“Over the last four years the United States has really established the industrial capacity and the muscle memory across the economy to carry out this plan,” said Ali Zaidi, the White House national climate adviser told Bloomberg.
At a glance: The 29th annual international gathering—the Conference of Parties—is the decision-making body of the UN’s convention on climate change, and is being held in Baku, Azerbaijan, through November 22.
Leaders worldwide face soaring demands for energy due to the electrification of numerous industries and a number of power-hungry data centers coming on line to fuel the growing need for artificial intelligence. And most are trying to balance the need to reduce carbon emissions before climate change damage becomes irreversible.
Too much, too soon? The near-term 2035 deployment target of 35 GW reflects a “sense of urgency needed to make a significant expansion of domestic nuclear energy policy,” the report states.
The goal of adding another 15 GW per year, beginning by 2040, would put the nation on pace to meet the 200 GW goal by 2050.
Even though nuclear power growth has been largely stagnant in the United States for decades, Biden’s road map points to a decades-old track record for nuclear growth of this size.
“Though these nuclear deployment targets are ambitious relative to the stagnation of new builds over the last 30 years, they are not without precedent based on achieved capacity additions in the 1970s and 1980s,” according to the report. “During those two decades, the U.S. nuclear industry completed construction of about 100 GW, with a peak at over 10 GW added in 1974. Through technology innovation, greater design standardization, modularization, and repetition, we have the potential to safely and responsibly deploy new nuclear power faster and more efficiently.”
Building on momentum: Last year’s COP28 meeting produced a pledge signed by 25 nations to triple worldwide nuclear capacity by 2050. And while the action does not require endorser countries to expand their nuclear output at the same pace, the U.S. wants to do its part to “support clean economic growth at home as well as uphold international pledges through supporting likeminded countries seeking to deploy peaceful nuclear energy, building on existing U.S. leadership in nuclear energy science and technology.”
This past summer, the Accelerating Deployment of Versatile, Advanced Nuclear for Clean Energy (ADVANCE) Act passed in Congress with overwhelming bipartisan support. The legislation aims to advance timely and efficient reactor licensing to accelerate safe and responsible nuclear energy deployment consistent with decarbonization, economic, and national security goals.
Targets in the road map: The document lays out several steps the United States should take to build capacity and cement the nation’s status as the world leader in the development of nuclear technology.
Read more here.