayoshi Son head of Softbank. No matter what option [in the
policy report] renewables must be increased in Japan at top speed, he said in
August while announcing his company’s pa the country’s largest solar power
project.
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