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Originally published Tuesday May 3, 2022. In 1960-61 McClaughry was a reactor physicist in GE’s Atomic Power Equipment Division.

by John McClaughry
The growing reawakening of enthusiasm for nuclear powered electricity has been a remarkable development over the past ten years.
For decades enviros of various stripes have raged against nuclear power. Nuclear was bad, bad, bad because a plant might explode, fission products would contaminate the continent, careless security might allow proliferation of bomb material, nuclear plants were big and owned by big corporations, mining uranium was environmentally destructive, and so on.
Despite their protests, starting in 1957 104 civilian nuclear stations went online, ultimately generating about a quarter of the nation’s electricity that dependably supplied the grid as needed 24/7. And the nuclear stations did so without causing air pollution, a single nuclear-related death, and the emission of greenhouse gases that enviros believe are producing a coming global climate catastrophe.

This record was largely accomplished by what are called Generation II and III reactors, mostly built by General Electric and Westinghouse. Among them was Vermont Yankee (GE, 1972). In its 42 years Yankee never had a core failure or release of dangerous radiation to the public. The now six decade-old design well served its purpose, but no one would build one of that early design today.
The future of nuclear energy today was first defined twenty years ago by a ten-nation conference called the Generation IV International Forum (GIF). In 2002 it announced the six most promising new technologies – clean, safe, likely cost-effective, and resistant to diversion of fissile materials.
In January 2014 GIF’s Technology Roadmap Update projected that the Gen IV technologies most likely to be deployed first are the sodium-cooled fast reactor, the lead-cooled fast reactor, and the two very high temperature reactor technologies. The molten salt reactor and the gas-cooled fast reactor were judged to be further down the road.
Since then, there has been a flood of new approaches to meet Gen IV criteria. In a 2016 article in Reason Ron Bailey listed the then most prominent: Terrapower (Bill Gates, depleted uranium, Wyoming); Transatomic and Terrestrial Energy (molten salt coolant) ; Oklo (truck-portable 2Mw micro reactors) ; ARC (100 Mw, sodium cooled) and Thorcon (LFTR – liquid fluoride thorium reactor).
The biggest roadblock to innovation, Bailey wrote, “is that under the Nuclear Regulatory Commission’s enabling legislation, the agency is only able to consider approving a new power plant when its application is complete…. Filing a complete application requires doing all of the engineering and legal work in advance. That generally takes a decade for conventional designs financed by giant utility companies. Entrepreneurs pursuing innovative designs don’t have the capital to endure this.”
President Obama cautiously supported some nuclear advances. In 2018 President Trump signed the bipartisan (passed the Senate 87-4) Nuclear Energy Innovation Capabilities Act to further reduce those roadblocks.
President Biden has aggressively swung behind Gen IV nuclear. In November 2021 his Department of Energy put $1.5 billion behind Bill Gates’ Natrium reactor (formerly Terrapower) and a Maryland startup called X-Energy. His Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm is an enthusiastic promoter of “the next wave of nuclear technologies.”
An April 15 news release from the New York Energy and Climate Advocates urged the endorsement of “a bold and inclusive climate strategy, embracing both renewables and zero-carbon nuclear” by a coalition including the former director of NASA’s Goddard Institute Dr. James E. Hansen. Dr. Hansen is the revered guru of climate catastrophe prediction stemming from his 1988 testimony before Sen. Al Gore’s committee. Unlike most of today’s climate change activists, Hansen has been steadfastly outspoken in his belief that nuclear is an indispensable component of America’s electric future.
Even Middlebury College climate activist Bill McKibben, who attracted a wide anti-nuclear following by demanding that Vermont Yankee be shut down, is cautiously moving toward nuclear. He still thinks that back then Yankee needed to be closed, but now he says for emissions reduction reasons, he does not believe that other operating nuclear plants should be shuttered.
What does this growing acceptance of Gen IV nuclear energy – smaller in scale, safe, reliable, distributed, cost effective and carbon-free – mean for Vermonters? First, we need to steer clear of emotional, irrational, and ignorant political movements and, as the climate activists repeatedly say, “listen to the science”.
On the policy level, by the end of this decade there will be market-ready small nuclear reactors that can reliably and safely support the dramatically increased electrification that the climate activists are now urging to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.
Our present and future governors should tell their Public Service Commissioners to begin to identify suitable sites for new small nuclear stations, starting with a field in Vernon which ratepayers have now spent $248 million to prepare.
The author, a Kirby resident, is founder and former vice-president of the Ethan Allen Institute. With his permission, VDC gratefully re-publishes commentaries written in years past but still spot-on today.
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Categories: Commentary, Energy










where are we going to bury all those solar panels?
Perhaps Vermont has missed the boat, again. As Ontario premier doug ford imposes a 25% tariff on electricity exports to three US states, one might ask what Vermont utilities, phil scott and the “public service board” have for a backup plan should Quebec decide the same action. What path will GMP and VTGas owner, Enegir take, should tariffs be placed on imported power to Vermont? How much pearl-clutching and hand-wringing will legislative “leadership” endure before they decide to open the state checkbook to further subsidize “disadvantaged groups”?
McClaughry has addressed and warned us in the past regarding Vermont government’s energy policies- even prior to peter shumlin’s takedown of VT Yankee- yet here we are, with an ineffective “green” energy sector, highly subsidized- and very little base-load generation capacity in-state. Funny, but not funny how Trump’s attempt to stem the flow of illegal drugs and secure the border could lead to an electricity crisis in the northeast- because of our own politician’s ignorance.
This boat has sailed as it.
Nuclear power, despite being the cleanest and generally renewable ( not to mention it is produced domestically) did not meet the Green Machines narrative or political agenda.
Vermont will vote Republican across the board before this moves even remotely forward.
Good to see John’s common sense insights resonates true today ,hope he sees this.
He always had smart common sense solutions for the state…too bad it took this long to get it through the states collective thick skull.
If only they had listened then… we would be on much firmer ground now.
Thank you John and Anne for all the years of fighting the good fight.
The anti-nukes are sure to come out of the woodwork with their half truths and outright lies. I remember a drawing depicting the outline of a female body showing the deposition of radioactive materials in the body, inferring it all comes from the nuke plant. The deposition was correct, however, not all the materials are produced by a power plant and somehow you would have to injest it. That being said it is a good idea to have solid oversight and regulations in n place.