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g : greenyouth@googlegroups.com 31 July 2012 • 1:00AM -0400

[GreenYouth] Nuclear ‘hard to justify’, says GE chief
by Sukla Sen

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http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/60189878-d982-11e1-8529-00144feab49a.html#axzz22DihwTLw

Nuclear ‘hard to justify’, says GE chief
By Pilita Clark, Environment Correspondent

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Nuclear power is so expensive compared with other forms of energy that it
has become “really hard” to justify, according to the chief executive
of General
Electric <http://markets.ft.com/tearsheets/performance.asp?s=us:GE>, one of
the world’s largest suppliers of atomic equipment.

“It’s really a gas and wind world today,” said Jeff Immelt, referring to
two sources of electricity he said most countries are shifting towards as
natural gas becomes “permanently cheap”.


“When I talk to the guys who run the oil companies they say look, they’re
finding more gas all the time. It’s just hard to justify nuclear, really
hard. Gas is so cheap and at some point, really, economics rule,” Mr Immelt
told the Financial Times in an interview in London at the weekend. “So I
think some combination of gas, and either wind or solar … that’s where we
see most countries around the world going.”


Mr Immelt’s comments underline the impact on the global energy landscape of
the US shale gas
revolution<http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/e04264c8-8a2e-11e1-a0c8-00144feab49a.html>,
Japan’s 2011 Fukushima nuclear meltdown and falling prices for some types
of renewable power.


The shale boom has sent US natural gas prices down to 10-year lows, a trend
some analysts believe will spread elsewhere, while the nuclear industry
faces added costs and uncertainty after Fukushima.


At the same time, a 75 per cent fall in solar panel market prices in the
past three years has made solar power competitive with daytime retail
electricity prices in some countries, according to a recent
report<http://www.bnef.com/WhitePapers/view/82> by
Bloomberg New Energy Finance, while offshore wind turbine prices have
steadily declined.

Such factors pose dilemmas for countries such as the UK, which is trying to
build new nuclear plants without public subsidy. The ruling coalition is
also split <http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/434437ee-d634-11e1-b547-00144feabdc0.html>over
whether to set a new target to make the electricity sector virtually free
of carbon emissions by 2030 – a plan George Osborne, the Conservative
finance minister, opposes but many Liberal Democrats back.

Mr Immelt lent weight to the Lib Dem argument, saying GE had found existing
EU carbon targets helpful. “I think standards sometimes really drive
innovation,” he said. “To a certain extent at least, knowing what the rules
are and being able to innovate against it is not a bad thing.”


Mr Immelt played down the impact of changing energy trends on a company as
large as GE, which reported annual profits of $13bn
<http://www.ge.com/ar2011/index.html#!section=highlights>for
2011 (on revenues of $142bn) and sells products for every leading source of
energy, from gas and wind turbines nuclear reactors and oil drilling gear,
to gas and wind turbines.


“We’ve got them all, so in some ways when you have them all you don’t have
to be so smart about anything,” he said.


Analysts estimate GE’s nuclear revenues, from a joint venture with Japan’s
Hitachi <http://markets.ft.com/tearsheets/performance.asp?s=jp:6501>, at an
estimated $1bn, or less than 1 per cent of annual global sales.

Mr Immelt is visiting London during the Olympic Games, which GE sponsors.

The company will announce on Monday that it has made more than $1bn in
sales from Olympic host cities since 2006, including $100m from the London
games, where GE has sold several power systems, 120 electric vehicle
charging stations and thousands of lights.

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Peace Is Doable

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