WASHINGTON – A new report indicates Washington could face an energy crisis within five years as its power capacity approaches its limit.
The growing demands from AI and major tech companies like Amazon, Microsoft, and Google are driving this strain on the state’s energy resources.
As the ink dries on the deal Amazon just signed with Energy Northwest and X-energy, investing in four new nuclear reactors along the Columbia River in Richland — near Hanford, the most contaminated nuclear site in the U.S. — some groups are asking why we’re risking this again?
“Nuclear kills,” Leona Morgan, an indigenous organizer said during a panel hosted by the organization Columbia Riverkeeper. “And nuclear is killing my people. Nuclear is what we call ‘a slow genocide.’”
Morgan says the health impacts her family and other indigenous people face stem from radioactive exposure and contamination on their land.
“Just because we can’t see it, it’s out of sight out of mind, doesn’t mean it’s not happening. And if you need proof of it, come visit us,” Morgan added. “See an abandoned uranium mine anywhere in the world? On Navajo, we have over 2,000.”
The panel came just after Amazon’s SMR announcement.
Columbia Riverkeeper maintains nuclear energy is far from clean.
“It’s the most expensive, complicated, dirtiest way to boil water,” said Morgan, explaining that the carbon footprint of nuclear is only counted at the power plant, not during the process to building it and the toxic waste left behind.
Billions in federal and local funds go toward nuclear site decommissioning and cleaning every year.
Washington state just approved a record $3 billion to spend on cleanup at the Hanford site this year.
Money Amazon is investing in Small Modular Reactors near Hanford could be better invested in other renewables like solar, wind and hydro, according to Columbia Riverkeeper, which says nuclear isn’t the clean energy savior that big tech makes it out to be.
“When it comes to companies like Google, Microsoft and Amazon, the public has plenty of reasons to be angry at them,” panelist M.V. Ramana said. “These companies steal your data, they do bad things, they want to pretend to be good citizens. The reason they can use investment in nuclear energy as a way to pretend they are good citizens is because the hard work of convincing the public has already been done by the nuclear lobby.”
Ramana is the author of the book “Nuclear is not the Solution: The Folly of Atomic Power in the Age of Climate Change.” He says we should focus on energy conservation instead.
Kelly Rae, who works in corporate communications with Energy Northwest, tells Fox 13 Seattle that the permits for the SMR’s haven’t been secured yet, although lawmakers from Jay Inslee down are already lining up behind the project.
Rae says Amazon’s funding will pay for a feasibility study over the next two years, in which after they are hopeful to fund the SMR’s. If they’re successful, the energy generated from the first four reactors would be available to Amazon only. Rae says after that, other utility companies and municipalities could come to the table to help Amazon fund additional reactors to provide energy for Washingtonians.
Energy Northwest is a collection of 28 utility districts, including Seattle City Light, Tacoma Public Utilities and Snohomish County PUD. Amazon didn’t say how much it’s spending on the project, or how much, if any, will come from Energy Northwest.
So far, there aren’t any other small modular reactors like the ones Amazon is investing in, operating in the U.S.
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