February 11, 2023

Nuclear wins inclusion as “green” source for hydrogen


French energy minister Agnès Pannier-Runacher

France appears to wins another round against Germany in the fight to have nuclear included as a clean energy source within EU Commission rules. The EU has agreed that nuclear energy powered hydrogen will be classified as "green," so long as the carbon-intensity of the country's electricity is below 65 grammes of CO2 equivalent per kilowatt hour.

Early reporting on the EU Commission's decision regarding classification of hydrogen as "green" indicates that, once again, the EU will be recognizing low-carbon nuclear power as "green."

For more than a year, the EU has been assessing and evaluating the best way to ensure that hydrogen producers can't easily claim "green" production by using existing renewable energy, in a form of greenwashing, that simply takes credit fo renewable power that was being used elsewhere. This has forced the EU to look closely at both "additionality" and "carbon intensity."

The new rules, a draft version of which leaked out but which have not been formally published, seek to ensure that that green hydrogen is made only from “additional” renewable power, by forcing the producer to correlate its production in time and space to prevent cannibalisation of existing sources of clean energy. The Commission has finally arrived at a decision and set out two important additionality criteria:

  • By 2030, hydrogen production must be matched to renewable energy production on an hourly basis. Until then, the correlation is set on a monthly basis.
  • By 2028, hydrogen producers must prove that their electrolysers are connected to renewable energy installations no older than 36 months.

This decision enables investments in new hydrogen production to move forward with a clear understanding of how that production can benefit from the benefits available to clean energy until 90% of electricity production in a given country is produced from low-carbon sources.

While Germany has sought to exclude nuclear energy as a clean power source, France has been lobbying Brussels on the opposite side, arguing that hydrogen produced by nuclear power is also be considered "green." It appears that France has won its case in the draft rules.

In recognition of nuclear's low-carbon production, the EU has agreed that hydrogen produced in a country like France with the intensity of electricity is lower than 18 gCO2eq/MJs (or approximately 65 grammes of CO2 equivalent per kilowatt hour), then the hydrogen can qualify as green. 

Among all 27 EU countries, only France and Sweden meet this criteria. In 2021, when its nuclear fleet was almost fully operational, French power was 70% of its energy, 85% low-carbon and emissions stood at 56g CO2e per kWh. Sweden, for its part, powered predominantly with hydropower, stands at an average of 28gCO2e/Kwh.

Not only is this EU rule a win for pronuclear countries, it is laying an important precedent in setting out a base level of carbon-intensity that recognizes that what matters is the carbon-intensity of the total grid, not the amount of renewable energy. We believe this will be of increasing importance over time.

Read more at EURACTIV LEAK: France wins recognition for nuclear in EU's green hydrogen rules, by Nikolaus J. Kurmayer, Feb. 11, 2023.

October 12, 2021

France will spend 30 billion Euros to build small nuclear reactors


French President Emmanuel Macron announced that France will "pour 30 billion euros, or $34.6 billion, over the next five years into nuclear reactors, semiconductor plants and other strategic investments aimed at revitalizing and decarbonizing the nation’s industry," according to Liz Alderman in France to invest in small nuclear reactors and green energy project, printed in the New York Times. The investment is intended to position France as a global leader in advanced nuclear and green hydrogen production, while also serving to stimulate the economy in the wake of the Covid-19 pandemic.

France already has a cleaner electric grid than nearly any other major nation, with 70 percent of its electricity generated by clean nuclear and another 20 percent coming from an assortment of other clean energy sources. Yet Macron recognizes the value of investing in the technologies needed to more fully decarbonize the entire world as a way to renew French industry, while pushing to decarbonize the rest of the French economy.

France has few natural resources for powering itself and chose back in the 70s and 80s to take smart steps to protect itself from the geopolitical vagarities of fossil fuels, choosing to build both nuclear power plants as well as a world-class nuclear power industry. This announcement follows in those wise footsteps, as France seeks to improve its economic competitiveness, its claim on critical new technologies and help lead the world in the fight against climate change. In this regard, France is head and shoulders above the U.S. and virtually every other country in terms of its embrace of science and technology, free from ideology.

Read more in the New York Time's France to invest in small nuclear reactors and green energy project, by Liz Alderman, published October 12, 2021.

July 10, 2020

IAEA Head Tells Ministers Nuclear is ‘Contributing Massively’

By David Dalton
Nuclear power is playing an important role in the world’s production of clean energy, “contributing massively” to avoiding greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions in many countries and providing innovative solutions that could be very useful to emerging economies, International atomic Energy Agency director-general Rafael Mariano Grossi said during a panel discussion on electricity security and sustainability at the International Energy Agency’s Clean Energy Transitions Summit.

“Nuclear power has a great deal to contribute as part of clean, resilient, inclusive energy systems, which are of course indispensable drivers of economic development, especially at this hard time of pandemic recession all over the world,” Mr Grossi said.

“Nuclear energy is not a promise in terms of low-carbon energy, it is already now today contributing massively to a low carbon economy and a green grid” by avoiding the equivalent of 55 gigatonnes of carbon dioxide emissions over the last 50 years, he added.

Read the full article at NucNet: Rafael Grossi / IAEA Head Tells Ministers Nuclear is 'Contributing Massively'

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