Execs say U.S. must consider new nuclear plants
By Scott Malone and Nick Zieminski
CHICAGO (Reuters) - The roughly 100 nuclear power plants in the United States are approaching the end of their useful life, and manufacturing executives say the nation cannot rule out building new ones if it wants to keep up with electricity demand.
"If you want to talk about energy availability and the environment in the same paragraph, you have to be talking about nuclear," John Rice, a General Electric Co vice chairman who heads up the conglomerate's infrastructure arm, told the Reuters Manufacturing Summit in Chicago this week.
Advocates of nuclear power point out that it does not produce the greenhouse gases generated by burning fossil fuels, such as coal, which currently accounts for about half the nation's electricity. Opponents raise concerns about safety and point out that questions remain about how to store the radioactive waste left behind by the fission process.
While GE supplies nuclear reactors as well as the turbines they use to generate electricity, Rice said the future of the company was not tied to that business, which he termed "a relatively small part" of its portfolio.
GE, the second-largest U.S. company by market value behind Exxon Mobil Corp, also makes turbines used in gas and coal-fired plants, as well as green energy sources.
In fact, Rice said GE expected to generate six times as much revenue this year from wind turbines as from its nuclear business.
"We'd be glad to sell more wind turbines, but the fact of the matter is that you can't possibly replace nuclear with wind," Rice said.
James Griffith, chief executive of bearings and specialty steel maker Timken Co, said at the summit that a robust U.S. economy would depend on all forms of energy. Continued...
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