| > But that isn't the case here. When the debt causes you to be bailed out by the government, is is an issue, wouldn't you agree? EDF's current situation is an issue. My point, however, is that this is not related to electricity pricing, nuclear or not. > Since the organisation is nationalised, that money will come from the taxpayers. Yes, so what? France's general budget received tens of billions in dividends from EDF in recent years, would you say EDF saved as much for the taxpayer? > Which decommissioned reactor are you thinking of? maine Yankee, for instance. > Apart from that, the "end result" for decommissioning projects are always "and then the federal government takes over from here". That's unrelated to dismantling. This issue is about waste storage in the US. |
Of course, my point is only that it's true to say that EDF sold the power too cheaply, otherwise they would have been profitable and debt-free.
The question that has to be answered is whether nuclear can provide power at a competitive price once all the costs are counted. Currently all the costs are not counted, and we keep discovering that the costs are way higher than any estimates have previously shown.
>> Which decommissioned reactor are you thinking of? >maine Yankee, for instance.
Yankee costs 10 million USD per year still to this day with no end in sight.
https://www.bangordailynews.com/2021/07/19/news/midcoast/arm...
"Securing these remnants of nuclear energy generation is an ongoing task that requires armed guards around the clock and costs Maine Yankee’s owners some $10 million per year, which is being paid for with money from the government."
This means that every year, at least 10 million USD has to retroactively be added to the actual cost of electricity generated by that plant.
Then some day the spent fuel has to be moved, and the current container structure has to be dismantled. Why doesn't that count as being part of the decommissioning costs?
To say that nobody knows what it actually costs is quite fair IMO.