NVP Flashcards

1
Q

Explain the NPP decommissioning process

A
  1. NRC created a trust fund similar to the Nuclear Waste Fund for every NPP
  2. NPP pays 1 cent/kWh made towards the fund
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2
Q

Is the trust fund adequate in theory?

???

A
  1. Maybe. There are reviews of these funds (what)
  2. There is only 75% of money actually needed, but it is doing better than other NVPs
  3. The longer it sits, the longer the fund grows while the half-life of radioactive materials run their course (and there is less to clean up)
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3
Q

Is the trust fund adequate in practice?

A
  1. Yes, 3dP Party Purchase of the Trust Assests suggests that there may be enough value
  2. 3dPs purchase the trust fund AND the liabilities - think that they they can decommission the plant w/ the fund or less
  3. Holtech Int’l (MI) is one of those companies
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4
Q

What is Negative Value Property? How does it differ from Zero Value Property?

A
  1. NVP is property that canont be alienated without remediation or a side payment.
  2. Zero Value Property - no legal requirement to rehabilitiate the land, and owner may simply use it as a land dump or abandon it
  3. Negative Value Property - law obligates owner to affirmatively rehabilitate the land w/o being able to simply abandon it (e.g., Berkeley pit - nuisance law exists even if there is no express rehabilitation leg or reg)
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5
Q

Explain the NVP phenomenon in energy

A
  1. NVP is not unique to energy, but more likely to arise when a resource stock far exceeds the location value, because it creates the risk of temporal spillovers
  2. Temporal spillovers - when a conduct (resource extraction) is highly lucrative at time A but highly costly (social costs) at time B
  3. This kind of spillover is NOT easily regulated by simple govt prohibition of that conduct, where the negative externality contemporaneous with a conduct, but requires
  • Rules re: abandonment & cleanup
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6
Q

Where in energy law do we see examples of NVP?

A
  1. Depleted resource extraction sites - coal mines, O&G wells, hardrock mines (Butte)
  2. Obsolete & derelict facilities - NPPs, hydropower dams, petrol stations & underground storage tanks
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7
Q

How does property law address NVP?

???

A

It doesn’t! Property rights reduce spillover only when they incentivize landowners to bear the costs of their land use.
1. Demsetz theory - property law guides incentives to achieve a greater internalization of externalities
2. Ellickson theory - infinite land land interest is a low transaction cost device for conserving natural resources for future generations

  • Here, the incentive mechanism incentivizes abandonment & externalizing reclamation costs because internalizing the externalities is very costly.
  • Property/market alone will not internalize externality!
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8
Q

What, besides property rights, perpetuates NVP phenomenon in energy?

A
  1. Political incentives - State juris w/ self-bonding under SMCRA (coal) want firms to stay alive to collect any funds & willing to reduce bond, rather than let them go bankrupt
  2. Legal incentives - Firms choose to not declare assets to be abandoned to avoid reclamation obligations.
    * We see this by firms & states declaring their assets abandoned en masse only once Infrastructure Bill offered reclamation support
  3. Functional abandonment - Bankruptcy law used to get around clean-up requirements because federally-mandated liabilities are placed in underfunded subsidiaries that are later liquidated
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9
Q

Future of NVP?

A
  1. Decommissioning era is only just starting; we don’t know the full cost of cleanup
  2. The process is largely untested; history is not on our side
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10
Q

Are the existing policies enough to address NVP phenomenon?

A

No. As seen in political, legal, and functional incentives,
1. Standards are too weak (SMCRA)
2. Insufficient financial assurance (need things like infrastructure bill)
3. Insufficient enforcement (bankruptcy)

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11
Q

First-best solutions to solve NVP phenomenon?

A
  1. Optimize standards to disincentivize abandonment
  2. Optimize financial assurances (environmental liabilities)
  3. Optimize enforcement (e.g., SMCRA)
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12
Q

Why are the first-best solutions not feasible?

??? what does the relativity of externality have to do w/ NVP?

A
  1. Politics - energy producers are well-connected
  2. Uncertainty re: cost & operations of cleanup at the outset of resource extraction or plant operation
  3. Internalizing externalities is difficult and not always worth doing – might be more reasonable for a polity to absorb the costs. AND, externality by definition is relative

maybe - property already suffers from fact that externalities=relative

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13
Q

What are the second-best solutions?

A
  1. Reform the laws of insolvency
  2. Employ trusts similar to NPPs
  3. Bundle assets - bundle NVP with enough positive value property
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