Quantification of nuclear liability insurance is difficult without arbitrary liability caps; however, post-mortem calculations can be used to calculate insurance costs. This study analyzes the Fukushima (Daiichi) nuclear power plant disaster to quantify the cost per unit electricity (/kWh)ofnuclearenergyfromthelifetimeoftheplantafteraccountingforthetruecostoftheliabilityneededtocoverthedamagesfromthenucleardisasterdeterminedfromnewsreports.ThesecostsarethencomparedtothecostofelectricitycurrentlypaidbyJapaneseconsumers,andthenareaggregatedtodeterminetheindirectsubsidyfornuclearpowerprovidersinbothJapanandtheUSA.TheresultsshowthatthereportedcostsoftheFukushimanucleardisasterare20–525 billion, which results in a real insurance cost from the lifetime of electricity produced at the plants between 0.22–5.78/kWh.ThesevaluesarefarhigherthanthecurrentinsurancecostsbyJapaneselawof0.01/kWh and even the total costs consumers pay for electricity. Although the spread in the input costs is large and the reported metrics are incomplete, the nuclear insurance subsidy is clearly substantial in Japan and in the USA. Ideally, energy sources should be economically sustainable without the need for a government insurance subsidy. For the electricity market to function effectively and efficiently in all other countries using nuclear power, the insurance costs should be reported accurately and included in nuclear electricity costs without arbitrary government liability caps
Is data on this page outdated, violates copyrights or anything else? Report the problem now and we will take corresponding actions after reviewing your request.