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The trouble is that, even with the limitations in your last sentence, there can be several different "stable frameworks" and the ability to capture market share depends on them (the fitness of competitors is determined by the environment). Things like the financial framework, approval, zoning laws. But I'm sure you have been told this already.
prematurely closing current ones is folly
The reason for the premature closures is of course not economic but that the plants had safety issues and operators like Vattenfall cannot be trusted. Then again, there would be an economic dimension if the old plants were required to implement retrofits according to the newest standards (with the protective hull being the main cost factor).
That said, I don't disagree that the precise implementation of the Merkel II government's nuclear phaseout is not reasonable. In a proper planned transition, the phaseout part should be continuous and not big steps, the advertised replacement should not be throttled, other "replacement" should be throttled even if it hurts big business, and grid development should have been pushed more energetically from the start. *Lunatic*, n. One whose delusions are out of fashion.
Votre commission s'interroge toutefois sur le pari que semble faire EDF : ces investissements, égaux aux trois quarts du coût de construction historique des centrales (72,9 milliards d'euros selon la Cour des comptes94(*)) se placent, en effet, dans la perspective de la prolongation des centrales nucléaires. M. Proglio a indiqué clairement aux membres de votre commission que « ces investissements comprennent une large rénovation, sorte de « grand carénage », indispensable à l'approche des trente ans de fonctionnement. Une fois cette rénovation réalisée, les centrales pourront fonctionner pendant trente nouvelles années, sans préjuger, bien sûr, des avis qui nous sont délivrés tous les dix ans par l'ASN. »
It comes down to trust, in the end. Every nation's nuclear safety record is excellent, until it isn't. It is rightly acknowledged that people of faith have no monopoly of virtue - Queen Elizabeth II
Also the claim that nuclear plant re-fueling can be timed to coincide with a low period of power demand is questionable, given that the refueling takes months. It takes, what, a day to replace a blade on a turbine?
Nuclear plant refuelling is always done during summer, in Sweden at least. At that time, demand is so low anyways that the slack can be picked up by our hydroplants without a hitch. And not all nukes need to be refueled at the same time. A standard refueling operation takes a few weeks. Peak oil is not an energy crisis. It is a liquid fuel crisis.
Then when you need to go again, the engine needs to start back up. (Obviously it's more complicated than that!) So the immediate reaction of the hybrid-car-denier community was "that's going to wear out your starter motor really fast!"
But obviously it doesn't wear out your "starter motor" because there is no starter motor. It's some combination of traction motor or motors, depending on the system, but the old-fashioned starter motor with Bendix drive engaging the flywheel is not in the picture at all.
Similarly with wind turbines, what you have today is a pretty complicated system with high-load gearing between the hub and the generator, plus what amounts to a helicoptor rotor blade management system to deal with varying wind strengths. The gearing can be replaced by direct drive connections, and one would think that over time the blade management system could also be simplified. So there's lots of space for technical improvements that go in the direction of simplification of the mechanical system--potentially down to something with very few moving parts.
Meanwhile, despite 60+ years of investment in engineering, nuclear reactors are fundamentally complicated, dangerous, and expensive.
And cheap at the price : one wonders why/whether new build has to be so fiendishly expensive. My guess is that the EPR is just a poor design. It is rightly acknowledged that people of faith have no monopoly of virtue - Queen Elizabeth II
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