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Jess H. Brewer's avatar

Now you know how the nuclear power industry feels, with hysterical anti-nuke fanatics spreading lies and rumors about how awful even a little extra radiation is. In war, truth is the first casualty.

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Barry Butterfield's avatar

NEPA has been used as a weapon to torpedo development of all kinds for many, many years. What is described here isn't new. As a NEPA practitioner for nearly 50 years, I've seen it work for good as well as bad. I’ve also seen how the protections NEPA was intended to provided are sacrificed at the alter of the Church of Carbon. Ignoring T&E considerations are the most heinous example of this practice and is frequently used by Cabinet-level agencies to insure more rapid deployment of renewables. So-called “take permits” are nothing more than saying “a little murder is OK.

Regulatory reform of NEPA is not needed in its enabling regulations, but rather in its assurance of good faith agency reviews, particularly for energy and energy-related civil works. I’ve sat in agency meetings and heard representatives of the EPA say unequivocally that they will disapprove any project that makes it easier to mine coal, regardless of the health and safety benefits that project might have. I’ve sat in agency meetings and heard Heads of Regulatory Agencies proclaim, “this is not about health and safety, it’s about regulatory interpretation!” (that was eventually rebuked, at severe cost to the agency, in Federal Circuit Court). Developers have a right to expect agencies to review their proposals in good faith, and in the equitable enforcement of regulations.

Lawfare is an inevitable product of our system of justice. Regulations, and in many cases the enabling legislation, contain deliberate ambiguities that create uncertainty for developers to manage, and create loopholes for litigants to exploit. Lawfare could be better controlled by closing some of these loopholes and by assigning liability to litigants. That liability should be, as a minimum, the additional project costs suffered by the developer. In the case I referenced above, the state was required not only to pay the developers costs, but was also penalized an additional 50 percent of costs because the courts deemed the state regulator acted in bad faith. NGOs such as Greenpeace, Sierra Club, NRDC, and others have substantial war chests to accept such responsibilities. (See Bryce, 18 Feb 2023, among others, https://robertbryce.substack.com/p/the-anti-industry-industry?utm_source=substack&utm_medium=email .

Energy projects are a particular hot-button. Lawfare with such developments could be constrained if regulators applied their rules equitably. For example, “community consent” is a major criterion in selecting a site for disposing of radioactive waste. Yet, many communities who object to the siting of windfarms near their domiciles are ignored, and their pleas are overwhelmed by the virtue signaling of politicians whose agenda is clearly not well-informed. (Again, see Bryce, Lovering, and others who have written about communities rejecting wind farms).

Regulatory reform and lawfare can be best implemented through an energy policy based on physics, not politics or the “crisis-du-jour”). A physics-based policy should recognize energy and power densities as the most important factors in energy and resource management. Power dense fuels require far less resources (such as land) than sources that merely harvest energy. Such a policy would establish a clear line for agencies in development and consideration of alternatives (the heart of the NEPA process) that would accomplish the purpose and need of the proposed works. Nuclear and gas works require far less land than renewables, and much of the lawfare rises from questions of land use. Nuclear and gas works also require fewer mineral resources, enhance energy security, provide more skilled employment jobs, and provide reliable, affordable, and safe electricity to our economy.

It is an essential truth that no energy source is without risk. Utilities are faced with many complex technical and economic decisions during the planning for new energy facilities. Regulatory uncertainty and inequity should not be one of those risks. The licensing process should be clear, well-defined and free from ambiguity so that all parties may understand the rules an trust that corruption is not occurring.

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