Skip to main content

Enabling the Nuclear Renaissance Act

large_george-voinovich Sen. George Voinovich (R-Ohio) this week introduced the Enabling the Nuclear Renaissance Act (S. 3618), which gathers into a single bill many nuclear energy provisions found in previously introduced legislation. Voinovich’s legislation also includes provisions not found in other bills, proposing to establish several offices within DOE to handle nuclear energy issues and a new government corporation to assume responsibility from DOE for implementing the disposition of used nuclear fuel.

While it shares elements of the nuclear energy title in the Kerry-Lieberman American Power Act and several bills that encourage development of small reactors, Voinovich’s legislation goes much further in reshaping the government’s approach to nuclear energy. It provides funding and assistance to train workers, modifies the ways reactors are licensed and financed, and removes used nuclear fuel management from DOE.

Voinovich said the bill “intends to reignite the nuclear renaissance. This bill gives our companies and universities the tools to compete and win.”

The legislation also includes nuclear energy in any national clean energy portfolio that is developed. Specifically, it allows nuclear companies to participate in a federal Renewable Electricity Standard (RES), which would place an obligation on utilities to produce a portion of their electricity from clean energy sources. Currently, only renewable energy generators qualify for the RES, though legislators have tried unsuccessfully to include nuclear energy.

The industry welcomed the new bill. Alex Flint, NEI’s senior vice president for governmental affairs, said the legislation “recognizes the role that nuclear energy should have in expanding our nation’s non-emitting electricity generation while simultaneously creating tens of thousands of U.S. jobs, helping to achieve desired greenhouse gas reductions, and strengthening our energy security.”
The bill includes the following financial incentives:

  • Following the lead of DOE’s fiscal 2011 budget request and the American Power Act, Voinovich proposes $54 billion in total loan guarantee authority. However, the bill goes further in proposing tax incentives for companies building new reactors and for manufacturers of parts used to construct a nuclear plant;
  • Adopting ideas from the Nuclear Power 2021 Act (S.2812), which encourages the deployment of small reactors, the legislation directs DOE to develop a 50 percent cost-sharing program with industry and provides $100 million a year for 10 years in government funding. Voinovich said that small reactors “represent an opportunity for the United States to regain global leadership” in nuclear technology.
  • The bill authorizes funding for educational and training programs to create a trained nuclear work force, with $5 million to DOE to support nuclear science and engineering in primary and secondary education and $5 million to the Department of Labor to expand work force training to meet the demand for workers skilled in nuclear power plant construction and operation.
The bill proposes the creation of several new offices to manage aspects of an expanded nuclear presence:
  • An independent government corporation would assume the responsibilities currently held by DOE for managing used nuclear fuel. The legislation does not offer prescriptions for how used fuel should be handled, either via a repository or reprocessing or both.
  • A proposed National Nuclear Energy Council as an independent forum within DOE for industry, Congress, government agencies, national laboratories and universities would address significant issues facing the nuclear industry. The council would have 15 members, six of them from the nuclear energy industry.
  • An Advisory Committee on Energy Park Development, also within DOE, would manage community initiatives to develop former DOE sites as energy parks.
Additionally, the legislation picks up several themes from other energy legislation that are designed to allow nuclear energy reactors to go on line sooner than the current licensing and regulatory regime allows. Specifically, the bill:
  • Eliminates NRC hearings for issues not raised in public meetings.
  • Allows environmental impact statements used for early site permits to stand for combined operating licenses as well, eliminating a duplication of effort.
  • Enhances regulatory authority. The bill extends the term of NRC commissioners to ensure the NRC is fully staffed in the event of delayed confirmation procedures.

The legislation has been referred to the Senate Committee on Finance.

Sen. George Voinovich

Comments

Yes! This is the type of rational legislation that the nuclear industry needs to get things going.
crf said…
It is mostly rational, except for tax incentives for the construction of plants and parts. Republicans can't credibly say they are an anti-deficit party when they keep voting for tax-expenditures.

A price on carbon would allow the market to fund the best technologies, as the market sees it, without, for example, the government deciding which portions of a company's business qualifies for incentives.

If there are no carbon-limiting bills this year, shouldn't the Republicans have a duty to propose what nearly every academic economist and most informed environmentalists desire: a carbon tax?
DocForesight said…
@crf -- That 'carbon tax' presumes carbon is a pollutant. Seems to many informed scientists, and even some environmentalists, that the debate is not yet 'settled'.

What would the general economic effect be of promoting the broad development of nuclear power plants? Would it be expanding deficits or broad increases in tax revenue from both employment and general economic activity?

Nuclear power plants can stand on their own merits without the facade of a carbon 'penalty'.

http://www.21stcenturysciencetech.com/Articles_2009/Build_Nuclear.pdf

http://www.21stcenturysciencetech.com/2006_articles/10-13_50_featnuke.pdf
Anonymous said…
21stcenturysciencetech = Lyndon Larouche's group. This is the same guy who insists the Queen of England is a drug dealer, etc.

Can we stick to credible sources in this discussion, please?
gunter said…
I only note that the nuclear legislation actually loooks more like the predicted "Nuclear Disabilities Act" than a "renaissance." This is underscored by the increasingly desperate effort to tack on $9 billion under the guise of the nuclear industry being a "small business."

Given this is in large part French in origin, one should also note that EdF just posted a 47% loss in profits. Skyrocketing costs and extensive delays are now spreading to its Flamanville EPR constuction project as well as in Finland.

As for here, again, given recent legislative failures to open a federal grab bag for nuclear industry and Constellation Energy crying that "time is running out" for its requisite taxpayer financial infusion, it continues to have the makings of a screeching crash on take off than a "new beginning".

With all this and more, its more like an old familiar "rerun" of a bad movie than a "renaissance."
Anonymous said…
Gunter, I take it you haven't been following your renewable pals. You want to talk about desperate:

"Strong federal policy supporting the U.S. wind energy industry has never been more important," said AWEA CEO Denise Bode. "We have an historic opportunity to build a major new manufacturing industry. Without strong, supportive policy like an RES to spur demand, investment, and jobs, manufacturing facilities will go idle and lay off workers if Congress doesn’t act now - before time runs out this session."
D Kosloff said…
There is no such thing as a "tax expenditure". Such a spirit can only be created by thinking that every dollar that is held by an individual or company already belongs to the government.

Popular posts from this blog

Fluor Invests in NuScale

You know, it’s kind of sad that no one is willing to invest in nuclear energy anymore. Wait, what? NuScale Power celebrated the news of its company-saving $30 million investment from Fluor Corp. Thursday morning with a press conference in Washington, D.C. Fluor is a design, engineering and construction company involved with some 20 plants in the 70s and 80s, but it has not held interest in a nuclear energy company until now. Fluor, which has deep roots in the nuclear industry, is betting big on small-scale nuclear energy with its NuScale investment. "It's become a serious contender in the last decade or so," John Hopkins, [Fluor’s group president in charge of new ventures], said. And that brings us to NuScale, which had run into some dark days – maybe not as dark as, say, Solyndra, but dire enough : Earlier this year, the Securities Exchange Commission filed an action against NuScale's lead investor, The Michael Kenwood Group. The firm "misap

An Ohio School Board Is Working to Save Nuclear Plants

Ohio faces a decision soon about its two nuclear reactors, Davis-Besse and Perry, and on Wednesday, neighbors of one of those plants issued a cry for help. The reactors’ problem is that the price of electricity they sell on the high-voltage grid is depressed, mostly because of a surplus of natural gas. And the reactors do not get any revenue for the other benefits they provide. Some of those benefits are regional – emissions-free electricity, reliability with months of fuel on-site, and diversity in case of problems or price spikes with gas or coal, state and federal payroll taxes, and national economic stimulus as the plants buy fuel, supplies and services. Some of the benefits are highly localized, including employment and property taxes. One locality is already feeling the pinch: Oak Harbor on Lake Erie, home to Davis-Besse. The town has a middle school in a building that is 106 years old, and an elementary school from the 1950s, and on May 2 was scheduled to have a referendu

Wednesday Update

From NEI’s Japan micro-site: NRC, Industry Concur on Many Post-Fukushima Actions Industry/Regulatory/Political Issues • There is a “great deal of alignment” between the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission and the industry on initial steps to take at America’s nuclear energy facilities in response to the nuclear accident in Japan, Charles Pardee, the chief operating officer of Exelon Generation Co., said at an agency briefing today. The briefing gave stakeholders an opportunity to discuss staff recommendations for near-term actions the agency may take at U.S. facilities. PowerPoint slides from the meeting are on the NRC website. • The International Atomic Energy Agency board has approved a plan that calls for inspectors to evaluate reactor safety at nuclear energy facilities every three years. Governments may opt out of having their country’s facilities inspected. Also approved were plans to maintain a rapid response team of experts ready to assist facility operators recoverin