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World Energy Needs and Nuclear Power

(Updated December 2015)

• The world will need greatly increased energy supply in the next 20 years, especially
cleanly-generated electricity.
• Electricity demand is increasing twice as fast as overall energy use and is likely to
rise by more than two-thirds 2011 to 2035. In 2012, 42% of primary energy used
was converted into electricity.
• Nuclear power provides about 11% of the world's electricity, and 21% of electricity
in OECD countries.
• Nuclear power is the most environmentally benign way of producing electricity on a
large scale.
• Renewable energy sources such as solar and wind are costly per unit of output and
are intermittent but can be helpful at the margin in providing clean power.

Primary energy and electricity outlook


The annual World Energy Outlook from the OECD's International Energy Agency (IEA) sets out
the present situation and also presents current policies*, new policies, and carbon reduction
(‘450’) scenarios. In World Energy Outlook 2013, from 2000 to 2010 total world primary energy
demand grew by 26%, and to 2020 it was projected to grow less (by 20% under the Current
Policies scenario, and less under other scenarios). Growth to 2035 is 45% under Current Policies,
and 33% under a more restrained scenario. Electricity growth is about double this in each case.
Electricity demand almost doubled from 1990 to 2011, and is projected to grow 81% from 2011
to 2035 (from 19,004 TWh to 34,454 TWh) in the Current Policies scenario, and 69% (to 32,150
TWh) in the central New Policies scenario. Increased electricity demand is most dramatic in
Asia, projected to average 4.0% or 3.6% per year respectively to 2035. Currently some two
billion people have no access to electricity, and it is a high priority to address this lack.
Electricity Information annually from the same source gives the latest available data on world
electricity generation and its fuels.

* The Reference case describes what would happen if, among other things, governments were to
take no new initiatives bearing on the energy sector, beyond those already adopted by mid-2013.
It is thus a baseline, not a forecast.

With the United Nations predicting world population growth from 6.7 billion in 2011 to 8.7
billion by 2035, demand for energy must increase substantially over that period. Both population
growth and increasing standards of living for many people in developing countries will cause
strong growth in energy demand, as outlined above. Over 70% of the increased energy demand is
from developing countries, led by China and India – China overtook the USA as top CO2 emitter
in 2007. Superimposed on this, the UN Population Division projects an ongoing trend of
urbanisation, from 52% in 2011 to 62% in 2035 and reaching 70% worldwide by 2050, enabling
world population to stabilize at about 9 billion with better food supply, clean water, sanitation,
health, education and communication facilities.

Coal is not limited globally, but large amounts need to be moved from where it is plentiful to
where it is needed, mainly for power generation. This has both economic and carbon emission
implications (apart from actually burning it). Natural gas is abundant and increasingly traded
over long distances, with supplies in several countries increasing due to technology enabling
access to gas in shale beds. Oil is more limited, in 2012 global production increased to almost 76
million barrels per day (27 billion barrels/yr), and known reserves increased 8% to 1600 billion
barrels. In the World Energy Outlook 2013 New Policies scenario, coal demand increases 0.7%
per year from 2011 to 2035, gas increases 1.6% pa, and oil increases 1.1% pa to 2020 then 0.4%
pa. For electricity, coal use increases 35% to 2035 thus reducing its share of generation from
41% to 33%, gas increases 72% so that its share remains at 22%, nuclear increases 66% pa to
hold its 12% share, and renewables other than hydro increase nearly five-fold.

Nuclear Power for electricity in published scenarios


Nuclear power generation is an established part of the world's electricity mix providing in 2012
some 11% of world electricity of 22,752 TWh (cf. coal 40.3%, oil 5%, natural gas 22.4%, hydro
16.5% and other 5%). It is especially suitable for large-scale, continuous electricity demand
which requires reliability (i.e. base-load), and hence ideally matched to increasing urbanisation
worldwide.

OECD World Energy Outlook

Annual editions of the World Energy Outlook from the OECD International Energy Agency
make clear the increasing importance of nuclear power in meeting energy needs while achieving
security of supply and minimising carbon dioxide emissions. The 2006 edition of this report
warned that if policies remained unchanged, world energy demand to 2030 is forecast to increase
by 53% accompanied by supply crises, giving a "dirty, insecure and expensive" energy future
which would be unsustainable. The report showed that nuclear power could make a major
contribution to reducing dependence on imported gas and curbing CO2 emissions in a cost-
effective way, since its uranium fuel is abundant. However governments needed to play a
stronger role in facilitating private investment, especially in liberalized electricity markets where
the trade-off between security and low price had been a disincentive to investment in new plant
and grid infrastructure.

The World Energy Outlook 2009 report said that investment of US$ 25.6 trillion* would be
required by 2030 under the reference scenario, and $10.5 trillion more under an alternative low-
carbon energy scenario. Under this, nuclear capacity increases 378 GWe (86%) to 816 GWe
rather than to 475 GWe in reference case, energy demand increases by 20% rather than 40% and
CO2 emissions reduce to 26.4 Gt/yr from 28.8 Gt/yr in 2007.

* Of the $25.6 trillion amount, $13.7 trillion is for electricity: about half for generation and the
rest for transmission and distribution.

The World Energy Outlook 2010 report built on this and showed that removing fossil-fuel
consumption subsidies, which totaled $312 billion in 2009 (mostly in non-OECD countries),
could make a big contribution to meeting energy security and environmental goals, including
mitigating CO2 and other emissions. In the central New Policies scenario, based on recent policy
advances, world primary energy demand increases by 36% between 2008 and 2035, or 1.2% per
year average. This compares with 2% per year over the previous 27-year period, but is higher
than the low-carbon scenario. In this scenario, non-OECD countries account for 93% of the
primary energy demand growth. The report notes that while China's energy use was half that of
the USA in 2000, it overtook the USA in 2009.

In the WEO 2010 New Policies scenario electricity demand was expected to grow at 2.2% pa to
2035, almost double the rate of primary energy, and with 80% of the growth being in non-OECD
countries. Globally, gross capacity additions, to replace obsolete capacity and to meet demand
growth, amount to around 5900 GWe to 2035 – 25% more than current installed capacity.
Nuclear capacity increased by only 360 GWe, somewhat less than in the reduced carbon
scenario. Support for renewable sources of electricity, estimated at $37 billion in 2009, is
quadrupled. But per unit it drops from average 5.5 c/kWh to 2.3 cents, apart from costs of
integrating them into the grid. CO2 emissions increase from 29 Gt/yr in 2008 to 34 Gt in 2020
and 35 Gt in 2035, all this being in non-OECD countries. In the low-carbon scenario they peak at
32 Gt about 2020 and drop to 22 Gt in 2035 with CO2 emission costs then being $90-120 per
tonne (all in 2009 dollars). In the '450' low-carbon scenario to 2035, the additional spending on
low-carbon energy technologies (business investment and consumer spending) amounts to $18
trillion more than in the Current Policies Scenario, and around $13.5 trillion more than in the
New Policies Scenario.

Following the Fukushima accident, World Energy Outlook 2011 New Policies scenario had a
60% increase in nuclear capacity to 2035, compared with about 90% the year before. "Although
the prospects for nuclear power in the New Policies Scenario are weaker in some regions than in
[WEO 2010] projections, nuclear power continues to play an important role, providing base-load
electricity. Most non-OECD countries and many OECD countries are expected to press ahead
with plans to install additional nuclear power plants, though there may be short-term delays as
the safety standards of existing and new plants are reviewed. Globally, nuclear power capacity is
projected to rise in the New Policies Scenario from 393 GW in 2009 to 630 GW in 2035, around
20 GW lower than projected last year." In this scenario the IEA expects the share of coal in total
electricity to drop from 41% now to 33% in 2035. Electricity generation increases from 20 to 36
PWh.

WEO 2011 also included a "Low Nuclear Case (which) examines the implications for global
energy balances of a much smaller role for nuclear power. The lower nuclear component of
electricity supply is not a forecast, post Fukushima, but an assumption adopted for the purpose of
illustrating a global energy outlook in such a low nuclear world." "In the Low Nuclear Case, the
total amount of nuclear power capacity falls from 393 GW at the end of 2010 to 335 GW in
2035, just over half the level in the New Policies Scenario. The share of nuclear power in total
generation drops from 13% in 2010 to just 7% in 2035, with implications for energy security,
diversity of the fuel mix, spending on energy imports and energy-related CO2 emissions." Its
effect would be to "increase import bills, heighten energy security concerns and make it harder
and more expensive to combat climate change."

The New Policies scenario in World Energy Outlook 2012 showed that "several fundamental
trends persist: energy demand and CO2 emissions rise even higher; energy market dynamics are
increasingly determined by emerging economies; fossil fuels remain the dominant energy
sources; and providing universal energy access to the world's poor countries continues to be an
elusive goal." Electricity generation increases from 21.5 PWh in 2010 to 36.6 PWh in 2035, with
average price increase of 15% in real terms. WEO 2012 further reduced nuclear capacity
projections for 2035, to 580 GWe, about 10% less than that scenario the year before and only
55% more than today. That would produce 4.37 PWh, 12% of world total. Renewables are likely
to "become the world's second-largest source of power generation by 2015", with share of
electricity generation growing from 20% in 2010 (mostly hydro) to 31% by 2035, though this
"hinges critically on continued subsidies" which impact electricity prices. The IEA concluded
that "taking all new developments and policies into account, the world is still failing to put the
global energy system onto a more sustainable path." This is highlighted by a 28% increase in
fossil fuel subsidies to $523 billion in 2011 (compared with $409 billion in 2010, and $44 billion
in 2010 for renewables. Renewables subsidies are expected to reach $240 billion per year in
2035, for 31% of power).

World Energy Outlook 2013 was very much in line with WEO 2012, and electricity generation
increases from 22.1 PWh in 2011 to 37.1 PWh in 2035. Its New Policies scenario showed 66%
increase in nuclear contribution 2011-2035, with its share steady at 12%. Nuclear capacity rises
only 47% however, in line with WEO 2012, with the expansion being mainly policy-driven on
energy security grounds. The largest gross capacity additions are in China, which adds 114 GWe
during the projection period (38% of global new nuclear capacity). Cumulative global
investment in the power sector to 2035 needs to be $17 trillion, an average of $740 billion per
year. New plants account for 58% of this, the rest is transmission and distribution. Electricity
prices by 2035 are expected to show significant regional differences, with those for industry in
USA ($80/MWh) being a little over half those in the EU and 40% lower than China’s, where
network costs eclipse capital cost savings. Japan’s electricity prices for industry, now shown as
over $185/MWh, decrease below EU levels to about $145/MWh as fossil fuel imports diminish.

World Energy Outlook 2014 had a special focus on nuclear power, and extends the scope of
scenarios to 2040. In its New Policies scenario, installed nuclear capacity growth is 60% through
543 GWe in 2030 and to 624 GWe in 2040 out of a total of 10,700 GWe, with the increase
concentrated heavily in China (46% of it), plus India, Korea and Russia (30% of it together) and
the USA (16%), countered by a 10% drop in the EU. Despite this, the percentage share of
nuclear power in the global power mix increases to only 12%, well below its historic peak. So-
called Low Nuclear and High Nuclear cases give 366 and 767 GWe respectively in 2040. The
450 Scenario gives a cost-effective transition to limiting global warming assuming an effective
international agreement in 2015, and this brings about more than doubling nuclear capacity to
862 GWe in 2040, while energy-related CO2 emissions peak before 2020 and then decline. In
this scenario, almost all new generating capacity built after 2030 needs to be low-carbon.
"Despite the challenges it currently faces, nuclear power has specific characteristics that
underpin the commitment of some countries to maintain it as a future option," it said. "Nuclear
plants can contribute to the reliability of the power system where they increase the diversity of
power generation technologies in the system. For countries that import energy, it can reduce their
dependence on foreign supplies and limit their exposure to fuel price movements in international
markets."

CO2 emissions from coal use level off after 2020 in the New Policies Scenario, though CCS is
expected to be negligible before 2030. CO2 emissions from gas grow strongly to 2040.

WEO 2014 expresses concern about subsidies to fossil fuels, “which encourage wasteful
consumption” and totalled $548 billion in 2013, over half of this for oil. Ten countries account
for almost three-quarters of the world total for fossil-fuel subsidies, five of them in Middle East
(notably Iran and Saudi Arabia) or North Africa where much electricity is generated from oil,
and where nuclear power plants and even renewables would be competitive, but for those
subsidies. The report advocates ensuring “that energy prices reflect their full economic value by
introducing market pricing and removing price controls.” Renewables subsides in 2013 are put at
$121 billion and rising, $45 billion of this being solar PV. Geographically this is $69 billion for
EU and $27 billion in USA. The report was unable to assign a figure for nuclear subsidies, which
at present don’t exist. The difficulty of reducing subsidies is discussed.

In June 2015 the IEA’s World Energy Outlook 2015 Special Report on Energy and Climate
Change was published, which “has the pragmatic purpose of arming COP21 negotiators with the
energy sector material they need to achieve success in Paris in December 2015”. It outlines a
strategy to limit global warming to 2°C, but is very much focused on renewables.

The report recommends a series of measures including increasing energy efficiency, reducing the
use of inefficient coal-fired power plants, increasing investment in renewables, reducing methane
emissions, and phasing out fossil fuels subsidies. Half of the additional emissions reductions in
its '450' scenario come from decarbonisation efforts in 
power supply, driven by high carbon
price incentives. In this scenario, an additional
 245 GWe of nuclear capacity is built by 2040
compared with a moderate ‘Bridge’ option. The IEA acknowledges that nuclear power is the
second-biggest source of low-carbon electricity worldwide after hydropower and that the use of
nuclear energy has avoided the release of 56 billion tonnes of CO2 since 1971, equivalent to
almost two years of global emissions at current rates. The report suggests that intended
nationally determined contributions (INDCs) submitted by countries in advance of COP21 will
have trivial effect, and its purpose is clearly to suggest more ambitious emission reduction
targets in its ‘Bridge’ scenario.

While the report confirms that nuclear energy will play an important role in reducing greenhouse
gas emissions, it projects nuclear capacity of only 542 GWe (38% increase) producing 4005
TWh in 2030 in its main ‘Bridge’ scenario, with the share of nuclear energy in power generation
increasing to 13% then, compared with about 11% today. Most of the new nuclear plants are
expected to be built in countries with price-regulated markets or where government-owned
entities build, own and operate the plants, or where governments act to facilitate private
investment.

In November 2015, the World Energy Outlook 2015 had a special focus on India. Its central New
Policies Scenario to 2040 takes into account the policies and implementing measures affecting
energy markets that had been adopted as of mid-2015, together with relevant declared policy
intentions. Its Current Policies Scenario takes into account only policies enacted as of mid-2015,
and the 450 Scenario depicts a pathway to the 2°C climate goal that can be achieved by the end
of the century by fostering technologies that are close to becoming available at commercial scale,
and relates to the June report described above. 
In all scenarios, electricity is the fastest-growing
form of energy in final use, driven by increasing use in industries, the
 ongoing shift of people to
urban centres, and rising living standards. In the New Policies scenario, electricity demand
increases 70% by 2040, mostly in non-OECD countries – in China it doubles, in India it more
than triples. Installed power generation capacity reaches 10,570 GW in 2040, an increase of
some 4,400 GW over the level in 2014 and one-third more than the increase in the previous 25
years. 
Worldwide, installed capacity more than doubles in non-OECD countries, led by China
(where it doubles) and India (where it almost quadruples). 


In WEO2015 New Policies, the global power generation mix shifts away from coal, whose share
falls from 41% today to 30% in 2040, after holding steady since 1990. The share of low carbon
technologies in total generation increases from one-third in 2013 to 47% in 2040, due to the
growth of non-hydro renewables and a stable share of nuclear and hydropower. Coal-fired
generation increases most in India, more than in China or in the rest of the world combined, but
the average efficiency of coal-fired plants climbs to 40%. Global power sector investment totals
nearly $20 trillion over 2015-2040, split between 6,700 GW of new power plants ($11.3 trillion,
62% renewables) and 75 million km of transmission lines to deliver the power ($8.4 trillion). 


Nuclear power provides considerably more electricity by 2040 in all scenarios. From 2,478 TWh
base in 2013, it increases to 4,606 TWh with New Policies, 3,974 under Current Policies, and
6,243 TWh in the 450 Scenario, then corresponding to 18% of supply. Under New Policies, 147
GWe is added by 2025, and another 218 GWe by 2040, both figures offset by retirements (62 &
86 GWe respectively). That scenario has much greater net addition for coal, gas, wind, solar and
hydro, though it shows that the 2020 cost of electricity from non-hydro renewables is more than
double that from nuclear, coal or hydro, though the difference diminishes by 2040.

International Energy Agency

The 2012 IEA Energy Technology Perspectives Study (ETP 2012) took the 450 ppm scenario in
WEO 2011 and extended it out to 2050, calling it the two-degree scenario (2DS). This scenario
is then compared with the status quo (six-degree scenario) and with a four-degree scenario in
between. It then goes a step further to see if a zero emissions energy system is possible by 2075.
The study made the case that environment and energy development must go hand in hand. Some
of the findings:

• A sustainable energy system is still within reach and can bring broad benefits.
• Technologies can and must play an integral role in transforming the energy system.
• Investing in clean energy makes economic sense – every additional dollar invested can
generate three dollars in future fuel savings by 2050.
• Energy security and climate change mitigation are allies.
• Despite technology’s potential, progress in clean energy is too slow.
• Nine out of ten technologies that hold potential for energy and CO2 emissions savings
are failing to meet the deployment objectives needed to achieve the necessary transition
to a low-carbon future. Some of the technologies with the largest potential are showing
the least progress.
• The share of energy-related investment in public research, development and
demonstration (RD&D) has fallen by two-thirds since the 1980s.
• Fossil fuels remain dominant and demand continues to grow, locking in high-carbon
infrastructure.
It then goes on to focus on how energy policy must address the key issues and the role of
government in formulating that, finally concluding with recommendations to energy ministers
(assuming these recommendations were to be considered at Rio+20).

The study focused on renewable technologies such as wind and solar, energy efficiency
technologies to reduce demand, and carbon capture technologies to clean up the ever-expanding
fossil infrastructure, though this is prime area where progress is obviously "too slow". Nuclear
technology is also shown to be important although its suggested role in ETP 2012 is less than the
others.

The electricity generation mixes for each of the three scenarios in 2050 range from almost
50,000 TWh in 6DS down to 40,000 TWh in 2DS. Improved energy efficiencies is the most
important source of clean generation, along with huge growth in renewables (wind, solar, hydro
and biomass) and an increase in nuclear output to about 8,000 TWh in 2DS. Most of the
remaining fossil generation, contributing 10,000 TWh, is assumed to have CCS installed.

Looking at the needed capacity, due to the variability and low capacity factors of renewables
such as wind and solar, capacity must increase even more than the output. This demonstrates the
importance of nuclear as it has high capacity relative to other forms of generation. With less than
5% of the generating capacity (about 550 GWe), it produces about 20% of the electricity,
indicating its importance in a low-carbon electricity system.

The main tool in achieving CO2 reduction targets for the 2DS is CO2 price, increasing from
USD 40/tCO2 in 2020 to USD 150/tCO2 in 2050. This greatly increases the electricity
generation costs of CO2-emitting technologies and thereby improves the relative cost-
competitiveness of low-carbon power technologies. The report suggests that the only way to
achieve a low-carbon world is to price carbon aggressively to force behavioural change; first by
reducing demand and second through the implementation of higher cost low carbon
technologies. This has a major impact on electricity prices, however, and the only mitigating
factor is the relatively low cost of power from nuclear plants allowed to operate on a continuous
full-power basis unrestrained by subsidised high-cost intermittent sources having dispatch
preference.

Hence the study continues to include a "high nuclear" sensitivity case for the 2DS scenario. In
the 2DS-hiNuc case, nuclear generation is increased to 34% in 2050. Compared with the base
2DS, nuclear replaces fossil power plants with CCS and renewables, whose share in 2050 falls,
in the case of CCS from 15% to 7%, and in the case of renewables from 57% to 49%. This
scenario reflects a world with greater public acceptance of nuclear power. On the technical side,
the average construction rate for nuclear power plants in the period 2011 to 2050 rises from 27
GW/yr in the base 2DS to 50 GW/yr. The cumulative investment costs of this case are only USD
200 billion higher than in the base 2DS and are more than offset by costs savings for fossil fuels
in the order of USD 2000 billion (10 to 1).

A system with about one-third of the generation provided by nuclear is achievable if the industry
can overcome the major issue of public acceptance. It raises the question of whether the public
will prefer very high electricity costs with a large increase in renewable generation, or a greater
role from nuclear power involving a relatively modest increase in the number of plants.

The 2014 Energy Technology Perspectives developed the ETP 2012 scenarios. In the 2DS one
which is the main focus, the share of fossil fuels in global primary energy supply drops by
almost half – from 80% in 2011 to just over 40% in 2050, and some 22 GWe of new nuclear
generating capacity must be added annually by 2050. However, the IEA notes that global nuclear
capacity "is stagnating at this time" and by 2025 will be 5% to 25% below needed levels,
"demonstrating significant uncertainty." It suggests that the high capital and low running costs of
nuclear create the need for policies that provide investor certainty.

The IEA estimates that an additional $44 trillion in investment is needed in global electricity
systems by 2050. However, it says that this represents only a small portion of global GDP and is
offset by over $115 trillion in fuel savings. The new estimate compares with $36 trillion in ETP
2012. This increase, "partly shows something the IEA has said for some time: the longer we
wait, the more expensive it becomes to transform our energy system."

"While clean energy technology deployment in emerging economies has rallied over the past
year – making up for declines in the industrialized world – the overall picture of progress
remains bleak," according to the IEA. It claims that "Cost-effective, practical solutions can
increase efficiency, moderate electricity demand and decarbonize almost all power generation by
2050." However, in order to attain this, "the decision-making process needs to be revised,
abandoning the short-term, siloed attitudes of the past, and embracing a longer-term systems
approach that identifies synergies within all sectors of the energy system. A significant change
from ETP 2012 is much reduced forecast use of CCS by 2020, and one-fifth less by 2050.

Launching the ETP 2014 report, the IEA executive director said: "Electricity is going to play a
defining role in the first half of this century as the energy carrier that increasingly powers
economic growth and development. While this offers opportunities, it does not solve our
problems; indeed, it creates many new challenges." She added, "We must get it right, but we're
on the wrong path at the moment. Growing use of coal globally is overshadowing progress in
renewable energy deployment, and the emissions intensity of the electricity system has not
changed in 20 years despite some progress in some regions. A radical change of course at the
global level is long overdue."

The 2015 Energy Technology Perspectives from IEA developed the earlier scenarios. In the
main 2DS scenario, the share of fossil fuels in global primary energy supply drops by almost half
– from 80% in 2011 to just over 40% in 2050. Energy efficiency, renewables and CCS make the
largest contributions to global emissions reductions under the scenario. The IEA says that
nuclear, end-use fuel switching, and power generation efficiency and fuel switching are
"essential" to reach the 2DS target cost-efficiently. Under the 2DS scenario, some 22 GWe of
new nuclear generating capacity must be added annually by 2050.

Launching the report the IEA said: "A concerted push for clean-energy innovation is the only
way the world can meet its climate goals," and that governments should help boost or accelerate
this transformation. The shift to clean energy is progressing at levels well short of those needed
to limit the global increase in temperature to no more than 2°C. It called for policymakers to step
up efforts to support the development and deployment of "new, ground-breaking energy
technologies". "We cannot be complacent, we are settling ourselves environmental and energy
access targets that rely on better technologies. Today's annual government spending on energy
research and development is estimated to be $17 billion. Tripling this level, as we recommend,
requires governments and the private sector to work closely together and shift their focus to low-
carbon technologies."

International Atomic Energy Agency

The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) in its annual Energy, Electricity and Nuclear
Power Estimates for the Period to 2050 published in September 2012 revised downwards its
projections for 2030, as it had done the previous year following the Fukushima accident. Its low
projection showed a nuclear capacity increase from 370 GWe then to 456 GWe in 2030, the high
one gave 740 GWe then, in line with forecast growth in all power generation. For 2050 it
tentatively estimated 470 to 1337 GWe respectively. That IAEA publication in September 2013
again revised downward the projections for 2030, to 435 GWe in 2030 for the low projection and
722 GWe for the high one then. For 2050 the figures were 440 and 1113 GWe. The 2014 version
again reduces 2030 projections to 401 GWe (low) and 699 GWe for the high projection. For
2050 the figures were 413 and 1092 GWe in 2014. The low figures assume “significant declines
in North America, Europe and the OECD Pacific, stagnation in Africa, some growth in Latin
America, CIS and ASEAN and substantial expansion in the Middle East and non-OECD Asia”
(i.e. including China but excluding Japan and South Korea).

OECD Nuclear Energy Agency

The OECD's Nuclear Energy Agency published its first Nuclear Energy Outlook in October
2008. Apart from nuclear being virtually carbon-free, it points out that energy security is
enhanced due to nuclear fuel's high energy density, which means that transport is less vulnerable
and storage of large reserves is easy. In its high scenario, life extensions and plant upratings
continue and present plans for new capacity are largely implemented to 2030. After that new
build accelerates to bring over 50 GWe on line each year, giving 1400 GWe nuclear capacity in
2050. It identifies factors which would result in that outcome.

In June 2010 this NEO was supplemented by the joint NEA-IEA Nuclear Technology Roadmap,
with scenario for cutting energy-related CO2 emissions by 50% by 2050. This would see 1200
GWe of nuclear capacity on line then, providing 24% of electricity (world production having
grown from 20,000 TWh in 2007 to 41,000 TWh then). Nuclear power would then be the single
largest source of electricity. If constraints on building new nuclear capacity were overcome,
nuclear could provide 38% of electricity by 2050, and in this case the power would be 11%
cheaper then. The roadmap saw nuclear as a mature technology which required no major
technological breakthrough to achieve the projected growth. However, global industrial capacity
to construct nuclear power plants will need to double by 2020 if nuclear capacity is to grow in
the 2020s and beyond as projected. The Roadmap estimates the investment in nuclear power
needed by 2050 to be almost $4000 billion: including $893 billion in China, $883 billion in USA
and Canada, $615 billion in OECD Pacific (including Japan & Korea), $389 billion in India, and
$330 billion in centrally-planned economies.

The 2015 edition of the joint NEA-IEA Nuclear Technology Roadmap asserts that “current
trends in energy supply and use are unsustainable,” and “the fundamental advantages provided
by nuclear energy in terms of reduction of GHG emissions, competitiveness of electricity
production and security of supply still apply” (from 2010). It puts forward a 2050 carbon-limited
energy mix scenario providing about 40,000 TWh in which 930 GWe of nuclear capacity
supplies 17% of electricity but plays an important role beyond that. "The contributions of nuclear
energy – providing valuable base-load electricity, supplying important ancillary services to the
grid and contributing to the security of energy supply – must be fully acknowledged."
Governments should "review arrangements in the electricity market so as to... allow nuclear
power plants to operate effectively."

"Clearer policies are needed to encourage operators to invest in both long-term operation and
new build so as to replace retiring units," said the report. "Governments should ensure price
transparency and the stable policies required for investment in large capital-intensive and long-
lived base-load power. Policies should support a level playing field for all sources of low-carbon
power projects." This is particularly important to OECD countries, where nuclear power is the
largest source of low-carbon electricity, providing 18% of their total electricity. Even though the
use of electricity grows over the timeframe to 2050, the increase of nuclear power from 377
GWe today would contribute 13% of the emissions reduction needed to limit global warming.

In the near term, small modular reactors "could extend the market for nuclear energy" and even
replace coal boilers forced into closure in order to improve air quality. "Governments and
industry should work together to accelerate the development of SMR prototypes and the launch
of construction projects (about five projects per design) needed to demonstrate the benefits of
modular design and factory assembly." In the longer term the IEA wants so-called Generation IV
reactor and fuel cycle designs to be ready for deployment in 2030-40.

US Energy Information Administration

The US Energy Information Administration (EIA) has also revised upwards its normally low
projections for nuclear in recent editions of its annual International Energy Outlook (IEO). In
2010 it projected 558 GWe nuclear capacity in 2030 and 593 GWe in 2035. The 2030 figure is
53% higher than its 2030 projection published seven years earlier. The reference case for 2035
includes 66 GWe added in China, 23 GWe in India, 25 GWe in Russia and 12 GWe in the USA.
It projected 4200 TWh from nuclear in 2030 and 4510 TWh in 2035. In 2013 these projections
had increased to 4755 TWh in 2030, 5135 TWh in 2035 and 5492 TWh in 2040 (from 2438
TWh in 2012).

In the EIA International Energy Outlook 2013, nuclear power and renewable energy are forecast
to be the world's fastest-growing energy sources from 2010 to 2040, increasing by 2.5% each
year, driven by concerns about energy security and greenhouse gas emissions which support the
development of new nuclear generating capacity. "Factors underlying the IEO2013 nuclear
power projections are mixed. They include the consequences of the March 2011 disaster at
Fukushima, planned retirements of nuclear capacity in OECD Europe under current policies, and
continued strong growth of nuclear power in non-OECD Asia." (The 2014 edition focuses
simply on trends in liquid fuel markets.)

In November 2011 the World Energy Council (WEC) published a report: Policies for the future:
2011 Assessment of country energy and climate policies, which ranked country performance
according to an energy sustainability index, meaning how well each country performs on "three
pillars" of energy policy – energy security, social equity, and environmental impact mitigation
(particularly low carbon emissions), or simply environmental sustainability. The five countries
with the "most coherent and robust" energy policies included large shares of nuclear energy in
their electricity fuel mix. The best performers, according to the report, are: Switzerland (40%
nuclear), Sweden (40% nuclear), France (75% nuclear), Germany (30% nuclear prior to reactor
shutdowns earlier 2011), and Canada (15% nuclear). The report said that countries wanting to
reduce reliance on nuclear power must work out how to do so without compromising energy
sustainability. In Germany this would be a particular challenge without increasing the reliance on
carbon-based power generation "since the renewable infrastructure currently does not have the
capability to do so."

World Energy Council

The 2013 version of this WEC World Energy Trilemma report gave top rating to Switzerland,
Denmark, Sweden, the United Kingdom and Spain as being the only countries that historically
demonstrate their ability to manage the trade-offs among the three competing energy policy
dimensions coherently. These all have, or depend upon, a high level of nuclear contribution.
Germany had notably dropped down the list on energy security and sustainability criteria, as had
France on energy security. Canada plunged from 2011 due to environmental sustainability,
though at top on the other two. In the 2014 edition, WEC gave top honours to Switzerland,
Sweden and Norway. Germany, Spain and Japan dropped down the rankings.

European Commission

In December 2011 the European Commission (EC) published its Energy 2050 Roadmap, a
policy paper. This was very positive regarding nuclear power and said that nuclear energy can
make "a significant contribution to the energy transformation process" and is "a key source of
low-carbon electricity generation" that will keep system costs and electricity prices lower. "As a
large scale low-carbon option, nuclear energy will remain in the EU power generation mix." The
paper analysed five possible scenarios leading to the EU low-carbon energy economy goal by
2050 (80% reduction of CO2 emissions), based on energy efficiency, renewables, nuclear power
and carbon capture and storage (CCS). All scenarios show electricity will have to play a much
greater role than now, almost doubling its share in final energy demand to 36%-39% in 2050.
The EC high-efficiency scenario would reduce energy demand by 41% by 2050 (compared with
2005); the diversified supply technologies scenario would have a combination of high carbon
prices, nuclear energy and introduction of CCS technologies; a high-renewables scenario
suggests they might supply 75% of total energy supply by 2050; a "delayed CCS" scenario has
nuclear power would playing a major role; and a low-nuclear power scenario had coal plants
with CCS providing 32% of total energy (ie 82-89% of EU electricity). The highest percentage
of nuclear energy would be in the delayed CCS and diversified supply technologies scenarios, in
which it would account for 18% and 15% shares of primary energy supply respectively, ie 38-
50% of EU electricity. Those scenarios also had the lowest total energy costs.

Others

In January 2014 BP published its Energy Outlook 2035, which showed growth in primary energy
demand to then at 2.0% per year to 2020 then 1.2% pa, but electricity demand growth is much
higher and by 2035 accounts for 46% of primary energy. Nuclear energy output is expected to
rise to 2035 at around 1.9% a year. China, India and Russia will together account for 96% of the
global growth in nuclear power, while nuclear output in the USA and EU declines due to
expected plant closures. Renewables are expected to continue to be the fastest growing class of
energy, gaining market share from a small base as they rise at an average of 6.4% a year to 2035.
Renewables' share of global electricity production is expected to grow from 5% to 14% by 2035.
Including biofuels, renewables are expected to have a higher share of primary energy than
nuclear by 2025.

Electricite de France (EdF) in about 2008 published forecast world figures for the period to
2020. These show 140 GWe of new capacity being built and 10 GWe decommissioned to give
480 GWe in 2020. Of the 140 GWe new build, almost 30% is in China, 15% is in India and 15%
other Asia. Europe, Americas and Russia have about 12% each.

A World Nuclear Association report early in 2013, Inside the Black Box – Exploring the
Assumptions within Nuclear Power Forecasting, examines several scenarios for electricity and
for nuclear power supply and their basis. A 2014 comparison among several sets of projections
from IEA (WEO 2013) and EIA (Outlook 2013) showed 2035 nuclear capacity figures ranging
from 527 to 792 GWe, compared with 381 GWe in 2010 base year. The World Energy Council’s
higher scenario was 751 GWe. Exxon Mobil and Shell projections for 2040 were comparable
with those from EIA. On the basis of these, a doubling of nuclear capacity by 2040 emerges as
being likely.
Generation options
In electricity demand, the need for low-cost continuous, reliable supply can be distinguished
from peak demand occurring over a few hours daily and able to command higher prices. Supply
needs to match demand instantly and reliably over time. There are number of characteristics of
nuclear power which make it particularly valuable apart from its actual generation cost per unit –
MWh or kWh. Fuel is a low proportion of power cost, giving power price stability, its fuel is on
site (not depending on continuous delivery), it is dispatchable on demand, it has fairly quick
ramp-up, it contributes to clean air and low-CO2 objectives, it gives good voltage support for
grid stability. These attributes are mostly not monetised in merchant markets, but have great
value which is increasingly recognised where dependence on intermittent sources has grown, and
governments address long-term reliability and security of supply.

The renewable energy sources for electricity constitute a diverse group, from wind, solar, tidal
and wave energy to hydro, geothermal and biomass-based power generation. Apart from hydro
power in the few places where it is very plentiful, none of these is suitable, intrinsically or
economically, for large-scale power generation where continuous, reliable supply is needed.

Growing use will however be made of the renewable energy sources in the years ahead, although
their role is limited by their intermittent nature. Their economic attractiveness is still an issue
also. Renewables will have most appeal where demand is for small-scale, intermittent supply of
electricity. In the OECD about 8% of electricity was from renewables other than hydro in 2013,
and the world figure was 5.7%.
This diagram shows that much of the electricity demand is in fact for continuous 24/7 supply
(base-load), while some is for a lesser amount of predictable supply for about three quarters of
the day, and less still for variable peak demand up to half of the time.

Apart from nuclear power the world relies almost entirely on fossil fuels, especially coal, to meet
demand for base-load electricity production. Most of the demand is for continuous, reliable
supply on a large scale and there is little scope for changing this.

Natural gas is increasingly used as fuel for electricity generation in many countries, but transport
over long distances and storage present some challenges. Much storage is underground, in
depleted oilfields, especially in the USA. However, this can be dangerous. In 2015 the Aliso
Canyon storage field in California leaked for some months at about 66 tonnes of methane per
hour, causing widespread evacuation and neutralising the state’s efforts to curb CO2 emissions
(methane having 25 times the global warming potential).

There is much made of comparisons with renewables. Aside from the obvious intermittency and
non-dispatchability of renewables, the following comparisons of plant materials is interesting.
Per MWe of installed capacity (disregarding capacity factors):
Solar PV: 40 t steel, 19 t aluminium, 76 t concrete, 85 t glass, 13 t silicon.
Wind: 118 t steel, 298 t concrete
Nuclear (1970s plant): 36-40 t steel, 75-90 m3 concrete.*

* Wind data from Vestas, Jan 2011, Life Cycle Assessment of electricity production from V112
wind turbine; solar PV: A Review of Risks in the Solar Electric Life-Cycle, by V.M. Fthenakis
and H.C. Kim of Brookhaven National Laboratory; Per F. Peterson, Haihua Zhao, and Robert
Petroski, "Metal And Concrete Inputs For Several Nuclear Power Plants," University of
California, Berkeley.

Implications of Electric Vehicles


Future widespread use of electric vehicles, both pure electric and plug-in hybrids, will increase
electricity demand modestly – perhaps up to 15% in terms of kilowatt-hours. But this increase
will mostly come overnight, in off-peak demand, so will not much increase the system's peak
capacity requirement in gigawatts. Overnight charging of vehicles will however greatly increase
the proportion of that system capacity to be covered by base-load power generation – either
nuclear or coal. In a typical system this might increase from about 50-60% to 70-80% of the
total, as shown in the Figures below.

This then has significant implications for the cost of electricity. Base-load power is generated
much more cheaply than intermediate- and peak-load power, so the average cost of electricity
will be lower than with the present pattern of use. And any such major increase in base-load
capacity requirement will have a major upside potential for nuclear power if there are constraints
on carbon emissions. So potentially the whole power supply gets a little cheaper and cleaner, and
many fossil fuel emissions from road transport are avoided at the same time.
Drivers for increased nuclear capacity
The first generation of nuclear plants were justified by the need to alleviate urban smog caused
by coal-fired power plants. Nuclear was also seen as an economic source of base-load electricity
which reduced dependence on overseas imports of fossil fuels. Today's drivers for nuclear build
have evolved:

Increasing energy demand

Global population growth in combination with industrial development will lead to a doubling of
electricity consumption by 2030. Besides this incremental growth, there will be a need to renew
a lot of generating stock in the USA and the EU over the same period. An increasing shortage of
fresh water calls for energy-intensive desalination plants, and in the longer term hydrogen
production for transport purposes will need large amounts of electricity and/or high temperature
heat. See first section above for recent projections.

Climate change

Increased awareness of the dangers and effects of global warming and climate change has led
decision makers, media and the public to realize that the use of fossil fuels must be reduced and
replaced by low-emission sources of energy, such as nuclear power, the only readily available
large-scale alternative to fossil fuels for production of continuous, reliable supply of electricity.

Security of Supply

A major topic on many political agendas is security of supply, as countries realize how
vulnerable they are to interrupted deliveries of oil and gas. The abundance of naturally occurring
uranium makes nuclear power attractive from an energy security standpoint.

Economics

Increasing fossil fuel prices have greatly improved the economics of nuclear power for electricity
now. Several studies show that nuclear energy is the most cost-effective of the available base-
load technologies. In addition, as carbon emission reductions are encouraged through various
forms of government incentives and trading schemes, the economic benefits of nuclear power
will increase further.

Insurance against future price exposure

A longer-term advantage of uranium over fossil fuels is the low impact that increased fuel prices
will have on the final electricity production costs, since a large proportion of those costs is in the
capital cost of the plant. This insensitivity to fuel price fluctuations offers a way to stabilize
power prices in deregulated markets.

As the nuclear industry is moving away from small national programmes towards global
cooperative schemes, serial production of new plants will drive construction costs down and
further increase the competitiveness of nuclear energy.

In practice, is a rapid expansion of nuclear power capacity


possible?
Most reactors today are built in under five years (first concrete to first power), with four years
being state of the art and three years being the aim with prefabrication. Several years are required
for preliminary approvals before construction.

It is noteworthy that in the 1980s, 218 power reactors started up, an average of one every 17
days. These included 47 in USA, 42 in France and 18 in Japan. The average power was 923.5
MWe. So it is not hard to imagine a similar number being commissioned in a decade after about
2015. But with China and India getting up to speed with nuclear energy and a world energy
demand double the 1980 level in 2015, a realistic estimate of what is possible might be the
equivalent of one 1000 MWe unit worldwide every five days.

A relevant historical benchmark is that from 1941 to 1945, 18 US shipyards built over 2700
Liberty Ships. These were standardised 10,800 dwt cargo ships of a very basic British design but
they became symbolic of US industrial wartime productivity and were vital to the war effort.
Average construction time was 42 days in the shipyard, often using prefabricated modules. In
1943, three were being completed every day. They were 135 metres long and could carry 9100
tonnes of cargo.

See also the paper in this series: Heavy Manufacturing of Power Plants.

Clean Air and Greenhouse Gases


On a global scale nuclear power currently reduces carbon dioxide emissions by some 2.5 billion
tonnes per year (relative to the main alternative of coal-fired generation, about 2 billion tonnes
relative to the present fuel mix). Carbon dioxide accounts for half of the human-contributed
portion of the global warming effect of the atmosphere.

The UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) has comprehensively reviewed


global warming and has reached a consensus that the phenomenon is real and does pose a
significant environmental threat during the next century if fossil fuel use continues even at
present global levels. See also Climate Change – science paper.

The 2007 IPCC report on mitigation of climate change says that the most cost-effective option
for restricting the temperature rise to under 3°C will require an increase in non-carbon electricity
generation from 34% (nuclear plus hydro) then to 48-53% by 2030, along with other measures.
With a doubling of overall electricity demand by then, and a carbon emission cost of US$ 50 per
tonne of CO2, nuclear's share of electricity generation was projected by IPCC to grow from 16%
now to 18% of the increased demand (ie 2650 TWh to some 6000 TWh/yr), representing more
than a doubling of the current nuclear output by 2030. The report projected other non-carbon
sources apart from hydro contributing some 12-17% of global electricity generation by
2030. This is considerably more than subsequent World Energy Outlook projections for 2030
reported above.

Nuclear power has a key role to play in reducing greenhouse gases. Every 22 tonnes of uranium
(26 t U3O8) used saves one million tonnes of carbon dioxide relative to coal.

Of more immediate relevance is clean air, and the health benefits of low pollution levels. A
World Health Organisation (WHO) study published in 2011 showed that some 1.34 million
people each year die prematurely due to PM10 particles – those less than 10 microns (µm) – in
outdoor air. Outdoor, PM10 particles mostly originate in coal-fired power stations and motor
vehicles, and indoors, residential wood and coal burning for space heating is an important
contributor, especially in rural areas during colder months.
WHO studied publicly-available air quality data from 1081 cities across 91 countries, including
capital cities and those with populations of more than 100,000 people. The data used are based
on measurements taken from 2003 to 2010, with most being reported for the period 2008-09. The
WHO air quality guideline for PM10 is 20 micrograms per cubic metre (µg/m3) as an annual
average. However, eleven cities exceeded 200 µg/m3 average, eg UlaanBaatar at 279 µg/m3,
whereas most of the 490 cities below the guideline level were in North America.

In August 2015 the Global Nexus Initiative (GNI) was set up by the US Nuclear Energy
Institute (NEI) and the Partnership for Global Security. It aims to explore the links between
climate change, nuclear energy and global security challenges through a working group of 17
multidisciplinary policy experts from the non-governmental, academic and private sectors in
Denmark, France, Japan, Sweden, the United Arab Emirates and the USA. The group will
convene for a series of meetings and workshops, through which it aims to produce policy
memoranda identifying the challenges and offering recommendations. These will feed into a
cumulative report at the end of the two-year project. GNI points out that climate change, energy
security and global security are all issues that cut across national borders, have significant
economic and social impacts, and require input from the full spectrum of stakeholders. This
means policies must be coordinated at national, regional and global levels.

Use of Natural Resources


Carbon and hydrocarbon resources have many other uses that generating power on a large scale.
Coal and other fossil fuels are required in much larger quantities than uranium to produce the
equivalent amount of electricity – nuclear power is very energy-dense, an extremely
concentrated form of energy – see Table below. Nuclear power already has substantially reduced
the use of fossil fuels.

Energy conversion: the heat values of various fuels

Fuel Heat value


Hydrogen (H2) 121 MJ/kg
Methane (CH4) 50 MJ/kg
Methanol (CH3OH) 22.7 MJ/kg
18 MJ/L
Dimethyl ether (CH3OCH3) 29 MJ/kg
19 MJ/L
Petrol/gasoline 44-46 MJ/kg
32 MJ/L
Diesel fuel 45 MJ/kg
39 MJ/L
Crude oil 42-44 MJ/kg
37-39 MJ/L
Liquefied Petroleum Gas (LPG) 49 MJ/kg
Natural gas (UK, USA, Canada, Australia) 37-39 MJ/m3
Natural gas (Russia) 34 MJ/m3
Natural gas as LNG (Australia) 55 MJ/kg
Hard black coal (IEA definition) >23.9 MJ/kg
Sub-bituminous coal (IEA definition) 17.4-23.9 MJ/kg
Lignite/brown coal (IEA definition) <17.4 MJ/kg
Lignite (Australia, electricity) c 10 MJ/kg
Firewood (dry) 16 MJ/kg
Natural uranium, in LWR (normal reactor) 500 GJ/kg
Natural uranium, in LWR with U & Pu recycle 650 GJ/kg
Natural uranium, in FNR 28,000 GJ/kg
Uranium enriched to 3.5%, in LWR 3900 GJ/kg

Uranium figures are based on 45,000 MWd/t burn-up of 3.5% enriched U in LWR
MJ = l06 Joule, GJ = 109 J; % carbon is by mass; mass CO2 = 3.667 mass C
MJ to kWh @ 33% efficiency: x 0.0926
One tonne of oil equivalent (toe) is equal to 41.868 GJ
For hydrogen and methane, Lower Heating Value is given (net of latent heat of vapourisation for
water)
Sources: OECD/IEA Electricity Information 2008, for coal; Australian Energy Consumption and
Production, historical trends and projections, ABARE Research Report 1999.

A further aspect of natural resource use in some places is regarding fresh water. Coal-fired plants
are often built on coalfields for logistical reasons, and then cooled with fresh water using
evaporative cooling towers. These use a lot of water. With nuclear plants, there is no similar
siting consideration and they may more readily be put on the coastline, using seawater for
cooling without evaporation. In Australia, a dry continent, a move from coal-fired to nuclear
power could save enough fresh water to supply a city of four million people.

See also Sustainable Energy in this series.

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