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For use after 9:30am, Tuesday, June 20, 2006 National Press Club News Briefing For further information: Dr. Arjun Makhijani or Dr. Brice Smith (301) 270-5500
Nuclear Power Is Risky Solution for Addressing Climate Change
New Book Documents Accident, Proliferation, Contamination Dangers, Details Safer Carbon Dioxide Reduction AlternativesDr. Brice Smith, senior scientist at IEER and author of the book, explained, "Nuclear power is a very risky and unsustainable option for reducing greenhouse gas emissions. Trading one potentially catastrophic health, environmental and security threat for another is not a sensible energy policy." Dr. Smith holds a Ph.D. in physics from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Dr. Smith continued, "Nuclear power plants are a uniquely dangerous source of electricity that will create serious risks, particularly if deployed on a large scale. These include the potential of catastrophic reactor accidents on the scale of Chernobyl, the difficulties of managing long-lived radioactive waste, and increased likelihood of nuclear weapons proliferation. For nuclear power to make a meaningful contribution to reducing CO2 emissions, 1,000 to 2,500 reactors would have to be operating globally by mid-century. That means commissioning a new plant every one to two weeks" "There is no shortage of ways to reduce carbon dioxide emissions: the essential question relates to cost," said IEER president Dr. Arjun Makhijani. "Wind power with pumped storage, combined cycle liquefied natural gas power plants, and power plants using integrated coal gasification with carbon dioxide sequestration, all have costs comparable to estimates for nuclear power made by its advocates." Dr. Makhijani has a Ph.D. in engineering from the University of California at Berkeley and has authored many publications on energy policy, including nuclear power and the first ever assessment of the energy efficiency potential of the U.S. economy.
Insurmountable Risks lays out a set of criteria for evaluating proposals aimed at limiting climate change, including: Dr. Makhijani concluded, "Were there no alternatives, the severity of the threat facing humans and the environment from global climate change might warrant serious consideration of the risks of nuclear energy. But it is irrational to incur the proliferation headaches of nuclear power when alternatives are clearly available. We need an energy policy that is not steeped in subsidies but centered on cost, reliability and environmental sanity." Insurmountable Risks is being jointly published by IEER Press and RDR Books (rdrbooks.com)
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June 20, 2006
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Institute for Energy and Environmental Research
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Article added August 3, 2006