Celebrating A Nuclear Win and the Village that Created It

Source: Nucleation Capital September 7, 2022 · 7 min read
Originally published by Nucleation Capital. Preserved here for reference — view the original ↗.

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Diablo Canyon has been saved—for now! Rather than allowing this clean energy producing power plant to be wastefully decommissioned by those who simply dislike nuclear power, the California legislature, under the leadership of Governor Gavin Newsom, voted to extend its life by up to 10 years. Senate Bill 846, sponsored by Jordan Cunningham (CA-25, R), passed with nearly unanimous votes in both the Democratically-controlled Assembly and Senate. SB 846 also provides for as much as $1.4 billion in loans from California to PG&E for re-licensing and enables PG&E to also submit a timely application to the DOE's Civil Nuclear Credit program for further aid in re-starting licensing with the NRC and transitioning back to full-operating mode. This is a nearly miraculous win for California's pronuclear advocates and it is worth celebrating both the win and the broader community that made it possible.

While there are a lot of individuals and organizations who contributed to setting the stage for this phenomenal political win for nuclear power in general and Diablo Canyon specifically, there were also considerable underlying political realities that effectively forced the Governor's hand. In particular, the state's own energy experts from CALISO, CEC, as well as academia and industry, expressed extreme alarm at the high level of fragility of the grid and the high risk of power outages even with Diablo Canyon operating. The closure of Diablo Canyon was clearly going to exacerbate the already bad situation. Climate change and state clean energy mandates made the CPUC's plan to replace Diablo Canyon's clean energy with dirty coal power from PacifiCorp anathema to the both the state's goals and the Governor's political reputation. Meanwhile, the Russian invasion of Ukraine has resulted in dire energy shortages in Europe and rising gas prices. This is making the world's growing reliance on natural gas both uneconomical and politically unsavory.

With that as the political and economic backdrop, we wish to take a look at some of the individuals and groups that took on prominent roles advocating for nuclear power in general and for Diablo Canyon specifically. Some of these groups worked behind the scenes and some played highly prominent roles. The press has recognized the advocacy of the San Luis Obispo-based Mothers for Nuclear, which has consistently stood up for Diablo Canyon at local hearings, rallies and in the press.  This mom-led non-profit further coordinated with Isabelle Boemeke, a model-turned "nuclear influencer," whose online presence "Isodope," introduced a witty, stylish and slightly snarky approach to pronuclear advocacy, sharing her frank messaging with a new generation. Together, they organized several recent and memorable public events, a rally on behalf of Diablo Canyon and the issuance of letter to Governor Newsom signed by 79 prominent scientific experts. As impactful as both of those campaigns were, their success rested upon a foundation of public opinion that had grown stronger due to very considerable contributions from the following very notable individuals and groups:

The Pronuclear Village

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Nuclear-Focused Writers

James Conca, Forbes

Robert Bryce,  Forbes and other

Michael Shellenberger, Forbes, Environmental Progress

Rod Adams,  Atomic Insights

Catherine Clifford, CNBC

Academics & Scientists

Dr, James Hansen, Climate Science, Awareness and Solutions, at the Earth Institute of Columbia University

Dr. Todd Allen, University of Michigan

Dr. Jacopo Buongiorno, MIT

Dr. Steven Chu,  Stanford University

Dr. Jesse Jenkins, Princeton

Dr. Jessica Lovering,  University of Colorado, Boulder

Also, another 75 or so who signed the February 2022 letter to Governor Newsom

Non-Profits & Think Tanks

The Breakthrough Institute, Ted Nordhaus

Clean Air Task Force,  Armond Cohen

Californians for Green Nuclear Power, Carl Wurtz, Dr. Gene Nelson

Anthropocene Institute, Carl Page

The Long Now, Stewart Brand

Energy for Humanity, Kirsty Gogan

Nuclear Innovation Alliance, Judi Greenwald

TerraPraxis, Erik Ingersoll, Kirsty Gogan

Good Energy Collective, Dr. Jessica Lovering, Suzy Hobbs Baker, Dr. Rachel Slaybaugh

Energy Impact Center, Bret Kugelmass

Energy for Humanity, Kirsty Gogan

Fastest Path to Zero, Dr. Todd Allen, at the University of Michigan

Climate Protection & Restoration Initiative, Dr. James Hansen, Donn J. Viviani and others

The Nature Conservancy, Mark Tercek

The World Resources Institute

Podcasters

Titans of Nuclear, Bret Kugelmass

The Atomic Show, Rod Adams

Decouple Podcast, Dr. Chris Keefer

Energy Impact Podcast, Bret Kugelmass

Climate Fix, Colby & Phil

Columbia Energy Exchange, Jason Bordoff, Bill Lovelass

Cowen’s Energy Transition Podcast, Marc Bianchi

Organizers & Advocates

Environmental Progress, Michael Shellenberger

Mothers for Nuclear, Heather Hoff and Kirstin Zaitz

Save Clean Energy, Isabelle Boemeke

Generation Atomic, Eric Meyers

Campaign for a Green Nuclear Deal, Madison Hilly

Stand Up for Nuclear, Paris Ortiz-Wines

Emergency Reactor, Zion Lights

Climate Coalition,  Valerie Gardner, Gary Kahanak

Nuclear New York, Dr. Dietmar Detering, Isuru Seneviratne

US Nuclear Industry:  NEI, ANS, USNIC, NIA, INPO, etc.

International:  IPCC, WNA, IAEA, WNN, etc.

Artists & Authors

Robert Stone, Pandora’s Promise (documentary)

Dave Schumacher, The New Fire (documentary)

Robert Bryce, Juice (documentary) and author of "A Question of Power: Electricity and the Wealth of Nations"

Oliver Stone, Nuclear: Time to Look Again (a new documentary, being released now)

Joshua Goldstein, "A Bright Future: How Some Countries Have Solved Climate Change and the Rest Can Follow"

Meredith Angwin, “Shorting the Grid: The Hidden Fragility of our Electric Grid” and "Campaigning for Clean Air"

Dr. Robert Hargraves, author of "Thorium, Energy Cheaper than Coal"

Michael Bloomberg, co-author of "Climate of Hope"

Gwyneth Cravens, author of "Power to Save the World: The Truth about Nuclear Energy"

Mathijs Beckers, author of "Highway to Dystopia: About spaceship Earth, Climate Change and more"

Isabelle Boemeke, creator of the “Isodope” TicTok videos and tweets

Baba Brinkman, Nuclear/Science rapper

Influencers

Stewart Brand, The Whole Earth Catalog

Californians for Green Nuclear Power, Dr. Gene Nelson

What is Nuclear, Nick Touran

Radiant Energy,  Mark Nelson

Thorium Energy Alliance,  John Kutsch

Google,  Ross Koningstein (IEEE, White Papers)

D.J. LeClear, The Rad Guy

TEA,  Silicon Valley,  Alex Cannara

Save Clean Energy, Isabelle Boemeke

Citizen’s Climate Lobby,  Jim Hopf (Nuclear group)

4th Generation Blog, Canon Bryan, Amelia Tiemann

Rethinking Nuclear, Richard Steeves

Politicians & Biden Admin

Trump Administration & Congress, laid a foundation with the passage of NEIMA & NEICA

Senator Sheldon Whitehouse, loudly pronuclear

Senator Cory Booker, introduced his support of nuclear power during the 2019 Primary Climate Debates

President Joe Biden, ushered in the Energy Bill of 2020,  which funded the Advanced Reactor Development Program (ARDP), to accelerate commercialization of the next generation of reactors

Dept. of Energy, Secr. of Energy, Jennifer Granholm, worked overtime to introduce the Civil Nuclear Credit program in a timely way, plus, she has posted many great videos about the need for nuclear to address climate

Gov. Gretchen Whitmer has expressed her support for the protection of the Palisades Nuclear Power plant and now for Holtec's application to restart it

The Infrastructure & Jobs Act, set up the Civil Nuclear Credit Program, with a $6 billion fund to save nuclear power plants, such as Palisades and Diablo Canyon

Representative Elaine Luria, has introduced a bevy of important nuclear energy bills, including the Nuclear Energy Leadership Act (’19), Nuclear Power Purchase Agreements Act (’21), and Fueling our Nuclear Future Act (’22)

All of Congress, has used *voice votes* to approve key pronuclear pieces of legislation

Senator Diane Feinstein, wrote about her support for Diablo Canyon in a number of OpEds

DOE’s Loan Program Office (LPO), under the leadership of Jigar Shah, has been working to provide Government-guaranteed loans to key projects

Funders

There is a small but dedicated community of funders who have shown a willing to support many of the above non-profits, as well as the various artistic and advocacy campaign initiatives.  We are greatful to them, as they have allowed much of the work that others have not been willing to fund, to be produced.

[Please note: All of the above listed groups have websites that are available online. Legislation is all searchable. We are not able to provide links for every group but have provided for some that may be harder to find. If you have trouble finding information you need, please reach out through our contact form. We have had a prime seat for the last decade or so to follow the events but we cannot possibly include everyone or every group that is active in this space. However, if you think we have omitted an important contributor who should be listed as having had a meaningful impact on the decision to save Diablo Canyon, please use the comment box below to send us a private message.]