ESG
Nuclear Power Will Grow "Exponentially" In Low-Carbon World – Citigroup White Paper

Unafraid to ruffle a few feathers, maybe, the US banking group has issued a study into the case for why nuclear fission and fusion power will be increasingly important ways of producing power in the years and decades to come.
Nuclear energy, once frowned upon as unsafe by some, is likely to develop into a significant part of the power production pie, according to a white paper from Citigroup.
The document, written by Arkady Gevorkyan, global commodity strategist, Edward L Morse, and Anthony Yen, Citi Research, argues that a variety of forces, such as the intermittency of solar and wind power, are driving increasing state and private sector interest in nuclear energy.
Such a view, if correct, has implications for sectors such as
uranium mining and the companies that produce and run nuclear
power plants. (See an analysis here.)
The Citigroup paper says that financing strategies, such as
public-private partnerships, and "green" bonds, could be areas
where providers of capital could seek returns.
“Nuclear energy, one of the largest low-carbon sources of
electricity, is set to grow exponentially in different parts of
the world and as varying designs are prioritized and developed. A
variety of factors contribute to this growth driven by potential
acceleration of new technologies becoming scalable and
commercialized,” the 42-page paper said. “The fight against
climate change and the importance of low-carbon sources of power
should inevitably secure a market share for nuclear in the
broader energy mix. 2022 was a landmark year in the history of
nuclear energy, as it gained public appreciation for the first
time since the Fukushima Daiichi accident in 2011,” it
continued.
The revived interest in nuclear energy comes at a time when the
demands of achieving a net zero status for worldwide carbon
emissions by 2050 are being increasingly challenged politically
and financially. In the UK, for example, a by-election result on
the outskirts of London was seen as a defeat for “net zero”
policies designed to curb car use. Germany has retired the last
of its nuclear power plants and re-started coal production –
provoking scorn from green activists and critics alike.
Renewable energy, such as wind and solar, has the quality of
“intermittency” – when wind doesn’t blow or sun doesn’t shine,
there’s no power, creating the need for vast batteries. Tidal,
hydro and geothermal power have their uses but can be difficult
to scale up, and have environmental side-effects (as in dam
building). Some environmentalists, once hostile to nuclear power,
have changed course, such as US-based activist and journalist
Michael Shellenberger. The late James Lovelock, famed for his
Gaia hypothesis and who warned about human impact on the Earth,
became a supporter of nuclear energy.
However, nuclear accidents, most notoriously that of the 1986
Chernobyl plant, have cast a pall on the sector, with relatively
few new plants being built since. The construction of new plants
can take years, if at all, in the face of opposition, planning
delays and lawsuits. According to the US writer Alex Epstein (1),
to "replace all existing fossil fuel energy (of all kinds) with
nuclear energy by the end of 2050 would require building four
1-gigawatt nuclear power plants every day starting in January
2022. In the last thirty years, on average, 4 gigawatts of
nuclear capacity have been created only every 540 days.”
There are signs of change, however. In 2022, the European Union
tweaked its taxonomy for the term "green" to include gas and
nuclear power. The EU’s actions took place when the drive against
fossil fuels hit a roadblock following Russia’s invasion of
Ukraine and the surge in global energy prices.
New tech
Developments such as small modular reactors – which could be
built at scale – superior ways to store waste, and use it more
safely – along with the promise of fusion energy, are changing
the narrative, the Citigroup writers said in their paper.
“Advanced fission, including small modular reactors (SMRs) and
advanced reactors (ARs), as well as fusion, are set to shape the
future of nuclear, sealing its role in the energy transition era
and the broader mix as being a dispatchable low-carbon source of
electricity, small modular reactors and advanced reactors,” it
said.
“Overall, we anticipate that SMRs and advanced fission reactors
will be commercialized sooner around the world (excluding Russia
and China) than fusion energy. Russia and China have already
commercialized fission AR/SMR concepts. Meanwhile, reactors based
on fusion energy most likely will be commercialized in the middle
to end of the next decade, with a number of successful private
firms navigating the space,” the paper continued.
The paper noted that regulators are being more accommodating to
existing nuclear capacity and investment in new and advanced
projects, including in the US as a result of the Bipartisan
Infrastructure Law and the Inflation Reduction Act; in the EU
with regulatory initiatives like the EU Green Deal Industrial
Plan; and in other countries such as the UK, China, Japan, and
Canada.
“Such regulatory advancements can unleash public spending while
also having a multiplicative effect that stimulates private
funding – a trend currently observed in both advanced fission and
fusion nuclear energy. Improving public sentiment around nuclear
energy – likely due in part to the unreliability of renewable
energy and the volatility of the fossil fuel commodities used for
power generation in the last two to three years – is serving as
another positive development for the energy source,” it said.
“In the energy transition era, the role of nuclear energy has
also been changing as the rising penetration of renewables
potentially brings more intermittency to the grid. Load balancing
and frequency regulation become increasingly vital given the
importance of the power stack having either low-emitting
dispatchable generation or battery storage to keep the grid
balanced,” it said.
The paper noted that nuclear power plants have some of the lowest
land requirements of all low-carbon energy sources.
“Per 1,000 megawatts of electricity (MWe) per year, power plants
require one to three square miles at most, while solar and wind
farms require a much larger footprint,” it said.
The report noted that up-front costs remain a headache for nuclear power.
"The history of cost overruns in nuclear projects presents a significant challenge in securing financing. Investors and financial institutions are often concerned about the financial risks associated with nuclear projects due to the industry's track record of costs exceeding initial estimates by a significant margin," it said.
Footnote:
1, Alex Epstein, Fossil Future: pages 236-237.