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The Carbon Value of Nuclear Power Plant Lifetime Extensions in the United States

Son H. Kim, T. A. Taiwo, Brent Dixon

2021Nuclear Technology25 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Nuclear power is currently the single largest carbon-free source of electricity in the United States. The climate mitigation cost savings of the existing U.S. nuclear fleet is denominated in hundreds of billions of dollars [net present value (NPV)] based on an integrated assessment modeling of the U.S. energy system within a globally consistent framework. Lifetime extensions of the existing nuclear fleet from 40 years to 60 and 100 years resulted in $330 billion to $500 billion (all figures are in U.S. dollars) (NPV) of mitigation cost savings for the United States under a deep decarbonization scenario consistent with limiting global temperature change to 2°C. The addition of new nuclear deployments in the United States increased the total U.S. mitigation cost savings of the 2°C climate goal by up to $750 billion (NPV). Immediate actions are required in the United States and globally to achieve net-zero carbon emissions by mid-century, and once achieving net-zero emissions, they must remain at net-zero indefinitely. Lifetime extensions of the existing nuclear fleet, in the United States and globally, support urgent near-term emissions reduction goals. Additionally, the longevity of nuclear power technologies reduces the need for new capacity additions of all carbon-free electricity sources and supports long-term actions necessary to maintain net-zero emissions.

Topics & Concepts

Nuclear powerNet present valueEnvironmental scienceClimate changeElectricityLimitingNuclear power plantNatural resource economicsClimate change mitigationGreenhouse gasEnvironmental economicsBusinessEngineeringEconomicsPhysicsNuclear physicsEcologyProduction (economics)Electrical engineeringMechanical engineeringBiologyMacroeconomicsAtmospheric and Environmental Gas DynamicsClimate Change Policy and EconomicsNuclear and radioactivity studies
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