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by Jason Leopold
GOP Presidential candidate John McCain’s ambitious plan to build 45 new nuclear reactors by 2030 as a means to combat global warming and add juice to the power grid is a policy ripped from the Bush administration’s failed National Energy Policy, first introduced by Vice President Dick Cheney during the height of the California energy crisis seven years ago.
At a time when public awareness surrounding renewable energy resources, the devastating effects of global warming and the importance of conservation is at an all-time high, the Bush administration has steered tens of billions in taxpayer dollars toward revamping the dormant nuclear power industry, touting it as the only proven technology to combat climate change.
One of the cornerstones of President Bush's National Energy Policy, released in May 2001, was "the expansion of nuclear energy in the United States as a major component of our national energy policy."
“We have [an] opportunity to increase our supplies of electricity. To meet projected demand over the next two decades, America must have in place between 1,300 and 1,900 new electric plants. Much of this new generation will be fueled by natural gas. However, existing and new technologies offer us the opportunity to expand nuclear generation as well. Nuclear power today accounts for 20 percent of our country’s electricity. This power source, which causes no greenhouse gas emissions, can play an expanding part in our energy future,” the energy policy says.
Bush’s energy policy was largely written by corporate executives, such
as the now defunct Enron Corp., and industry lobbyists during a series
of meetings convened by Cheney in early 2001. When Enron imploded in a
wave of accounting scandals later that year documents surfaced showing
that the company played a role in helping Cheney draft the energy
policy. Documents obtained by the Washington Post last July show that
several officials from the Nuclear Energy Institute (NEI), a powerful
industry lobby, met with Cheney at least twice in March 2001.
Last year, NEI spent $680,000 during the first half of 2007, according
to a disclosure form posted online August 13 by the Senate's public
records office, lobbying the White House, Congress, the Department of
Energy, and other federal agencies, to drum up support for nuclear
energy as an alternative to the fossil fuels that emit greenhouse
gasses. Cheney's longtime friend, Tom Loeffler, a former lobbyist and
Republican congressman, represented the NEI Loeffler's former aide,
Nancy Dorn, worked as a Congressional liaison for Cheney, and later
became a lobbyist for General Electric.
The lobbying appears to have paid off. In a series of speeches last
year, Vice President Cheney and Energy Secretary Samuel Bodman said
that reviving the nuclear power industry would be a long-term solution
to the country's increasing thirst for electricity and a way to address
global warming.
Last year, the Energy Department undertook a massive public relations
effort, expected to continue until the end of 2008, to promote nuclear
energy as the new "green" energy.
In a speech at a nuclear power conference held last October at the
Howard Baker Center for Public Policy at the University of Tennessee,
Secretary of Energy Samuel Bodman said nuclear energy is "safe, clean
and reliable. And, for the foreseeable future, it is the only mature,
emissions-free technology that can supply the power America will need
to meet the projected increase in demand for electricity over the next
25 years. This is one of the reasons we have put so much emphasis on
bringing about a nuclear renaissance here in the United States."
Before being tapped as Energy Secretary, Bodman ran a chemical company,
Cabot Corporation that spent years on the top five lists of the
country's worst polluters. In 1997 alone, Cabot was responsible for the
54,000 tons of toxic emissions his company's refineries released into
the atmosphere. Cabot was identified as the fourth-largest source of
toxic emissions in Texas. Cabot is the world's largest producer of
industrial carbon black, a byproduct of the oil refinery process.
Bodman is the wealthiest official in the Bush administration. His net
worth is estimated to be between $42 million and $164 million, the bulk
of it in Cabot stock, deferred compensation, and other benefits.
In a speech Wednesday, McCain said he would adopt the Bush administration’s policy on nuclear power as his own.
"If I am elected president, I will set this nation on a course to
building 45 new reactors by the year 2030, with the ultimate goal of
100 new plants to power the homes and factories and cities of America,"
McCain said during a campaign stop in Missouri.
A study conducted by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 2003,
“The Future of Nuclear Power," disagreed with Bodman’s analysis. It
said even with volatile natural gas prices and a wildly fluctuating
market, the cost of producing electricity from nuclear power plants is
still 20 percent more expensive than electricity produced from
gas-fired power plants, and 60 percent more expensive than electricity
produced from a coal-fired power plant.
McCain has made a point of distinguishing his policies as dramatically
different from President George W. Bush. However, key aspects of
McCain’s energy policy unveiled Wednesday are nearly identical to the
Bush administration’s plan, specifically, McCain’s stance on nuclear
energy.
In fact, one of McCain’s advisers on energy policy has been David
Conover, the former principal deputy assistant secretary office of
policy and international affairs at the Department of Energy.
Conover briefed members of Congress in July 2005 on the Bush
administration’s plan of reviving the dormant nuclear power industry to
deal with the threat of climate change, a position McCain has embraced.
“Concerns over... climate change suggest a larger role for nuclear
power as an energy supply choice,” Conover told the Committee on Senate
Commerce, Science and Transportation Subcommittee on Global Climate
Change and Impacts in testimony July 20, 2005. “The Nuclear Power 2010
program is working with industry to demonstrate the Nuclear Regulatory
Commission`s new licensing process.”
The NP2010 has been one of Cheney’s pet energy projects. Officials in
the Energy Department told the vice president has worked on the project
with a relatively unknown administration official, Deputy Energy
Secretary Clay Sell. Before being sworn in as deputy energy secretary
in March 2005, Sell, a lawyer whose roots extend to Bush's home state
of Texas, was a White House lobbyist working on energy issues. He had
also participated in secret meetings with Cheney's Energy Task Force
and has worked closely with David Conover, McCain’s energy adviser.
According to the Department of Energy's web site, NP2010 was launched
in 2002, and "is a joint government/industry cost-shared effort that
can help provide solutions to meet future base load energy demand and
address climate change. Specifically, NP2010 seeks to: demonstrate new,
untested processes for licensing reactors in the United States;
identify sites for new nuclear power plants, complete first-of-a-kind
engineering of new reactor designs; develop and bring to market
advanced nuclear plant technologies, and evaluate the business case for
building new nuclear power plants."
Last September, Princeton-based NRG Energy Inc., having emerged from
bankruptcy proceedings, became the first company in 30 years to submit
an application to build two new General Electric-designed nuclear
reactors at its Bay City, Texas, nuclear power plant facility. NRG's
former president, David Peterson, traveled to Washington on two
occasions in 2001 to help Cheney's Energy Task Force shape the
country's energy policy, according to government records.
Prior to NRG's application, there had not been a filing for a new
nuclear power plant in the United States since before the Three Mile
Island nuclear reactor meltdown three decades ago.
NRG Chief Executive David Crane told investors last year that massive
federal tax incentives and federal loan guarantees, a move McCain
supports, included in the Energy Policy Act of 2005 was the deciding
factor in steering the company toward the $6 billion nuclear project.
"The whole reason we started down this path was the benefits written into the [Energy Policy Act] of 2005," Crane said.
That legislation called for upwards of $125 million in annual tax
credits for a nuclear plant, in addition to loan guarantees that would
cover about 80 percent of construction costs. Furthermore, the federal
government provided $2 billion in risk insurance for application costs,
thereby protecting energy companies in the event they would not be able
to finance a nuclear project due to regulatory obstacles.
The federal loan program automatically requires taxpayers to cover any
defaults on the loans. In a February 2007 report to Congress, the
Government Accountability Office said failure to properly account for
default risks in the loan program was one factor that "could result in
substantial financial costs to the taxpayer."
A 2003 Congressional Budget Office (CBO) report said the risk of
utilities defaulting on loans for new nuclear plants is "very high -
well above 50 percent."
Last October, the Tennessee Valley Authority, the nation's largest
public power provider, also filed an application with the NRC for a
license to construct and operate two new nuclear power reactors in
northern Alabama using General Electric's Westinghouse AP1000 reactor
units. The application was filed under the banner of NuStart Energy,
LLC, a consortium of electric utilities that joined together in 2004 to
test the NRC's streamlined nuclear reactor licensing program. The
licensing costs were paid for by the federal government under an Energy
Department program called Nuclear Power 2010 (NP2010), to promote
construction of new nuclear power plants.
Sell, the Deputy Energy Secretary, said TVA's application was a "a
monumental step toward the rebirth of nuclear power in the United
States."
Members of the NuStart consortium include: Constellation Energy, Duke
Energy, EDF International North America, the US subsidiary of the
French electric utility, Entergy Nuclear, Exelon Generation, Florida
Power & Light Company, Progress Energy, South Carolina Electric
& Gas, Southern Company and Tennessee Valley Authority, Knoxville,
Tennessee.
With the exception of Progress Energy, South Carolina Electric Gas
& Light and EDF International, all of these companies participated
in meetings with Cheney's Energy Task Force and advised the vice
president on energy policy. Additionally, these corporations have said
publicly they intend to file applications for nuclear reactor licenses
before the end of 2008, the deadline to receive billions of dollars in
federal subsidies and tax credits. The NRC says it expects to receive
as many as 21 applications to build 32 new reactors before the end of
2008, with most, if not all, expected to go online in 2015.
Jon Block, nuclear energy and climate change project manager for the
Union of Concerned Scientists (UCS), said one of the problems with
constructing new nuclear facilities is how to dispose of nuclear waste.
"In over 50 years of operating experience, the nuclear industry still
has not managed to solve the problems of safety, security, and disposal
of highly dangerous radioactive waste," said . "Until that happens,
we're much better off investing in safer, cleaner energy sources such
as renewable wind, geothermal, tidal, and solar projects."
The Department of Energy, the agency largely responsible for monitoring
nuclear waste, submitted an application to the NRC to build a
repository at Yucca Mountain, the site of a former nuclear testing
ground in Nevada, where the agency has proposed burying the waste deep
underground.
McCain supports the idea of storing waste in Yucca Mountain, a move
opposed by a majority of Nevadans and one that could cost the Arizona
Republican a critical swing state.

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