Letter to Environmentalists Posted
Mr. Michael Brune, Executive Director, Sierra Club
Mr. Fred Krupp, President, Environmental Defense Fund
Ms. Rhea Suh, President, NRDC
Mr. Dick Munson, Environmental Defense Fund, Director, Midwest Clean Energy
Mr. Henry Henderson, Director, Midwest Office, Natural Resources Defense Council
Mr. Jack Darin, Director, Sierra Club, Illinois
Dear Mr. Brune, Mr. Krupp, Ms. Suh, Mr. Munson, Mr. Henderson, and Mr. Darin,
Two and a half years ago, four of us wrote to you and other environmental leaders expressing our concern that “continued opposition to nuclear power threatens humanity’s ability to avoid dangerous climate change.” We urged you to support the development and deployment of new nuclear plants.
We are writing now, as a larger group of climate scientists, conservation scientists, environmentalists and concerned citizens, to urge your support for state and federal action to prevent the replacement of clean, zero carbon nuclear power plants with natural gas.
In particular, we urge you to support efforts by Illinois, New York and others states to include nuclear plants, at least distressed ones, in a low-carbon portfolio.
Fracking is partly responsible for premature closures of nuclear plants while the main factor hurting nuclear is discriminatory policies. While nuclear has suffered, wind and solar have boomed. This is because wind and solar receive, respectively, 17 and 140 times more in federal subsidies than nuclear, and because 30 states have mandates to deploy clean energy that exclude nuclear, even though its carbon emissions are lower than those of solar panels.
If nuclear plants at risk of premature closure received a fraction of the subsidies solar and wind receive, or were included in state Renewable Portfolio Standards, no new policies would be needed to protect them.
Recent closures show that nuclear plants are replaced almost entirely with natural gas-fueled power. Retiring four nuclear plants resulted in additional carbon emissions equivalent to putting three million new cars on the road; if we lose the other 10 plants, it will be the same as adding 10 million cars to the road.
Loss of nuclear plants will largely negate the benefits of the EPA’s Clean Power Plan. Reactors in states with deregulated electricity markets and reactors approaching license renewals are especially likely to shut down. If these 47 units close and are replaced with natural gas-fired power, the extra 171 million tons of carbon dioxide emissions will reverse 87 percent of the CPP-mandated emissions reductions in their home states. If the nation loses all its nuclear plants, the extra greenhouse emissions will reverse 84 percent of the nation-wide gains from the CPP.
Renewable sources are simply not making up for lost nuclear. Even with the very high and unprecedented rate of solar and wind additions over the last five years, it would still take 12 years to replace the 120 billion kilowatt-hours of yearly production from the eleven at-risk nuclear plants with wind and solar, and 81 years to replace the entire reactor fleet.
Meanwhile, solar and wind electricity used to replace lost nuclear plants will not be available to displace fossil-fueled power from the grid. If nuclear plants are closed, America’s progress in reducing carbon emissions will stall.
Each of your organizations has, in the past, called climate change our most serious environmental problem and urged technology-neutral approaches, namely pricing carbon. We applaud this principled view, and encourage you to extend it to nuclear in the states where your organizations have influence.
Climate policy should aspire to technology-neutrality. If a federal price on carbon cannot be achieved then subsidies should be equalized. And everyone who supports strong action on the state level should support not today’s low renewable portfolio standard targets but rather a 100 percent zero emission standard — one that treats all sources of zero-carbon electricity — from solar and wind to nuclear and coal with carbon capture and sequestration — equally.
Commitment to climate action and a basic standard of fairness demands that reasonable actions be taken to prevent any move away from zero emissions nuclear to carbon and methane-emitting natural gas. A long-term commitment to natural gas would increase fracking, to the detriment of our climate and the future for young people.
Sincerely,
Scientists
Barry Brook, Professor and Chair of Environmental Sustainability, University of Tasmania
Ken Caldeira, Carnegie Institution Dept of Global Ecology, Stanford University
David Dudgeon, Chair of Ecology & Biodiversity, School of Biological Sciences, The University of Hong Kong, China
Erle C. Ellis, Ph.D, Professor, Geography & Environmental Systems, University of Maryland
Kerry Emanuel, Professor of Atmospheric Science, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Joseph Fargione, Ph.D, ecologist
James Hansen, Climate Science, Awareness, and Solutions Program, Columbia University, Earth Institute, Columbia University
Chris Johnson, Professor of Wildlife Conservation, University of Tasmania, Australia
William F. Laurance, PhD, FAA, FAAAS, FRSQ, Distinguished Research Professor & Australian Laureate, Prince Bernhard Chair in International Nature Conservation, Director of the Centre for Tropical Environmental and Sustainability Science (TESS), James Cook University Cairns, Queensland 4878, Australia
David W. Lea, Professor, Earth Science, University of California
Michelle Marvier, Professor, Environmental Studies and Sciences, Santa Clara University
Raymond Pierrehumbert, Halley Professorship of Physics, University of Oxford
Joe Mascaro, Program Manager for Impact Initiatives, Planet Labs
Robert May, Oxford OM AC Kt FRS, Department of Zoology, University of Oxford
Peter H. Raven, President Emeritus, Missouri Botanical Garden. Winner of the National Medal of Science, 2001
Burton Richter, Nobel Prize Winner, Physics, 1976
Frank M. Richter, Sewell Avery Distinguished Professor of Geophysics, The University of Chicago
Jeff Terry, Professor of Physics, Illinois Institute of Technology
Cagan H. Sekercioglu, professor of conservation ecology, Department of Biology, University of Utah; former senior scientist at the Stanford University Center for Conservation Biology at the University of Utah.
Pushker Kharecha, Climate Science, Awareness, and Solutions Program, Columbia University, Earth Institute, Columbia University
Scholars, Conservationists and Environmentalists
Daniel Aegerter, Chairman, Armada Investment
John Asafu-Adjaye, PhD, Senior Fellow, Institute of Economic Affairs, Ghana, Associate Professor of Economics, The University of Queensland, Australia
John Crary, Crary Family Foundation
Gwyneth Cravens, author, Power to Save the World
Christopher Foreman, author, The Promise & Peril of Environmental Justice, School of Public Policy, University of Maryland
Valerie Gardner, President, Climate Coalition
Kirsty Gogan, Energy for Humanity
Joshua S. Goldstein, Prof. Emeritus of International Relations, American University
Gene Grecheck, President, American Nuclear Society
Garrett Gruener, Managing Director, Gruener Ventures
Mel Guymon, Guymon Family Foundation
Ross Koningstein, author, "What it would really take to reverse climate change," IEEE Spectrum
Joe Lassiter, Professor, Harvard Business School
John Lavine, Professor and Medill Dean Emeritus, Northwestern University
Ariane Norrgard, Coordinator, Environmental Progress - Minnesota
Martin Lewis, Department of Geography, Stanford University
Alan Medsker, Coordinator, Environmental Progress - Illinois
Norris McDonald, President, Center for Environment, Commerce & Energy/African American Environmentalist Association
Reed F. Noss, Provost's Distinguished Research Professor, Department of Biology, University of Central Florida
Carl Page, President, Anthropocene Institute
Margi Kindig, Wisconsin Governor's Task Force on Global Warming, former Board Chair, Clean Wisconsin
Andrew Klein, in-coming President, American Nuclear Society
Steve Kirsch, CEO, Token
Mark Lynas, author, The God Species, Six Degrees
Norris McDonald, President, Center for Environment, Commerce & Energy/African American Environmentalist Association
Steven Pinker, Harvard University, Better Angels of Our Nature
Richard Rhodes, Pulitzer Prize recipient, author of Nuclear Renewal and The Making of the Atomic Bomb
Paul Robbins, Director, Nelson Institute for Environmental Studies
Rachel Pritzker, Pritzker Innovation Fund
Rathin Roy, Director, National Institute of Public Finance and Policy, Delhi, India
Ray A. Rothrock, Partner Emeritus Venrock, venture capitalist
Samir Saran, Vice President, Observer Research Foundation, Delhi, India
Michael Shellenberger, President, Environmental Progress
Robert Stone, filmmaker, “Pandora’s Promise”
Stephen Tindale, Alvin Weinberg Foundation, former Executive Director, Greenpeace UK
Barrett P. Walker, Alex C. Walker Foundation