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Posted in Editorials   July 12, 2016

We Need a Power Plan Based on Clean Energy - Not Renewable Energy

Nuclear power is clean, carbon free
 
In August 2000, the Seattle City Council passed a resolution supporting the partial removal of the four lower Snake River dams which currently produce enough clean, carbon-free energy to power over 800,000 average U.S. homes.  Last May, history repeated itself when the Council passed a resolution directing it’s utility to seek ways “….to promote the transition of electricity generation in the Pacific Northwest away from energy facilities that burn fossil fuels or use nuclear power.”

We respect the right of community governing boards to weigh-in on these types of issues.  It is commendable that the Seattle City Council promotes the reduction of carbon emissions; however, it strikes us that they continue to push against the very carbon-free power resources that enable Washington State to have one of the cleanest electric sectors in the nation. 

This is puzzling to many power resource planners.  The Northwest’s existing hydroelectric and nuclear resources are safe, reliable, cost-effective, and carbon-free.  Further, these power sources are essential to the viability of other carbon-free, renewable resources such as wind and solar because they provide needed base-load power at times when the wind doesn’t blow and the sun doesn’t shine. 
 
In 2014, nuclear energy accounted for nearly 63% of carbon-free electric resources nationwide. Hydroelectric power was second at nearly 20%.  Here in the State of Washington, due to the many dams on both the Snake and Columbia Rivers, hydroelectric power produced nearly 90% of our State’s carbon-free electricity followed by the Columbia Generating Station (CGS) operated by Energy Northwest in Richland at nearly 7%.  CGS is the third-largest producer of electricity in our State, behind the Grand Coulee and Chief Joseph hydroelectric dams.  
 
Energy efficiency has been and will continue to be another significant carbon-free alternative.  In fact, the Northwest Power and Conservation Council believes that  new energy efficiency can address the majority of the region’s projected load growth and capacity needs over the next several years; however, in looking to use energy efficiency to meet future loads, we should not abandon the carbon-free resources that serve our existing loads.    
 
It would appear that Energy Secretary Earnest Moniz shared a similar view in a recent New York Times article (May 31, 2016) by expressing his support for nuclear power as a carbon-free resource: "Maintaining the nuclear fleet is really important for meeting our near-term and midterm goals." In conveying his concern about recent closures of U.S. nuclear plants, he went on to say: “We’re supposed to be adding zero-carbon sources, not subtracting.” 
 
To keep the lights on during a typical rainy day in western Washington, we can’t depend on solar or wind power alone. Storing this power is a technology that has yet to be perfected.   Like it or not, nuclear, hydro and even efficient natural gas are the current options available to provide power when renewable resources cannot.
 
Former Energy Secretary Steven Chu appeared right in line with Secretary Moniz when he was quoted at a recent symposium hosted by Stanford University (Forbes, June 5, 2015).  Secretary Chu criticized the Environmental Protection Agency for neglecting nuclear power in its recently released Clean Power Plan. “We should make a Clean Power Plan that’s based on clean energy, not renewable energy.”
Nuclear power and hydroelectric power are exactly that – clean, carbon-free energy.

By:  Chad Bartram, General Manager Benton PUD and Tim Nies, General Manager Franklin PUD