Title: Jor-Shan Choi
1Jor-Shan Choi Professor, G-COE Project Nuclear
Engineering Management Department Tokyo
University, Japan 81-3-5841-2954 Choi_at_lnuclear
.jp 4th Meeting of the CSCAP Study Group on
Energy Security Empire Hotel, Bandar Seri
Begawan, Brunei July 8-9, 2008
2Presentation Outline
- Current Status
- Why nuclear and why now?
- Key Issues for nuclear power development
- Toward a New Nuclear Regime
- A New Vision
3NUCLEAR POWER PLANTS INFORMATION
Nuclear Capacity (2008) in the World
104 in the US
59 in France
- 439 nuclear power plants
- 3 countries hold ½ of operating plants - US (104)
France (59), and Japan (55) - 5 nuclear weapons countries also account for gt50
of all operating plants
55 in JAPAN
Taken from Power Reactor Information system,
IAEA
4Why Nuclear and Why Now
1) Oil and gas price surge
2) Environmental concerns
Carbon concentration
Temperatures
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Why nuclear and why now
3) Energy Security
4) Increased Living Standard
Oil and gas supply disruptions Infrastructural
security Shipping chokepoints
6Why Nuclear and Why Now
- Nuclear energy, relative to fossil fuels,
contributes little to greenhouse gas emissions - Relative to oil and gas, the ability to stockpile
uranium offers greater assurance of weathering
potential cutoffs - Nuclear energy is a proven technology which can
provide a large scale electricity generation base
for lifting the standard of living in many
countries without emitting green house gases and
further damaging the global environment - Nuclear energy can also help offset
transportation emissions now by supporting hybrid
cars, and in the future, through the production
of hydrogen
Uranium Spot Prices 2007 - 2008
7Generations of Nuclear Energy
Generation IV
Revolutionary Designs
Generation III
Generation III
Evolutionary Designs
Advanced LWRs
- Safe
- Sustainable
- Economical
- Proliferation Resistant and Physically Secure
- ABWR
- ACR1000
- AP1000
- APWR
- EPR
- ESBWR
http//www.gen-4.org/Technology/evolution.htm
8Courtesy of M. Senzaki of JAEA
9Design Improvement and High Availability
Higher Availability Factor
Standardized design and Cumulative
operation experience
Passive Safety Systems Eliminate Components
Simplify Safety Systems Reduce Building
Volumes
Reduce Costs
10Key Issues for Nuclear Energy Development
- Costs/Financing
- Nuclear safety and security
- Human resource and infrastructural development
- Spent fuel and waste management
- Nuclear non-proliferation
11Costs and Financing - Its the economics
- Nuclear generators are expensive to build, but
their fuel costs are low - Combined-cycle gas plants are far less expensive
to build, but their fuel costs are much higher - Intermittent technologies like wind and solar
produce less power over time - With the inclusion of CO2 charges (i.e., carbon
tax), the nuclear plant will cost less than
combined-cycle gas plant and coal plant in the US
In the past few decades, nuclear power has proven
to be poor investments, producing far more
expensive electricity than originally promised
- In the US, the Advanced Energy Initiative of
2006 offered financial incentive - for new plant construction that employs new
reactors and technologies - New financial arrangement needed for Asian
Pacific region
US Congressional Research Council Study, 2007
12NUCLEAR POWER PLANTS INFORMATION
Nuclear Safety and Security
- Since TMI and Chernobyl, the global nuclear power
generation has maintain good safety record
through stringent regulation, automated and
redundant safety systems, and the industrys
commitment to comprehensive safety procedures - Since 11 September 2001, the nuclear industry has
substantially enhanced security at nuclear plants
requiring extensive security measures in place to
protect the facility from intruders - Can these accidents happen again?
- How can a good safety culture be in-forced
world-wide?
13NUCLEAR POWER PLANTS INFORMATION
Human Resource Development
Tokyo University Global COE Program
Funding to Nuclear Engineering Programs in
Universities Has Increased
14Infrastructural Development
New nuclear infrastructure is highly optimized
1978 Plastic models on roll-around carts
2007 4-D computer aided design and virtual
walk-through
McGuire Nuclear Station Reactor Building Models.
GT-MHR
Operating in a mature industry, the consortia
work with their supply chains for major
equipment to support the near-term deployment of
Gen-III and Gen-III reactors
15The Crucial Role of Waste Management
- Provide a safe and secure disposition for Spent
Nuclear Fuel (SNF) and Radioactive Wastes (HLW) - Regional/international solutions driven by
security considerations
USDOE submitted a license application to USNRC
on 3 June 2008 for Yucca Mountain as the US SNF
and HLW repository
Yucca Mountain
Waste Isolation Pilot Plant
Repositories and storage become instruments of
security, more than utility dumping grounds
16Nuclear Non-Proliferation
- IAEA safeguards (Pre-NPT, CSA, AP)
- To stop Onward Proliferation, i.e., spread of
sensitive technologies (enrichment
reprocessing, ER), and to prevent nuclear
weapons-materials-capability to fall onto wrong
hands, new proposals were made by - - M. El Baradei, DG, IAEA limit ER to
international controls - - G. W. Bush, US President limit ER to
existing full-scale facilities - - V. Putin, RF President International Uranium
Enrichment Center - - Others
Business as usual is no longer an acceptable
option. A new nuclear regime is needed to deal
with the non-proliferation and environmental
risks
17Forming a global network of nuclear fuel cycle
facilities
Reducing non-proliferation and waste burden
- J. S. Choi, An innovative fuel cycle concept
with nonproliferation and waste considerations
for small and medium sized reactors, - International Seminar on Status and Prospects
for Small and Medium Sized Reactors, Cairo Egypt,
May 27-31, 2001
18A Global Network of Nuclear Fuel Cycle Facilities
- Is not necessarily a regional nuclear fuel cycle
center - Does not need to be within a national boundary
- Could be formed by framework of contractual
agreements among companies and supported by their
respective countries, - Is intended to provide a cradle-to-grave fuel
cycle services to countries generating
electricity for their citizen, - Nuclear fuel cycle facilities in the network must
comply with international safety standards and
safeguards requirements - Countries can benefit from nuclear energy without
the burdens of non-proliferation and waste
management, much like a country can provide air
transportation to its citizens by operating
airlines without the large investment in aircraft
manufacturing
Most fuel-cycle services are provided today
except for long-term spent fuel storage and
repository disposal. Regioanl/multilateral
cooperation is needed for the network
19A New Vision
- Countries have access to nuclear power at market
prices - Nuclear fuel supplies are assured at competitive
prices - Spent nuclear fuel (SNF) is returned to
appropriate countries for management and disposal - Spread of sensitive fuel cycle technologies
(Enrichment/reprocessing) reduced or eliminated
- The former USSR took spent fuel back from other
countries - Russia currently takes spent fuel back from CIS
countries - The US takes research reactor spent fuel from
other countries
- Can the Nuclear Weapons Countries do more?
- Can the Uranium Producing Countries do more?