NEWS The Activists Who Embrace Nuclear Power

For the orig­i­nal in The New York­er (Feb­ru­ary 19, 2021), click here.

In 2004, Heather Hoff was work­ing at a cloth­ing store and liv­ing with her hus­band in San Luis Obis­po, a small, laid-back city in the Cen­tral Coast region of Cal­i­for­nia. A few years ear­li­er, she had earned a B.S. in mate­ri­als engi­neer­ing from the near­by Cal­i­for­nia Poly­tech­nic State Uni­ver­si­ty. But she’d so far found work only in a series of eclec­tic entry-lev­el positions—shovelling grapes at a win­ery, assem­bling rec­tal ther­mome­ters for cows. She was twen­ty-four years old and eager to start a career.

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One of the county’s major employ­ers was the Dia­blo Canyon Pow­er Plant, sit­u­at­ed on the coast­line out­side the city. Jobs there were sta­ble and well-pay­ing. But Dia­blo Canyon is a nuclear facility—it con­sists of two reac­tors, each con­tained inside a giant con­crete dome—and Hoff, like many peo­ple, was sus­pi­cious of nuclear pow­er. Her moth­er had been preg­nant with her in March, 1979, when the melt­down at a nuclear plant on Three Mile Island, in Penn­syl­va­nia, trans­fixed the nation. Hoff grew up in Ari­zona, in an uncon­ven­tion­al fam­i­ly that lived in a trail­er with a com­post­ing toi­let. She con­sid­ered her­self an envi­ron­men­tal­ist, and took it for grant­ed that envi­ron­men­tal­ism and nuclear pow­er were at odds.

Nonethe­less, Hoff decid­ed to give Dia­blo Canyon a try. She was hired as a plant oper­a­tor. The work took her on dai­ly rounds of the facil­i­ty, check­ing equip­ment performance—oil flows, tem­per­a­tures, vibrations—and hunt­ing for signs of mal­func­tion. Still skep­ti­cal, she asked con­stant ques­tions about the safe­ty of the tech­nol­o­gy. “When four-thir­ty on Fri­day came, my co-work­ers were, like, ‘Shut up, Heather, we want to go home,’ ” she recalled. “When I final­ly asked enough ques­tions to under­stand the details, it wasn’t that scary.”

In the course of years, Hoff grew increas­ing­ly com­fort­able at the plant. She switched roles, work­ing in the con­trol room and then as a pro­ce­dure writer, and got to know the workforce—mostly old­er, avun­cu­lar men. She began to believe that nuclear pow­er was a safe, potent source of clean ener­gy with numer­ous advan­tages over oth­er sources. For instance, nuclear reac­tors gen­er­ate huge amounts of ener­gy on a small foot­print: Dia­blo Canyon, which accounts for rough­ly nine per cent of the elec­tric­i­ty pro­duced in Cal­i­for­nia, occu­pies few­er than six hun­dred acres. It can gen­er­ate ener­gy at all hours and, unlike solar and wind pow­er, does not depend on par­tic­u­lar weath­er con­di­tions to oper­ate. Hoff was espe­cial­ly struck by the fact that nuclear-pow­er gen­er­a­tion does not emit car­bon diox­ide or the oth­er air pol­lu­tants asso­ci­at­ed with fos­sil fuels. Even­tu­al­ly, she began to think that fears of nuclear ener­gy were not just mis­guid­ed but dan­ger­ous. Her job no longer seemed to be in ten­sion with her envi­ron­men­tal­ist views. Instead, it felt like an expres­sion of her deep­est values.

In late 2015, Hoff and her col­leagues began to hear reports that wor­ried them. P.G. & E., the util­i­ty that owns Dia­blo Canyon, was in the process of apply­ing to renew its oper­at­ing licenses—which expire in the mid-twenty-twenties—with the fed­er­al Nuclear Reg­u­la­to­ry Com­mis­sion. Because its cool­ing sys­tem takes in and spits out about 2.5 bil­lion gal­lons of ocean water each day, the plant also needs a lease from the Cal­i­for­nia State Lands Com­mis­sion in order to oper­ate, and P.G. & E. was apply­ing to renew that as well. Envi­ron­men­tal groups had come to the com­mis­sion with long-stand­ing con­cerns about the effects of the cool­ing sys­tem on marine life and about the plant’s prox­im­i­ty to sev­er­al geo­log­ic faults. The com­mis­sion, chaired by Gavin New­som, then the lieu­tenant gov­er­nor, had agreed to take those issues into account. At a meet­ing that Decem­ber, New­som said, “I just don’t see that this plant is going to sur­vive beyond ’24–2025.”

Around this time, Hoff dis­cov­ered a Web site called Save Dia­blo Canyon. The site had been launched by a man named Michael Shel­len­berg­er, who ran an orga­ni­za­tion called Envi­ron­men­tal Progress, in the Bay Area. Shel­len­berg­er was a con­tro­ver­sial fig­ure, known for his pugilis­tic defense of nuclear pow­er and his acer­bic crit­i­cism of main­stream envi­ron­men­tal­ists. Hoff had seen “Pandora’s Promise,” a 2013 doc­u­men­tary about nuclear pow­er, in which Shel­len­berg­er had been fea­tured. She e‑mailed him to ask about get­ting involved, and he offered to give a talk to plant employ­ees. Hoff pub­li­cized the event among her col­leagues, and baked about two hun­dred choco­late-chip cook­ies for the audience.

On the evening of Feb­ru­ary 16, 2016, a cou­ple hun­dred peo­ple filed into a con­fer­ence room at a local Court­yard Mar­riott hotel. Shel­len­berg­er told the audi­ence that Dia­blo Canyon was essen­tial to meet­ing California’s cli­mate goals, and that it could oper­ate safe­ly for at least anoth­er twen­ty years. He said that it was at risk of being closed for polit­i­cal rea­sons, and urged the work­ers to orga­nize to save their plant, for the sake of their jobs and the planet.

Kristin Zaitz, one of Hoff’s co-work­ers, was also in atten­dance. A Cal­i­for­nia native and civ­il engi­neer, she had worked at Dia­blo Canyon since 2001, first con­duct­ing struc­tur­al analyses—including some meant to for­ti­fy the plant against earthquakes—and then man­ag­ing projects. Zaitz, too, came from a back­ground that pre­dis­posed her to dis­trust nuclear power—in her case, an envi­ron­men­tal­ly mind­ed fam­i­ly and a left-lean­ing social cir­cle. When she first con­tem­plat­ed work­ing at Dia­blo Canyon, she imag­ined the rat-infest­ed Spring­field Nuclear Pow­er Plant on “The Simp­sons,” where green liq­uid oozes out of tanks. Even­tu­al­ly, like Hoff, she changed her think­ing. “What we were doing actu­al­ly aligned with my envi­ron­men­tal val­ues,” she told me. “That was shock­ing to me.”

Zaitz and Hoff some­times bumped into each oth­er at state parks, where both vol­un­teered on week­ends with their chil­dren. After Shellenberger’s talk, they lin­gered, fold­ing up chairs and talk­ing. Before long, they decid­ed to team up. Using the name of Shel­len­berg­er’s site Save Dia­blo Canyon, they orga­nized a series of meet­ings at a local pipe-fit­ters’ union hall. They served piz­za for dozens of employ­ees and their fam­i­ly mem­bers, who wrote let­ters to the State Lands Com­mis­sion and oth­er Cal­i­for­nia offi­cials. Oth­er nuclear plants across the coun­try were also at risk of clos­ing, and soon they decid­ed that their mis­sion was big­ger than res­cu­ing their own plant. They want­ed to cor­rect what they saw as false impres­sions about nuclear power—impressions that they had once had themselves—and to try to shift pub­lic opin­ion. They would show that “it’s O.K. to be in favor of nuclear,” Zaitz said—that, in fact, if you’re an envi­ron­men­tal­ist, “you should be out there root­ing for it.”

Hoff and Zaitz formed a non­prof­it. Like the lead­ers of many oth­er move­ments led by women—protests against war, drunk dri­ving, and, of course, nuclear power—they sought to cap­i­tal­ize on their sta­tus as moth­ers. They toyed with a few gener­ic names—Mothers for Cli­mate, Moth­ers for Sustainability—because they wor­ried that the word “nuclear” would scare some peo­ple off. But they ulti­mate­ly dis­card­ed those more innocu­ous options. “We want­ed to be real­ly clear that we think nuclear needs to be part of the solu­tion,” Zaitz said. They now run a small activist orga­ni­za­tion, Moth­ers for Nuclear, which argues that nuclear pow­er is an indis­pens­able tool in the quest for a decar­bonized society.

On Decem­ber 8, 1953, Pres­i­dent Dwight Eisen­how­er deliv­ered his “Atoms for Peace” speech at the Unit­ed Nations Gen­er­al Assem­bly. He described the dan­gers of atom­ic weapons, but also declared that “this great­est of destruc­tive forces can be devel­oped into a great boon, for the ben­e­fit of all mankind.” Eisen­how­er pro­posed that gov­ern­ments make con­tri­bu­tions from their stock­piles of ura­ni­um and fis­sion­able mate­ri­als to an inter­na­tion­al atom­ic-ener­gy agency. One pur­pose of such an agency, he sug­gest­ed, would be “to pro­vide abun­dant elec­tri­cal ener­gy in the pow­er-starved areas of the world.”

The first com­mer­cial nuclear pow­er plant in the Unit­ed States opened four years lat­er, in Beaver Coun­ty, Penn­syl­va­nia. In the fol­low­ing decades, dozens more were con­struct­ed. There are cur­rent­ly fifty-six nuclear pow­er plants oper­at­ing in the U.S. They pro­vide the coun­try with rough­ly twen­ty per cent of its elec­tric­i­ty sup­ply— more than half of its low-car­bon elec­tric­i­ty.

The plants were not always pre­sumed to be envi­ron­men­tal­ly unfriend­ly. At the dawn of the nuclear age, some con­ser­va­tion­ists, includ­ing David Brow­er, the long­time leader of the Sier­ra Club, sup­port­ed nuclear pow­er because it seemed prefer­able to hydro­elec­tric dams, the con­struc­tion of which destroyed scenery and wildlife by flood­ing val­leys and oth­er ecosys­tems. But Brow­er changed his mind in the late nine­teen-six­ties and, after a bit­ter split with­in the Sier­ra Club over whether to sup­port the con­struc­tion of Dia­blo Canyon, left to found Friends of the Earth, which was vehe­ment­ly anti-nuclear. As John Wills explains in his 2006 book, “Con­ser­va­tion Fall­out,” these dis­putes coin­cid­ed with broad­er philo­soph­i­cal shifts. Conservationism—with its focus on the preser­va­tion of charis­mat­ic scenery for out­door adventures—was giv­ing way to the mod­ern envi­ron­men­tal­ist move­ment, sparked in part by Rachel Carson’s 1962 book, “Silent Spring.” Carson’s book, which inves­ti­gat­ed the dan­gers posed by pes­ti­cides, artic­u­lat­ed an eco­log­i­cal vision of nature in which every­thing was con­nect­ed in a del­i­cate web of life. Nuclear pow­er was asso­ci­at­ed with radi­a­tion, which, like pes­ti­cides, could threat­en that web.

By 1979, the U.S. had sev­en­ty-two com­mer­cial reac­tors. That year proved piv­otal in the shap­ing of pub­lic opin­ion toward nuclear pow­er in Amer­i­ca. On March 16th, “The Chi­na Syn­drome,” star­ring Jane Fon­da, Jack Lem­mon, and Michael Dou­glas, was released; the film por­trayed cor­rup­tion and a melt­down at a fic­tion­al nuclear plant. Twelve days lat­er, one of the two reac­tors at the Three Mile Island Nuclear Gen­er­at­ing Sta­tion in south­east­ern Penn­syl­va­nia par­tial­ly melt­ed down. Most epi­demi­o­log­i­cal stud­ies would even­tu­al­ly deter­mine that the acci­dent had no detectable health con­se­quences. But at the time there was no way the pub­lic could know this, and the inci­dent added momen­tum to the anti-nuclear move­ment. By the time of the Cher­nobyl cat­a­stro­phe, in Sovi­et Ukraine, in 1986—widely con­sid­ered to be the worst nuclear dis­as­ter in history—opposition to nuclear pow­er was wide­spread. Between 1979 and 1988, six­ty-sev­en planned nuclear-pow­er projects were can­celled. In the mid-eight­ies, the Depart­ment of Ener­gy began research into the “inte­gral fast reactor”—an inno­v­a­tive sys­tem designed to be safer and more advanced. In 1994, the Clin­ton Admin­is­tra­tion shut the project down.

Today, the loom­ing dis­rup­tions of cli­mate change have altered the risk cal­cu­lus around nuclear ener­gy. James Hansen, the nasa­sci­en­tist cred­it­ed with first bring­ing glob­al warm­ing to pub­lic atten­tion, in 1988, has long advo­cat­ed a vast expan­sion of nuclear pow­er to replace fos­sil fuels. Even some envi­ron­men­tal groups that have reser­va­tions about nuclear ener­gy, such as the Nat­ur­al Resources Defense Coun­cil and the Envi­ron­men­tal Defense Fund, have rec­og­nized that abrupt­ly clos­ing exist­ing reac­tors would lead to a spike in emis­sions. But U.S. plants are aging and grap­pling with a vari­ety of chal­lenges. In recent years, their eco­nom­ic via­bil­i­ty has been threat­ened by cheap, fracked nat­ur­al gas. Safe­ty reg­u­la­tions intro­duced after the melt­downs at Japan’s Fukushi­ma Dai­ichi nuclear plant, in 2011, have increased costs, and, in states such as Cal­i­for­nia, leg­is­la­tion pri­or­i­tizes renew­ables (the costs of which have also fall­en steeply). Since 2013, eleven Amer­i­can reac­tors have been retired; the lost elec­tric­i­ty has large­ly been replaced through the burn­ing of fos­sil fuels. At least eight more clo­sures, includ­ing Dia­blo Canyon’s, are planned. In a 2018 report, the Union of Con­cerned Sci­en­tists con­clud­ed that “clos­ing the at-risk plants ear­ly could result in a cumu­la­tive 4 to 6 per­cent increase in US pow­er sec­tor car­bon emis­sions by 2035.”

The past decade has seen the rise of a con­tin­gent of strong­ly pro-nuclear envi­ron­men­tal­ists. In 2007, Shel­len­berg­er and his col­league Ted Nord­haus co-found­ed the Break­through Insti­tute, a Bay Area think tank known for its het­ero­dox, “eco­mod­ernist” approach to envi­ron­men­tal prob­lems. The orga­ni­za­tion, which presents itself as more prag­mat­ic than the main­stream envi­ron­men­tal move­ment, sup­ports nuclear pow­er along­side G.M.O.s and agri­cul­tur­al inten­si­fi­ca­tion. Oth­er pro-nuclear groups include Third Way, a cen­ter-left think tank, and Good Ener­gy Col­lec­tive, a pol­i­cy-research orga­ni­za­tion. (Shel­len­berg­er left the Break­through Insti­tute, in 2015, and found­ed Envi­ron­men­tal Progress, part­ly to focus more on efforts to save exist­ing plants.)

The 2011 Fukushi­ma dis­as­ter shift­ed the land­scape of opin­ion, but not in entire­ly pre­dictable ways. Imme­di­ate­ly after Fukushi­ma, anti-nuclear sen­ti­ment surged; Japan began to shut­ter its nuclear plants, as did Ger­many. And yet, as Car­olyn Kor­mann has writ­ten, stud­ies have found few health risks con­nect­ed to radi­a­tion expo­sure in Japan in the wake of the acci­dent. (The evac­u­a­tion itself was asso­ci­at­ed with more than a thou­sand deaths, as well as a great deal of eco­nom­ic dis­rup­tion.) Pro-nuclear advo­cates now point out that, after retir­ing some of their nuclear plants, Japan and Ger­many have become increas­ing­ly reliant on coal.

Heather Hoff watched news footage of the Fukushi­ma dis­as­ter while at Dia­blo Canyon. What she saw resem­bled the sce­nar­ios she had learned about in training—situations that she had pre­pared for but nev­er expect­ed to face. “My heart instant­ly filled with fear,” she lat­er wrote, on the Moth­ers for Nuclear Web site. For a time, her con­fi­dence in nuclear pow­er was shak­en. But, as more infor­ma­tion emerged, she came to believe that the acci­dent was not as cat­a­clysmic as it had ini­tial­ly appeared to be. Even­tu­al­ly, Hoff con­clud­ed that the inci­dent was an oppor­tu­ni­ty to learn how to improve nuclear pow­er, not a rea­son to give up on it. She and Zaitz vis­it­ed the site in 2018. They saw black plas­tic bags of con­t­a­m­i­nat­ed soil heaped on the road­side, and ate the local fish. After­ward, they both blogged about the expe­ri­ence. Zaitz wrote that she under­stood the fear pro­voked by radi­a­tion, “with its deep roots in the hor­ren­dous human impacts caused by the atom­ic bomb.”

Pro-nuclear envi­ron­men­tal­ists often tell a con­ver­sion sto­ry, describ­ing the moment when they began to see nuclear pow­er not as some­thing that could destroy the world but as some­thing that could save it. They argue that much of what we think we know about nuclear ener­gy is wrong. Instead of being the most dan­ger­ous ener­gy source, it is one of the safest, linked with far few­er deaths per ter­awatt-hour than all fos­sil fuels. We per­ceive nuclear waste as unique­ly haz­ardous, but, while waste from oil, nat­ur­al gas, and coal is spewed into the atmos­phere as green­house gas­es and as oth­er forms of pol­lu­tion, spent nuclear-fuel rods, which are sol­id, are con­tained in con­crete casks or cool­ing pools, where they are mon­i­tored and pre­vent­ed from caus­ing harm. (The ques­tion of long-term stor­age remains fraught.) Most nuclear enthu­si­asts believe that renew­ables have a role to play in the ener­gy sys­tem of the future. But they are skep­ti­cal of the premise that renew­ables alone can reli­ably pow­er mod­ern soci­eties. And—in con­trast to an envi­ron­men­tal move­ment that has his­tor­i­cal­ly advo­cat­ed the reduc­tion of ener­gy demand—pro-nuclear groups tend to focus more on the val­ue that abun­dant nuclear ener­gy could have around the world.

Char­lyne Smith, a twen­ty-five-year-old Ph.D. can­di­date in nuclear engi­neer­ing at the Uni­ver­si­ty of Flori­da, who shared her sto­ry on the Moth­ers for Nuclear Web site, grew up in rur­al Jamaica, where she had first­hand expe­ri­ence of “ener­gy pover­ty.” Dur­ing hur­ri­canes, she told me, no one knew when the elec­tric­i­ty would come back; food would spoil in the fridge. Smith learned about nuclear pow­er as an under­grad­u­ate and decid­ed to enter the field, with the goal of bring­ing reac­tors to the Caribbean. She is not naïve about the risks: she is writ­ing a dis­ser­ta­tion on nuclear pro­lif­er­a­tion. But, she says, “Waste and radiation—those are risks that are min­i­miz­able. Pro­lif­er­a­tion of nuclear material—that risk is min­i­miz­able. Ver­sus what you can get out of nuclear ener­gy, weigh­ing the pros and cons. I strong­ly believe that nuclear ener­gy can solve count­less problems.”

The pro-nuclear com­mu­ni­ty is small and frac­tious. There are debates about how large a role renew­ables should play and about whether to focus on pre­serv­ing exist­ing plants or devel­op­ing advanced reac­tors, which have the poten­tial to shut down auto­mat­i­cal­ly in the event of over­heat­ing and to run on spent fuel. (These reac­tors are still in the exper­i­men­tal phase.) There are also dif­fer­ences in rhetoric. At one end of the spec­trum is Shel­len­berg­er, who seems to see main­stream envi­ron­men­tal­ists as his main adver­saries; his newest book is titled “Apoc­a­lypse Nev­er: Why Envi­ron­men­tal Alarmism Hurts Us All.” His recent com­men­tary decry­ing what he calls the cli­mate scare has been wide­ly cir­cu­lat­ed in right-wing cir­cles and has per­plexed some pro-nuclear allies. At the oth­er end is Good Ener­gy Col­lec­tive, co-found­ed, recent­ly, by Jes­si­ca Lover­ing, Shellenberger’s for­mer col­league at the Break­through Insti­tute. Her orga­ni­za­tion sit­u­ates itself specif­i­cal­ly on the pro­gres­sive left, and is attempt­ing to ally itself with the broad­er envi­ron­men­tal move­ment and with activists focussed on social and racial jus­tice. Moth­ers for Nuclear falls some­where in between: their tone is less com­bat­ive than Shellenberger’s, but Hoff and Zaitz often seem frus­trat­ed with anti-nuclear argu­ments and, in their social media feeds, point out the down­sides of renewables—an empha­sis that may turn off some of the peo­ple they are try­ing to per­suade. (They believe that nuclear pow­er should do most of the work of decar­boniza­tion, sup­ple­ment­ed by renewables.)

Nuclear ener­gy scram­bles our usu­al trib­al alle­giances. In Con­gress, Demo­c­ra­t­ic Sen­a­tors Cory Book­er and Shel­don White­house have co-spon­sored a bill with Repub­li­can Sen­a­tors John Bar­ras­so and Mike Crapo that would invest in advanced nuclear tech­nol­o­gy and pro­vide sup­port for exist­ing plants that are at risk of clo­sure; a cli­mate plat­form draft­ed by John Ker­ry and Alexan­dria Oca­sio-Cortez includ­ed a plan to “cre­ate cost-effec­tive path­ways” for devel­op­ing inno­v­a­tive reac­tors. And yet some envi­ron­men­tal orga­ni­za­tions, includ­ing Green­peace and Cli­mate Jus­tice Alliance, deplore nuclear ener­gy as unsafe and expen­sive. Per­haps most telling is the ambiva­lence that some groups express. Although the Union of Con­cerned Sci­en­tists has warned about the cli­mate impacts of shut­ting down nuclear facil­i­ties, it has his­tor­i­cal­ly sound­ed the alarm about nuclear risk. Ed Lyman, its direc­tor of nuclear-pow­er safe­ty, told me that, because “there are so many uncer­tain­ties asso­ci­at­ed with nuclear safe­ty analy­sis,” it’s “very hard to make a con­clu­sion about whether it’s safe or not.” He not­ed, dispir­it­ing­ly, that cli­mate change could increase the haz­ards at nuclear plants, which will have to con­tend with more extreme weath­er events.

When Hoff and Zaitz offi­cial­ly launched Moth­ers for Nuclear, on Earth Day, 2016, they had to fig­ure out how to tell their sto­ry and to change minds. The stan­dard images of renewables—gleaming solar pan­els, ele­gant wind tur­bines in green fields—are wel­com­ing, even glam­orous. It seemed to Hoff and Zaitz that, by com­par­i­son, the nuclear indus­try had done a ter­ri­ble job at pub­lic rela­tions. By empha­siz­ing safe­ty, they thought, the indus­try had acti­vat­ed fears. Air­lines don’t adver­tise by tout­ing their safe­ty records. It might be bet­ter to unapolo­get­i­cal­ly cel­e­brate nuclear ener­gy for its strengths.

They gave talks at schools and con­fer­ences, shared sto­ries on their Web site, post­ed on social media, and even­tu­al­ly start­ed chap­ters in oth­er coun­tries. Iida Ruishalme, a Finnish cell biol­o­gist who lives in Switzer­land and now serves as Moth­ers for Nuclear’s direc­tor of Euro­pean oper­a­tions, told me that she was drawn to the orga­ni­za­tion, in part, because of its appeal to emo­tion. The wide­spread impres­sion, she said, is that “peo­ple who like nuclear are old white dudes who like it because it’s tech­ni­cal­ly cool.” Moth­ers for Nuclear offered “this very emo­tion­al, very car­ing point of view,” she said. “The moti­va­tion comes from want­i­ng to make it bet­ter for our chil­dren.” Ruishalme said that online com­menters often tell her that the group is “clear­ly pro­pa­gan­da, a lob­by­ist front, not sincere—because it’s so pre­pos­ter­ous to think that moth­ers would actu­al­ly do this.” On the organization’s Web site, a pho­to mon­tage of women and chil­dren is accom­pa­nied by a cap­tion clar­i­fy­ing that they are pic­tures of real peo­ple who sup­port the group—not stock images.

Among oppo­nents, there is a long-stand­ing assump­tion that any­one who pro­motes nuclear pow­er must be a shill. The name “Moth­ers for Nuclear” sounds so much like some­thing dreamed up by indus­try exec­u­tives that it can elic­it sus­pi­cion, even anger, in those who are anti-nuclear. The orga­ni­za­tion is entire­ly vol­un­teer-run, with a tiny bud­get, and has not accept­ed dona­tions from com­pa­nies. But Hoff and Zaitz work at a nuclear plant and have been flown to give talks at indus­try-spon­sored events; Moth­ers for Nuclear has received small dona­tions from oth­ers who work in the indus­try. There is no deny­ing the con­flict of inter­est posed by their employ­ment; even with­in the pro-nuclear com­mu­ni­ty, their indus­try ties pro­voke uneasi­ness. Nord­haus, the exec­u­tive direc­tor of the Break­through Insti­tute, wrote in an e‑mail that, although he thinks Hoff and Zaitz are “well-inten­tioned,” nuclear advo­ca­cy should be inde­pen­dent of what he called “the lega­cy indus­try.” (The Break­through Insti­tute has a pol­i­cy against accept­ing mon­ey from ener­gy inter­ests.) Yet, from anoth­er angle, their con­nec­tion to indus­try may be an asset. “Where they’ve been suc­cess­ful is com­ing at it from a per­son­al per­spec­tive,” Jes­si­ca Lover­ing, the co-founder of Good Ener­gy Col­lec­tive, told me. Their approach to telling their sto­ries, as out­doorsy, hip­pie moms, “human­izes the indus­try,” she said.

On a driz­zly morn­ing in May, 2019, when such vis­its were pos­si­ble, Hoff and Zaitz offered me a tour of their plant. Hoff picked me up from my hotel in San Luis Obis­po in her slate-gray elec­tric Ford Focus, adorned with a “Split Don’t Emit” bumper stick­er. While we wait­ed for Zaitz at a café a few blocks away, Hoff told me about the laven­der pen­dant hang­ing around her neck. Craft­ed for her by an artist she knew in Ari­zona, it was made part­ly of ura­ni­um glass, an old-fash­ioned mate­r­i­al that has a touch of ura­ni­um added in for aes­thet­ic pur­pos­es. “I wear it as a demonstration—radiation is not nec­es­sar­i­ly dan­ger­ous,” she said. Like many nuclear advo­cates, Hoff believes that the fears pro­voked by radi­a­tion are often unfound­ed or based on infor­ma­tion that is not con­tex­tu­al­ized. A CT scan of the abdomen involves about ten times as much radi­a­tion expo­sure as the aver­age nuclear work­er gets in a year. Some sci­en­tists argue that no lev­el of radi­a­tion expo­sure is safe, but oth­ers doubt that expo­sure below a cer­tain thresh­old caus­es harm, and note that we are all exposed to nat­ur­al “back­ground” radi­a­tion in dai­ly life. (Ura­ni­um glass emits a near-neg­li­gi­ble amount.) Hoff and Zaitz believe that pan­ic about radi­a­tion from nuclear ener­gy has, cumu­la­tive­ly, caused more harm than the radi­a­tion itself.

After Zaitz arrived, we set out for Dia­blo Canyon. I rode up front; Zaitz sat in the back, pump­ing breast milk for her year-old daugh­ter. The light rain had stopped, but mist still hung in the air. We passed through the town of Avi­la Beach, dri­ving along­side the ocean. To our left, aqua­ma­rine water sparkled. On our right lay gen­tly slop­ing ter­rain of grass­es, sage­brush, wild­flow­ers, and shrubs. The facil­i­ty sits amid twelve thou­sand acres of oth­er­wise unoc­cu­pied sea­side land. Along the curv­ing road, a sign pro­claimed “Safe­ty Is No Acci­dent.” In the dis­tance, the two mas­sive con­tain­ment domes rose above a clus­ter of short­er structures.

We pulled into the park­ing lot. In one of the out­build­ings, I hand­ed over my pass­port, then placed my jack­et and bag in a plas­tic bin for an X‑ray. I walked through a met­al detec­tor, then stood under the arch of a “puffer machine,” which blast­ed me with air, shak­ing loose par­ti­cles and ana­lyz­ing them for traces of explo­sives. Once I’d been cleared, we walked upstairs to Hoff’s office, where the two women exchanged greet­ings with a few co-work­ers. We put on safe­ty glass­es and hard hats before enter­ing “the bridge,” a nar­row cor­ri­dor with large win­dows that con­nects the admin­is­tra­tion build­ing to the tur­bine hall. Through the win­dows, we could see the ocean, where water was con­tin­u­al­ly cycling into and out of the plant. A secu­ri­ty guard, armed with a hand­gun and a rifle, and wear­ing a red back­pack, saun­tered by.

The tur­bine hall, a vast space with a soar­ing, arched ceil­ing, was dom­i­nat­ed by two large gen­er­a­tors. Out­side, with­in the two con­tain­ment domes, ura­ni­um atoms were split­ting apart in a chain reac­tion, heat­ing water to more than six hun­dred degrees Fahren­heit; the steam spun the tur­bines, which in turn drove the gen­er­a­tors. The result­ing elec­tric­i­ty would bring pow­er to about three mil­lion Cal­i­for­ni­ans. Warm air rushed nois­i­ly around us. Through the din, Hoff explained dif­fer­ent parts of the sys­tem: the pipes, the springs that sup­port­ed them, the con­denser, which takes wet vapor from the tur­bine exhaust and turns it back into liq­uid. Vend­ing machines sell­ing Pep­si and Chex Mix stood against one wall. I wasn’t allowed to take pho­tos, but Hoff snapped a few of me and Zaitz. We smiled as if we were at Disneyland.

In June, 2016, not long after the for­ma­tion of Moth­ers for Nuclear, P.G. & E. announced that it would not renew its oper­at­ing licens­es: the reac­tors at Dia­blo Canyon would cease oper­a­tions in 2024 and 2025, respec­tive­ly. The com­pa­ny said that its deci­sion was based large­ly on eco­nom­ic con­sid­er­a­tions. Cus­tomer demand was declin­ing, in part because of the grow­ing pop­u­lar­i­ty of a sys­tem called com­mu­ni­ty-choice aggre­ga­tion, in which local­i­ties can choose their ener­gy sources; often they choose wind or solar farms (though they still need to rely on nat­ur­al gas at night, when solar is unavail­able). The year before, Cal­i­for­nia had passed Sen­ate Bill 350, which requires the state to derive half of its ener­gy from renew­able sources by 2030; since P.G. & E. would be legal­ly required to increase its pro­cure­ment of renew­able ener­gy, it could end up with more elec­tric­i­ty than it need­ed if it kept Dia­blo Canyon online.

The envi­ron­men­tal groups that sup­port­ed P.G. & E.’s plan, includ­ing the Nat­ur­al Resources Defense Coun­cil and Friends of the Earth, see it as a mod­el for grad­u­al­ly tran­si­tion­ing to a grid fed entire­ly by renew­able ener­gy. P.G. & E. has pledged to replace Dia­blo Canyon with oth­er low-car­bon ener­gy sources. And yet ener­gy stor­age remains a major chal­lenge. Even if P.G. & E. does man­age to fill the gap with­out help from nat­ur­al gas—a heavy lift—some argue that, giv­en California’s ambi­tious cli­mate goals, the state should be adding to its total port­fo­lio of low-car­bon ener­gy rather than sub­tract­ing from it. Experts dif­fer on the wis­dom of the choice. Steven Chu, the Nobel Prize-win­ning physi­cist who served as Pres­i­dent Barack Obama’s Sec­re­tary of Ener­gy, told me that he had urged P.G. & E. not to decom­mis­sion the plant. “It’s real­ly the last twen­ty to thir­ty per cent of elec­tric­i­ty where it’s going to be hard to go a hun­dred per cent renew­able,” he said. Daniel Kam­men, a physi­cist and a pro­fes­sor of nuclear ener­gy at the Uni­ver­si­ty of Cal­i­for­nia, Berke­ley, how­ev­er, was more san­guine. Although he is not opposed to nuclear pow­er, or even to keep­ing Dia­blo Canyon open, he said, “We don’t need nuclear, and we cer­tain­ly can get to a zero-car­bon future with­out nuclear. The mix­ture of oth­er renew­ables means you don’t have to go there.”

Hoff and Zaitz are not espe­cial­ly opti­mistic about the future of Dia­blo Canyon, but they hope that, between now and the planned clo­sure, P.G. & E. and state offi­cials can be per­suad­ed to reverse course. They seek to recruit ordi­nary Cal­i­for­ni­ans to their cause. After tour­ing the plant, I accom­pa­nied them to a radio stu­dio, where they were sched­uled to be guests on Dave Con­gal­ton Home­town Radio, a pop­u­lar local talk show. On the air, Hoff explained who they were. “Moth­ers for Nuclear offers a dif­fer­ent voice,” she said. “Nuclear pow­er plants are run by lots of men, and women have been more scared of nuclear ener­gy. We’re here to offer the moth­er­ly side of nuclear—nuclear for the future, for our chil­dren, for the planet.”

The phone lines lit up. The first cou­ple of calls were favor­able. “It’s kind of nice to hear a lit­tle bit of san­i­ty about nuclear pow­er, for a change,” a caller named John said. But then Pete, a lis­ten­er who said that he had protest­ed the con­struc­tion of Dia­blo Canyon back in the ear­ly eight­ies, brought up nuclear waste. “There’s been numer­ous efforts to put it here, put it there, put it in bar­rels, bury it in the sea, bury it in deep caves—this, that, the oth­er thing,” he said. “I don’t think any real­ly good solu­tion has even come up.”

Pete, where do you put your garbage?” Hoff asked. “Where do you put your plas­tic waste?”

That’s not radioactive!”

It’s still real­ly dam­ag­ing to the envi­ron­ment,” Hoff said.

An acci­dent at a nuclear plant is a lot worse than an explo­sion at an oil plant,” Pete said.

Zaitz jumped in. “The sur­pris­ing thing, Pete, that we found out is that nuclear is actu­al­ly the safest way to make reli­able elec­tric­i­ty when you look at even the con­se­quences of the worst acci­dents we’ve ever had,” she said. “Any oth­er ener­gy source ends up, in the long run, killing more peo­ple, whether it’s due to air pol­lu­tion, whether it’s due to indus­tri­al acci­dents. Air pol­lu­tion kills about eight mil­lion peo­ple per year.”

As the con­ver­sa­tion con­tin­ued, Hoff and Zaitz held their own, but it seemed unlike­ly that many minds would be changed deci­sive­ly. In try­ing to plan a car­bon-free future, we are faced with imper­fect choic­es and innu­mer­able unknowns. In such sit­u­a­tions, we typ­i­cal­ly go with our guts. Gut feel­ings are hard to alter. And yet, espe­cial­ly for younger peo­ple, nuclear pow­er may not elic­it vis­cer­al fears. Many peo­ple who did not grow up with the threat of a nuclear holo­caust now face a future of cli­mate chaos. Many lie awake at night imag­in­ing not melt­downs but lethal heat waves and calv­ing glac­i­ers; they dread life on an inex­orably less hos­pitable planet.

Since I first met with Hoff and Zaitz, the coro­n­avirus pan­dem­ic has upend­ed the world. At Dia­blo Canyon, the com­par­a­tive­ly small frac­tion of the plant’s work­ers who need to be on site—security guards, con­trol-room oper­a­tors, and the like—are now doing so in masks, and with oth­er safe­ty pro­to­cols in place; Hoff and Zaitz have been work­ing from home. Mean­while, last sum­mer, wild­fires set the West Coast ablaze. For Hoff and Zaitz, both crises have rein­forced their exist­ing beliefs. Evi­dence that air pol­lu­tion exac­er­bates vul­ner­a­bil­i­ty to covid-19 is yet anoth­er rea­son to move away from fos­sil fuels; the impor­tance of ven­ti­la­tors and oth­er devices at hos­pi­tals under­scores the need for reli­able, around-the-clock elec­tric­i­ty. Last August, when thick smoke blocked the sun in parts of Cal­i­for­nia, solar out­put in those areas tem­porar­i­ly plummeted.

Rolling black­outs have raised ques­tions about how California’s grid will func­tion after Dia­blo Canyon is shut down. In May, the office of the Cal­i­for­nia Inde­pen­dent Sys­tem Oper­a­tor, which is respon­si­ble for main­tain­ing the grid’s reli­a­bil­i­ty, filed com­ments to the state’s Pub­lic Util­i­ties Com­mis­sion. Its mod­el­ling, the office report­ed, showed that “incre­men­tal resource needs may be much greater than orig­i­nal­ly antic­i­pat­ed and that the sys­tem hits a crit­i­cal inflec­tion point after Dia­blo Canyon retires.” At the same time, the plant’s out­sized role is not with­out draw­backs. The reac­tors peri­od­i­cal­ly need to be tak­en offline for main­te­nance, with­draw­ing a sub­stan­tial amount of elec­tric­i­ty from the grid.

Our ener­gy sys­tem is in flux. There are inno­va­tions under way in the renew­ables sphere—advances in bat­tery stor­age, demand man­age­ment, and region­al integration—which should help over­come the chal­lenges of inter­mit­ten­cy. Nuclear sci­en­tists, for their part, are work­ing on small­er, more nim­ble nuclear reac­tors. There are com­plex eco­nom­ic con­sid­er­a­tions, which are insep­a­ra­ble from policy—for exam­ple, nuclear pow­er would imme­di­ate­ly become more com­pet­i­tive if we had a car­bon tax. And there are huge risks no mat­ter what we do.

To be fer­vent­ly pro-nuclear, in the man­ner of Hoff and Zaitz, is to see in the peace­ful split­ting of the atom some­thing almost mirac­u­lous. It is to see an ener­gy source that has been steadi­ly pro­vid­ing low-car­bon elec­tric­i­ty for decades—doing vast­ly more good than harm, sav­ing vast­ly more lives than it has taken—but which has received lit­tle cred­it and instead been maligned. It is to believe that the most sig­nif­i­cant prob­lem with nuclear pow­er, by far, is pub­lic per­cep­tion. Like the anti-nuclear world view—and per­haps part­ly in response to it—the pro-nuclear world view can edge toward dog­ma­tism. Hoff and Zaitz cer­tain­ly seem read­ier to tout stud­ies that con­firm their views, and reluc­tant to acknowl­edge any flaws that nuclear ener­gy may have. Still, even if one does not embrace nuclear pow­er to the same extent, one can rec­og­nize its past con­tri­bu­tions and ques­tion the wis­dom of count­ing it out in the future.

One of the last times I spoke with Zaitz, she not­ed that a lot of peo­ple seemed to be feel­ing dis­cour­aged at this moment, over­whelmed by the scale of the chal­lenges ahead. But she coun­selled against despair. “The hope­ful way to go into that is, ‘Oh, wow, we actu­al­ly have tech­nol­o­gy that can do this,’ ” she said. “And that’s nuclear. And so I’d rather stay hopeful.”

 

 

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