Germany ditched nuclear power. Other nations show new interest.
Renewable energy is competitively priced. But many say nuclear power still has a role to play even as old plants shut down. A status report in charts.
Renewable energy is competitively priced. But many say nuclear power still has a role to play even as old plants shut down. A status report in charts.
When Germany powered down its final remaining nuclear reactors this past weekend, the news was both long-anticipated and controversial.聽
The nation followed through on its existing plan to phase out nuclear power during a long-term pivot toward greener 鈥 and increasingly cost-effective 鈥 sources such as solar and wind. But it did so at a time when calls are rising worldwide to give nuclear power another look.聽
The road to a decarbonized economy, many say, will be smoothest if nuclear power isn鈥檛 closed down alongside fossil fuel plants. Nuclear may produce radioactive waste, but as this chart-focused story shows, it also produces a lot of the world鈥檚 current electricity. And it is blamed for very few deaths compared with fossil fuels.
Even in Germany, popular opinion ran against the shut-off. The Ukraine war has highlighted the importance of energy security to nations in Europe that long relied on Russia for natural gas and oil.聽In聽one recent poll, public broadcaster ARD聽found聽that 59% of Germans oppose the nuclear phaseout while 34% support it.
Ryan Norman, an energy expert at the moderate-left think tank Third Way in Washington, sees several factors driving interest in聽 nuclear power:聽improving nuclear-plant designs聽that are safer and cheaper, the world鈥檚 rising urgency over climate change, and growing concerns about energy security.
鈥淵ou see the value of these clean,聽firm, reliable technologies,鈥 he says. 鈥淧eople see how they can anchor and secure their grids鈥 with nuclear as well as other sources.
Just as Germany was shutting off its reactors, the U.S. government was聽extending support聽to Poland to potentially build new ones.聽
Nuclear still draws plenty of skepticism. Accidents are a real risk, as the聽Fukushima disaster聽in Japan proved. Yet from Europe and the United States and even to Japan, many nations are not hitting the 鈥渙ff鈥 button on nuclear, which聽can run day and night and in all weather conditions.
鈥淧eople want to have strong, reliable power sources on their grid,鈥 says Mr. Norman.聽