Historical construction costs of global nuclear power reactors
Abstract
The
existing literature on the construction costs of nuclear power reactors
has focused almost exclusively on trends in construction costs in only
two countries, the United States and France, and during two decades, the
1970s and 1980s. These analyses, Koomey and Hultman (2007); Grubler
(2010), and Escobar-Rangel and Lévêque (2015), study only 26% of
reactors built globally between 1960 and 2010, providing an incomplete
picture of the economic evolution of nuclear power construction. This
study curates historical reactor-specific overnight construction cost
(OCC) data that broaden the scope of study substantially, covering the
full cost history for 349 reactors in the US, France, Canada, West
Germany, Japan, India, and South Korea, encompassing 58% of all reactors
built globally. We find that trends in costs have varied significantly
in magnitude and in structure by era, country, and experience. In
contrast to the rapid cost escalation that characterized nuclear
construction in the United States, we find evidence of much milder cost
escalation in many countries, including absolute cost declines in some
countries and specific eras. Our new findings suggest that there is no
inherent cost escalation trend associated with nuclear technology.
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0301421516300106
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