| Now you start dodging. Typical. Let me quote you: > They could always build more nuclear plants to fill additional demand. And then > If you've already provisioned enough nuclear plants to meet peak energy demand, producing less energy has no marginal cost. If the magic tooth fairy comes with free nuclear plants... Nuclear cult member fantasy land. So at what capacity factor will the entire fleet run at when built out to manage both outages and cold spells requiring 30 GW of fossil fuels to handle? France currently run their fleet of 63 GW at a ~70% capacity factor. Add another 30 GW (lets call it 100% reliable when a cold spell hits) and the capacity factors vastly lower due to extremely low utilization factors of the last 30 GW. You can spread out the lower of capacity factors across the entire fleet or just let the peakers bear them. But in the end the results are the same because you still need to finance the your fleet now delivering a measly 45% capacity factor. Lets translate a 45% capacity factor to Hinkley Point C numbers: Now you are forcing the consumers to pay $355/MWh or 35.5 cents per kWh for all electricity delivered the whole year. All you have done is take the ~$1000/MWh cost from 15% of the time and spread it out over the whole year. Do you see the pure insanity of what you keep proposing now? |
What's the alternative to nuclear power for reaching a carbon-free grid? No doubt, your plan will assume a breakthrough in energy storage that delivers orders-of-magnitude more scale than existing solutions.