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Climate leaders must include nuclear in net-zero debate
The Canadian Nuclear Association, Europe's Foratom, the Japan Atomic Industrial Forum, the USA's Nuclear Energy Institute, the UK's Nuclear Industry Association and World Nuclear Association have issued a joint statement ahead of the Leaders Summit on Climate that starts today. At the invitation of US President Joe Biden, world leaders will convene for the two-day event to galvanise efforts to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.
"We have less than 30 years to cut carbon emissions from every sector of our global economy to zero. To meet the urgency and the magnitude of this challenge we must take a realistic, science-based approach that addresses all sectors," the industry groups said. "The world will need to generate many times more clean energy than we do today. To achieve this will require that we use every low-carbon technology at our disposal. Nuclear power must be one of those technologies."
The benefits of nuclear technologies are "unmatched", they said, and include:
- A proven track record: nuclear power plants have operated for more than 60 years; they are the largest single source of low-carbon electricity in developed countries and have a long-proven track record in offering an affordable low-carbon alternative to fossil fuel generation.
- 24/7 reliability: nuclear plants provide a dependable, always-on output. But they can also operate flexibly, supporting the deployment of intermittent renewable generation and ensuring a robust and resilient electricity system.
- Cost-effective: Nuclear energy is a cost-effective climate change mitigator. Extending the operation of our current reactors is the lowest-cost form of additional low-carbon generation. New reactors are competitive, particularly when total system costs and the value of avoided emissions are taken into account.
- Energy services beyond electricity: nuclear reactors can be used to provide process heat for industry, to desalinise water, produce green hydrogen, and to create synthetic low-carbon fuels as well as to generate power.
- Jobs and socio-economic benefits: nuclear energy deployment efficiently promotes national and local economic growth. It provides long-term high-skilled jobs and has significant multiplier effects in many sectors of the economy. For developing countries, where the bulk of world energy demand growth will occur in the decades to come, nuclear can be a huge development contributor, as well as limiting their reliance on fossil fuels.
- Scalable: New designs mean that any country, large or small, can deploy nuclear power, irrespective of their natural resources.
Climate leaders must include nuclear in net-zero debate
The Canadian Nuclear Association, Europe's Foratom, the Japan Atomic Industrial Forum, the USA's Nuclear Energy Institute, the UK's Nuclear Industry Association and World Nuclear Association have issued a joint statement ahead of the Leaders Summit on Cli
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