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Environment & Energy

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n2doc

(47,953 posts)
Sun Jan 8, 2012, 05:01 PM Jan 2012

America Is Getting More Power from Renewables than From Nuclear [View all]

Despite the economic slowdown and the absence of any groundbreaking climate policy, renewable energy had a good year in the United States in 2011. According to the latest report from the Energy Information Administration, the government’s keeper of all energy-related facts, renewables grew at a record pace and squeaked out of last place in the country’s energy generation standings. In the first nine months of the year, renewables accounted for 11.95 percent of domestic energy production, pulling ahead of nuclear power, which contributed only 10.62 percent.

When you look at the electricity sector alone, renewables shine even brighter. Nuclear’s share of electricity generation dropped by 2.8 percent compared to the first nine months of 2010, while coal’s share dropped by 4.2 percent. In the same period, renewables’ share of electricity generation grew almost 25 percent.

Renewables’ big bump comes is attributable in part to its relatively small share of electricity generation overall. But the continuing success of renewable energy also points to its dynamism compared to energy sources like nuclear plants—which take years to build, require heavy investments at the beginning of their lifetime, and often face strong community opposition. While the price per unit of renewable energy has been dropping steadily, the price per unit nuclear energy has been sneaking upward.

Some supporters of renewables do see a role for nuclear energy in a low-carbon future. It is, after all, clean energy, and it poses little risk to human life and health compared to coal power. The nuclear industry is looking for different ways to build plants—new designs use nuclear waste for fuel, for instance, and plans for "mini-reactors" could make nuclear power a less-intimidating investment.

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http://www.good.is/post/america-is-getting-more-power-from-renewables-than-from-nuclear/

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All the big dams have already been built. hunter Jan 2012 #1
Once upon a time Nederland Jan 2012 #2
We're including ethanol added to gasoline as "renewable power", are we? wtmusic Jan 2012 #3
Nukes and ethanol both have externalized social costs and require huge public subsidies Kolesar Jan 2012 #4
Wind subsidies/tax credits, as a proportion of the actual product they deliver wtmusic Jan 2012 #12
Let me show you how to support your claims kristopher Jan 2012 #6
ERROR!! ERROR!! ERROR!!! PamW Jan 2012 #9
classic move Maslo55 Jan 2012 #5
That makes no sense at all. kristopher Jan 2012 #7
This old saw PamW Jan 2012 #10
... Maslo55 Jan 2012 #28
I frequently see wind turbine blades traveling down the highway waddirum Jan 2012 #8
Compare the output power. PamW Jan 2012 #11
Hmmm… OKIsItJustMe Jan 2012 #13
Do you know the difference between a loan guarantee and a loan? wtmusic Jan 2012 #14
It appears that these two projects are about the same order of magnitude OKIsItJustMe Jan 2012 #15
A bit of a stretch. FBaggins Jan 2012 #16
This is one project OKIsItJustMe Jan 2012 #17
What's the next-largest in the US? FBaggins Jan 2012 #18
Why does this matter? OKIsItJustMe Jan 2012 #19
Because it's the relevant comparison. FBaggins Jan 2012 #20
I guess we need a more precise definition of “swamp” and “meager” OKIsItJustMe Jan 2012 #23
Roughly 4-5 times as much is "swamping" in my estimation FBaggins Jan 2012 #24
This demonstrates your false reasoning kristopher Jan 2012 #25
What percentage of the average wind turbine is produced at that plant? FBaggins Jan 2012 #26
Two problems with your take on this. kristopher Jan 2012 #27
Nope Maslo55 Jan 2012 #29
Nuclear Loan Guarantees Aren’t Just Guarantees: They are Actual Taxpayer Loans bananas Jan 2012 #30
No, they aren't. wtmusic Jan 2012 #31
Actually... they are. But why is that a bad thing? FBaggins Jan 2012 #32
IF the loan goes bad. wtmusic Jan 2012 #33
I love when nuclear proponents use that foolish claim kristopher Jan 2012 #21
Lol! And you're still spinning that nonsense. FBaggins Jan 2012 #22
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