This suggests you're being overcharged.
Actually, no. If you look carefully, only three of those plants are in the US--and the prices for those are comparable to Georgia's. The Levy plant, for example, is estimated to cost a total of
$14 billion. FPL is estimating that the cost of their project will be between
$12 and $25 billion. The Texas project, which is listed at $8 billion, is for the expansion of an existing plant, not for a new one.
The prices of plant construction
outside the United States has little bearing on the situation, unless you want Obama to fund nuclear expansion in Asia. (I find that unlikely.)
The fact is, that if that $15 billion was thrown at nuclear energy expansion, it
might create
one new plant.
Might.
These are for new plants. The bottom of the report shows that when everything is factored in, the cost of electricity from nuclear power is quite competetive with the cost of electricity from gas and coal, and much less expensive than wind.
Nuclear plants last for decades, so over time, yeah, the cost per Watt is going to be at least competitive with other sources.
But the startup costs are
prohibitively expensive, and that's the part you're glossing over. That $15 billion simply would not do much of anything in terms of expanding nuclear power in the United States.
And note Obama is talking about $15 billion to develop wind, solar, and biofuel technology, not $15 billion to actually build or plant anything. He's talking about R&D.
Yup. And instead of R&D, you want to throw it at nuclear power expansion. Don't think I don't understand what you're saying.
$15 billion in R&D accomplishes a
lot of R&D. $15 billion thrown at nuclear energy expansion amounts to doodly squat.
Don't misunderstand me. I'm all for expanding nuclear power. But throwing $15 billion at nuclear energy expansion
now would be a massive waste of money, as reactor construction is so ungodly expensive.
It's putting the cart before the horse, basically. Before investing that kind of cash we need to look into ways to reduce the exorbitant cost of plant construction, and streamline the application/approval process (while still making safety the top priority).
Once
that's done, then maybe that $15 billion would actually
mean something. Until then, it's an inefficient use of taxpayer money.
If you think otherwise, try to find a statement anywhere of how many additional KwHs will be generated from this $15 billion "investment." When a normal person tells you that you should "invest" in something, you want an idea of what return you can expect. But, of course, politicians are not normal people. So how many more kilowatt-hours of electricity are we going to get for our $15 billion "investment?"
Anyone? Bueller?
You're arguing against a statement nobody has made.