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Impacts of the Changing Regulatory Landscape on New Nuclear in the United States
Abstract
Nuclear generation currently provides over fifty percent of the carbon-free energy
on the United States electricity grid. Despite an increasing emphasis on carbon-free
generation, operating nuclear plants are being retired early and the construction
of new plants has crawled to a halt. Through primary interviews with industry experts
and a secondary literature review, this study aims to outline key historic U.S. nuclear
regulation changes, international regulatory structures that lead to new builds, and
environmental stakeholders’ views of nuclear. Though there was a federal policy push
in the 2000s to encourage new builds through financial incentives, research support,
and a simplified licensing process, this initiative largely failed due to the failed
adherence to the intended licensing process and the external economic impact of declining
natural gas prices. The nuclear generation industry is hesitant to build new plants
due to fears of continued reactionary regulation changes, increased opportunities
for public participation, lack of technical construction personnel and supply chains,
unfavorable operating economics, and the risky, large-scale nature of traditional
nuclear.
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Master's projectPermalink
https://hdl.handle.net/10161/20540Citation
Vondracek, Sarah (2020). Impacts of the Changing Regulatory Landscape on New Nuclear in the United States.
Master's project, Duke University. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/20540.Collections
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