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U.K. Seen Doubling Power Price To Guarantee New Reactor: Energy

The future of the U.K.'s nuclear industry will be decided on one number: the price the government's willing to guarantee Electricite de France SA will get for generating atomic power.

EDF and government officials will negotiate the so-called strike price for new nuclear power plants by the end of the year. To ensure the Paris-based utility makes a final decision on a new reactor in southwest England, the U.K. must set a price between 95 pounds ($148) and 105 pounds a megawatt-hour in 2020, double the level power trades at today, according to Bloomberg New Energy Finance.

(...)

When negotiating with the department of energy, EDF will argue that costs of nuclear have increased significantly given delays at reactor construction sites in France and Finland, as well as post-Fukushima safety precautions, according to Bloomberg New Energy Finance analyst Brian Potskowski.

Increased Capital Costs

Based on increased capital costs and a rate of return of 10 percent to 11 percent, the company will need a guaranteed power price of 95 to 105 pounds, he said. The upper limit on this strike price is 130 pounds, which is the compensation level for offshore wind, he added.

"If the U.K. government really wants new nuclear built, there aren't any other options on the table other than EDF and Centrica," Daniel Grosvenor, head of Deloitte LLP's nuclear team in London, said in a telephone interview. "All the utilities are going to look at this as a robust investment decision. No one is going to take a punt."

"robust" is one of these new corporate buzzwords...


Wind power

by Jerome a Paris (etg@eurotrib.com) on Thu Jul 19th, 2012 at 10:43:20 AM EST
Heh. I say let the free market decide! That'll surely result in no plants at all getting built (at best some gas plants), and then we'll get an actual phyisical lack of power, rolling blackouts and enormous price spikes which create "incentives" to build new plants, which will come online 5-10 years after the disaster strikes, while in the meantime rolling blackouts remain and all power-intensive industry is forced out of the country. :)

Markets yay, planning boo!!!11

Peak oil is not an energy crisis. It is a liquid fuel crisis.

by Starvid on Thu Jul 19th, 2012 at 11:06:14 AM EST
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