Review
A review of Nukenomics was published on page 770 of the December 2008 Volume 95, Number 6 issue of Health Physics - The Radiation Protection Journal --Health Physics - The Radiation Protection Journal, 95, 6 (2008), p770
A review of Nukenomics published on www.no2nuclearpower.org.uk can be found at:
http://www.no2nuclearpower.org.uk/reviews/review03.php --http://www.no2nuclearpower.org.uk/reviews/review03.php
A review of Nukenomics published on www.no2nuclearpower.org.uk can be found at:
http://www.no2nuclearpower.org.uk/reviews/review03.php --http://www.no2nuclearpower.org.uk/reviews/review03.php
Product Description
The British nuclear industry is once again experiencing rapid and turbulent commercial change, transforming from a handful of public sector owned organisations into a series of private sector ones ready to tackle Britain s £100-billion-plus nuclear cleanup legacy.
At the same time, just when the future of nuclear energy looked set to be in terminal decline, the politics of global warming have delivered a dramatic return to respectability for nuclear power. Significant investment in new British nuclear power stations now seems almost certain; a situation that was unthinkable just a few years ago.
The restructuring of Britain's nuclear industry, and the resulting implications for the private sector, are explained in Ian Jackson's book Nukenomics: The commercialisation of Britain's nuclear industry. This Nuclear Engineering International special publication describes the major trends and market forces that are actively shaping the future development of the nuclear industry today, by explaining not just what things are happening but, more fundamentally, why.
Nukenomics explores the dynamics of this newly revitalised nuclear market by looking at five major commercial themes addressing key business questions.
Chapter 1, Paying for Nuclear Clean-up: The Decommissioning Market, explains why nuclear decommissioning costs paid for by British taxpayers are skyrocketing and how the government is attempting to bring these costs under control through privatisation of the nuclear industry. After examining the underlying factors responsible for driving an explosion in nuclear decommissioning costs, Chapter 1 analyses the market opportunity for nuclear cleanup firms and the scale of the financial risks and rewards available to market investors.
Chapter 2, Sites for Sale: Selling Nuclear Real Estate, looks at the government's future ambitions for selling cleaned up nuclear sites to commercial property developers and energy utility companies.
Chapter 3, Pricing Waste: The Economics of Nuclear Repositories, examines the search for a final dump site for Britain s historic nuclear waste legacy and the likely cost implications for taxpayers. After several failed attempts at finding a disposal location the government is now offering to negotiate financial incentives with local communities to accept the waste. Chapter 3 also looks at the thorny question of how much cash energy utility companies might be asked to pay for disposing of extra wastes from new nuclear power station build, which is likely to triple the total radioactivity in the community's repository.
Chapter 4, Selling Plutonium: The Market for MOX, examines Britain's role in the supply of MOX nuclear fuel manufactured from foreign plutonium stored at Sellafield. The chapter looks at the financing of the Sellafield MOX Plant (SMP), intended by the government to be a profitable commercial venture, and forecasts that taxpayers stand to lose several billion pounds. Chapter 4 goes on to examine the government's options for dealing with Britain's own much larger stockpile of plutonium, regarded by the nuclear industry as a valuable energy resource.
Chapter 5, Beyond Carbon: Nuclear Reactor Economics, discusses nuclear power's dramatic return to respectability as a low-carbon energy source to help combat climate change. The chapter looks at the economic justification for building a new generation of nuclear power stations, and how the fortunes of nuclear energy are crucially geared towards the carbon market developing in Europe. The chapter discusses the critical factors affecting nuclear energy investment and how nuclear power plants might make a decent profit for investors if carbon prices remain high over the long term.
At the same time, just when the future of nuclear energy looked set to be in terminal decline, the politics of global warming have delivered a dramatic return to respectability for nuclear power. Significant investment in new British nuclear power stations now seems almost certain; a situation that was unthinkable just a few years ago.
The restructuring of Britain's nuclear industry, and the resulting implications for the private sector, are explained in Ian Jackson's book Nukenomics: The commercialisation of Britain's nuclear industry. This Nuclear Engineering International special publication describes the major trends and market forces that are actively shaping the future development of the nuclear industry today, by explaining not just what things are happening but, more fundamentally, why.
Nukenomics explores the dynamics of this newly revitalised nuclear market by looking at five major commercial themes addressing key business questions.
Chapter 1, Paying for Nuclear Clean-up: The Decommissioning Market, explains why nuclear decommissioning costs paid for by British taxpayers are skyrocketing and how the government is attempting to bring these costs under control through privatisation of the nuclear industry. After examining the underlying factors responsible for driving an explosion in nuclear decommissioning costs, Chapter 1 analyses the market opportunity for nuclear cleanup firms and the scale of the financial risks and rewards available to market investors.
Chapter 2, Sites for Sale: Selling Nuclear Real Estate, looks at the government's future ambitions for selling cleaned up nuclear sites to commercial property developers and energy utility companies.
Chapter 3, Pricing Waste: The Economics of Nuclear Repositories, examines the search for a final dump site for Britain s historic nuclear waste legacy and the likely cost implications for taxpayers. After several failed attempts at finding a disposal location the government is now offering to negotiate financial incentives with local communities to accept the waste. Chapter 3 also looks at the thorny question of how much cash energy utility companies might be asked to pay for disposing of extra wastes from new nuclear power station build, which is likely to triple the total radioactivity in the community's repository.
Chapter 4, Selling Plutonium: The Market for MOX, examines Britain's role in the supply of MOX nuclear fuel manufactured from foreign plutonium stored at Sellafield. The chapter looks at the financing of the Sellafield MOX Plant (SMP), intended by the government to be a profitable commercial venture, and forecasts that taxpayers stand to lose several billion pounds. Chapter 4 goes on to examine the government's options for dealing with Britain's own much larger stockpile of plutonium, regarded by the nuclear industry as a valuable energy resource.
Chapter 5, Beyond Carbon: Nuclear Reactor Economics, discusses nuclear power's dramatic return to respectability as a low-carbon energy source to help combat climate change. The chapter looks at the economic justification for building a new generation of nuclear power stations, and how the fortunes of nuclear energy are crucially geared towards the carbon market developing in Europe. The chapter discusses the critical factors affecting nuclear energy investment and how nuclear power plants might make a decent profit for investors if carbon prices remain high over the long term.
About the Author
Ian Jackson joined the British nuclear industry in 1986 working initially at the Atomic Energy Research Establishment then later as a nuclear regulator. He is the author of Siting New Nuclear Power Stations: Availability and Options for Government published alongside the 2007 Energy White Paper. He received the Environment Agency's plain language award in 1999 for his report on the regulation of atomic weapons sites and has advised many public and private sector organisations on nuclear issues.