From Deseret News archives:
Nuclear power is a fix for Utah energy woes
Utah, like many states nationwide, faces an energy problem. Demand is rising by 2 percent a year, even as the desire to reduce CO2 emissions grows. Efforts to find solutions are complicated by burdensome regulation, legal restrictions and activist intervention.
Governments everywhere are developing a two-pronged approach in response to the dilemma. First is to mandate conservation (read: rationing). The other is to cap carbon-dioxide emissions.
These are the peanut butter and jelly of modern energy policy. In reality, it will be virtually impossible to affordably build new major power plants once CO2 is capped. So to prevent rolling blackouts and public outrage, governments are forcing energy rationing through conservation mandates.
Bringing nuclear energy to Utah can help. It is emissions-free, affordable, proven and safe. It already provides the U.S. with 20 percent of its electricity, but none to Utah. That could soon change. According to a recent poll, 57 percent of Utahns favor nuclear energy. They may soon receive their wish.
There is a proposal to build two 1,500-megawatt reactors in Green River that would provide the state clean and secure energy while adding some diversity, which could help lessen the blow of CO2 regulation.
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