Environment & Energy
Showing Original Post only (View all)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 governments keeper of all energy-related facts, renewables grew at a record pace and squeaked out of last place in the countrys 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. Nuclears share of electricity generation dropped by 2.8 percent compared to the first nine months of 2010, while coals 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 plantswhich 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 plantsnew 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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