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by cyberax
244 days ago
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> And nuclear is scalable if you force other sources off the grid in favor of nuclear (and force customers to not use renewables "behind the meter"). Not really? Nuclear is not any different from coal. And plenty of countries have coal generation in the mix. France also is majority-nuclear. And so far, nuclear is the second known technology (after hydro) that actually demonstrated close to 100% fossil-free grid. So far, there is nothing similar for solar. Even though it's supposed to be oh-so-cheap. > In Texas now there is no chance of new nuclear construction. ERCOT is a competitive market and new nuclear simply doesn't make sense. Well, yeah. Because they can just allow the grid to die during the next Arctic air blast. |
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First, coal has a much larger share of its cost as variable cost which is avoided if you don't run the plant. 40% for coal, only 10% for nuclear. This makes integrated a coal fired plant into a renewable grid easier than a nuclear plant. China is increasingly doing this with its coal plants.
Second, coal is much more forgiving of maintenance sloppiness, and even in the event of catastrophic malfunction the plant remains repairable.
Nuclear has been available in its current (and no longer competitive) state longer than solar/wind have been in their current economic state, so if you look at historical data you might conclude nuclear is better. But that's backward looking and says little about what's better in the future.
You are aware that a nuclear plant tripping offline was part of the cause of ERCOT's last winter cold problem?