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President Biden’s Inaugural Climate Move Should Be Saving Nuclear Reactors Slated For Closure - Forbes

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Joe Biden Sworn In As 46th President Of The United States At U.S. Capitol, Jan 20, 2021.

If President Joe Biden is serious about climate change, he and his advisors should find a way to ... [+] keep the existing fleet of nuclear reactors operating. The three nuclear plants slated for closure in 2021 produce about 43 terawatt-hours of juice per year, which is about as much electricity as is produced by all of the solar plants in California.

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In his inaugural speech today, President Joe Biden spoke about “ a climate in crisis.” Biden has made it clear that climate policy will be one of his administration’s top priorities. If the new president is serious, he should immediately start working to prevent the closure of 5.1 gigawatts of nuclear capacity slated for closure this year.

The reason to keep those nuclear plants operating is obvious: they play a critical role in reducing emissions from the electricity sector. Indeed, the three power plants slated for closure produce about the same amount of electricity as all of the solar capacity in California. (More on that in a moment.) Furthermore, those reactors are providing thousands of high-paid jobs. They also provide stable, baseload power to the electric grid. And unlike solar and wind energy, they don’t require huge amounts of rural land, nor do they need new high-voltage transmission capacity to accommodate their output.

Under his proposed “Energy Efficiency and Clean Energy Standard” Biden has pledged to fully decarbonize the domestic electric grid by 2035. As I explained in these pages last July, achieving that goal in such a short amount of time will be difficult. Achieving it without the massive amount of zero-carbon electricity now being produced by America’s existing fleet of reactors will make that task far more difficult, or maybe impossible.

Let’s look at the numbers. The combined energy output of the three plants slated to be shuttered this year– Indian Point (Unit 3), in New York, and the Dresden and Byron facilities in Illinois – is about 43 terawatt-hours per year.