The Journal. - Why Microsoft Wants Three Mile Island's Nuclear Power
Episode Date: October 4, 2024Last month, Microsoft and Constellation Energy announced a deal to restart Pennsylvania’s Three Mile Island, the site of the country’s worst nuclear power accident. WSJ’s Jennifer Hiller reports... that the goal is to power the tech giant’s growing artificial intelligence ambitions. Further Listening: - Artificial: The OpenAI Story - Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella's Big Bet on AI Further Reading: - Three Mile Island’s Nuclear Plant to Reopen, Help Power Microsoft’s AI Centers Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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In 1979, a nuclear power plant on Three Mile Island, which is about 100 miles west of Philadelphia,
had a major accident.
A government official said that a breakdown in an atomic power plant in Pennsylvania today
is probably the worst nuclear reactor accident to date.
I heard a very loud noise that sounded like a huge release of steam.
One of the reactors at Three Mile Island overheated and partially melted down.
A cooling pump broke down and the plant did just what it was supposed to do, shut itself
off, but not before some radioactivity had escaped. A cooling pump broke down and the plant did just what it was supposed to do, shut itself off.
But not before some radioactivity had escaped.
Heat and pressure built up and some radioactive steam escaped into the building housing the reactor
and eventually out into the plant and the air.
Certain people have been advised to evacuate.
Others have been urged to remain indoors.
Telephone lines in the Harrisburg area are jammed and immediate highways are too as more people decide to leave.
No one died and it turned out only a small amount of radiation was released.
The exposure for two million people was less than that of a chest x-ray,
but the disaster had a lasting impact on the American psyche.
I think one of the big ramifications was just that there was a loss of confidence in the
nuclear power industry.
That's our colleague Jennifer Hiller, who covers energy.
And people just became maybe more aware of the problems or more fearful of the potential
downside.
And kind of the potential downside.
And kind of the upshot over a long period of time was that nuclear power plant construction in the US really slowed down in the 80s and 90s.
And we really aren't building plants today.
And Three Mile Island is one of the reasons why.
After the accident, one of Three Mile Island's reactors actually kept running for 40 years.
But in 2019, the plant closed, seemingly for good.
But now, an unlikely suitor wants to reopen Three Mile Island.
The tech giant Microsoft.
I think it's a wild story.
It's something that really you wouldn't have seen coming. Microsoft is in search of so much power and so much clean power that it is willing to
go to Three Mile Island, the site of our worst commercial nuclear accident in the U.S.
Welcome to The Journal, our show about money, business, and power.
I'm Ryan Knudson.
It's Friday, October 4th.
Coming up on the show,
why Microsoft wants to turn Three Mile Island back on. You let him try violin because you love him.
And if you love him that much, love him enough to make sure he's buckled up and in the back
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Brought to you by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration and the Ad Council.
You might think that U.S. electricity consumption has gone up over the past few decades,
as we've used more and more devices.
But for most of that time, that wasn't true.
A more efficient grid and greener designs
have kept electricity use relatively flat.
But all that changed about two years ago, when there was a sudden surge in electricity
demand, thanks in large part to a new technology.
I would say starting in late 2022, early 2023, everybody really started talking about generative AI.
And generative AI uses a lot more power than a regular Google search.
It requires a lot of energy.
And the tech industry realized essentially that it was on the cusp of this new boom
that it compares to sort of being the next internet. And, you know, something that's very important for the U.S.
economy. They argue that it's important for global security and sort of the U.S.
position in the world as well.
So the tech industry started making really big strides in generative AI.
Generative artificial intelligence, stuff like chat GPT, requires a lot of energy.
Asking chat GPT a question can use up to 10 times more power than doing a Google search.
How much energy does like one data center consume?
It really varies.
You can have smaller data centers that might be you
know 10 or 20 megawatts. That would have been you know kind of a normal data
center until not too long ago. But some of the newer data centers are
consuming hundreds of megawatts. How much is a megawatt? So a megawatt is
roughly a big box retailer. And a megawatt is So a megawatt is roughly a big box
retailer.
And a megawatt is about what they're drawing at any
at any given time.
I see. Yeah. So a gigawatt, if you have a gigawatt.
Is a thousand Walmarts.
Yeah, that's a thousand Walmarts.
It's about like San Francisco.
So you can have.
San Francisco is a gigawatt, is a thousand
Walmarts?
Exactly. So wait, it's possible that some of these new data centers use up as much electricity
as San Francisco as an entire city?
Yes.
Holy smokes!
I'm not allowed to swear on this show, but wow, that is enormous!
Yeah, so you see the problem.
This is a lot of power, and we have a lot of power see the problem.
This is a lot of power.
And we have a lot of power in the US.
We have a lot of times, most of the time, we have excess power because the system is sort of designed to have a lot of wiggle room.
But we have new factories being built. have electric vehicles coming into the system, including big fleets that use a lot of power.
So there are other big new users of the grid,
but there are lots of projects that are asking for
many hundreds of megawatts. So it's complicated.
Making things more complicated is the fact that these
tech companies have set stringent climate goals,
meaning that they don't want to power these data centers by buying carbon-heavy sources like natural gas and coal.
They want their power to be clean.
Microsoft, a major investor in OpenAI,
the company behind Chad GPT,
has pledged not only to be carbon neutral by 2030,
but carbon negative.
Here's Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella in 2020.
We must take responsibility to address
the carbon footprint of our own technology and company,
but we will also go beyond that.
By 2050, we will remove from the environment all of the carbon we have
emitted directly or by electrical consumptions
since our company's founding in 1975. For recent disclosures from the company show its climate metrics are moving in the wrong direction.
Microsoft reported that its emissions were up 30% over the previous three years.
So Microsoft and the other tech companies have been making progress on their climate goals,
but that has sort of reversed in the face of AI.
And they're kind of backsliding a little bit
because they're in this huge growth period
and they're needing to use more electricity.
And they're also needing to build a lot of data centers
and buy things like steel and concrete
to build those data centers.
And that's really being driven by this AI boom.
Microsoft is already partially powering its data centers. And that's really being driven by this AI boom. Microsoft is already partially powering its data centers with clean energy
generated from solar and wind farms.
But wind and solar don't provide constant energy.
These data centers are online all the time.
They basically are not flexible. They are using power 24 seven.
Right. People are asking chat GPT, you know, are not flexible.
source on the grid. You're not able to maybe dial down your use the way that a household might be able to or that a manufacturing facility may be able to. You need to be on all the
time.
That's why companies like Microsoft are more and more interested in nuclear energy.
So the promise of nuclear energy is that it can deliver baseload power, so a very steady and reliable source of power 24-7,
and that it can do it in a carbon-free way.
Basically, the big stacks that you see
at a nuclear power plant are releasing steam.
So it's just water that gets released from a plant.
There's no carbon dioxide.
And so the promise of nuclear is that you can produce a lot of reliable clean power.
But the concern about nuclear is that you have radioactive waste that we don't have
a great solution for in the US.
Currently, we just store everything on site under what are turning out to be very long-term
arrangements and people have safety concerns around nuclear power.
Is nuclear a more cost-effective source of energy?
No, it's expensive.
There's a lot of people who think it could be cheap or say that it's cheap when a whole
bunch of other factors are considered.
But, you know, it's a more expensive kind of plant to operate. You need more people on site and they have higher regulatory costs. But there's a lot of advocates of nuclear power who would say
that that expense is worth it when you look at the climate benefits and the reliability benefits
and that we're going to have
to pay for those one way or another. So you're going to need nuclear to be sort of part of the
reliability and climate solution. But rebooting a power plant is a lot more complicated than a
Microsoft Windows update. That's next.
If you're a tech company that wants nuclear energy, there aren't a lot of great options
for getting it.
Building new plants is extremely expensive and time consuming.
There's new, smaller reactors that might be able to sit next to a data center,
but that's still pretty far off from being scalable in the US.
So the quickest thing to do is reopen an old decommissioned plant.
Let's talk about Three Mile Island. Introduce us to this deal that just got announced.
So this deal is just got announced.
So this deal is between Microsoft and Constellation. Constellation Energy owns Three Mile Island.
And about 20 months ago, they started looking at what it would take technically to bring Three Mile Island back. So this deal is a power purchase agreement between Constellation and Microsoft.
In a 20-year power deal, Constellation Energy will revive and run the undamaged reactor
from Three Mile Island and sell that power to Microsoft.
So is Microsoft going to build a data center right near Three Mile Island and plug it in to the nuclear power plant?
How does that work exactly? It's not going to be directly adjacent or receiving power directly
from Three Mile Island, but they will have data centers in the region. Okay, so it's sort of just
like we're going to pay to put this power into grid, and then that'll sort of balance itself out as it moves around the networks in the US, sort of.
Exactly. When you're pulling power from the grid, you never know exactly what you're using.
You can assume that you're using, you know, sort of the mix of whatever's on there,
because electrons just flow.
But, yeah, they will be paying for that clean power to be delivered.
Microsoft's vice president of energy called the agreement, quote, a major
milestone in Microsoft's efforts to help decarbonize the grid. For
Constellation, the deal is a huge win. The company's stock jumped 22 percent the day of
the announcement. Here's Constellation's CEO talking about the new partnership at a conference
last week. Nuclear energy is like peanut butter and jelly with the AI needs for power, right? We
have facilities that likewise were always designed to run 24-7, and so it's a good matchup. And
Microsoft has been focused on that matching
because they want to have energy that's produced
at the same time they use it.
The company says it will take four years
and cost $1.6 billion to reopen the plant.
And it will change its name from Three Mile Island
to the Crane Clean Energy Center.
Why is it going to take until 2028
to reopen this plan if it only shut down
and, you know, five years ago or so?
Okay, you just kind of go back in there
and Homer Simpson flip the switches back on.
Homer Simpson is the nuclear industry's
favorite fictional character.
Nuclear.
It's pronounced nu-cular.
I imagine, I suspect that the nuclear industry does not like Homer Simpson.
They're not a fan.
The Department of Energy has pages even dedicated to busting Simpson's mouth.
Like, there's no green goo.
Ooh, what's this?
Don't! Who'd have thought a nuclear reactor would be so complicated?
But you were asking about what they need.
Yeah, like why is it going to take four years to turn this nuclear plant back on?
Well, everything that you do at a nuclear power plant you have to be, of course,
really careful with. And you're going to have to go through the Nuclear Regulatory Commission,
which is a pretty stringent regulatory body that oversees that industry.
What about the risk for the people that live around these nuclear power plants?
So like for the people that live around Three Mile Island, is there a chance that, you know,
there could be another Three Mile Island disaster?
I mean, I don't know that you can ever eliminate all of the risk factors.
I think there's always going to be risk that something could go wrong.
People operate these plants.
Human error is a thing.
You can have mechanical or other failures at plants.
But certainly we haven't had another three-mile island in the U.S.
And a lot of people consider this to be a really safe form of power.
They've got a really stringent regulator that oversees them, often considered the most stringent regulator in the world.
Is this the return of nuclear in the US or is this just maybe a sort of stopgap solution
for the tech industry as they transition to other technologies?
That's a really good question.
And I think it's hard to say for certain.
It's definitely something of a turnaround for the nuclear power industry.
This is not the kind of project that we would have imagined, you know,
even three years ago.
It would have been impossible to imagine
that there was a customer willing to pay
to bring a nuclear plant out of decommissioning.
But I think in terms of, right,
how much can this industry grow?
I think that's just a big question
because wind and solar is being added so quickly.
You could have advances in battery technology.
So I think there's a question about exactly how much market share nuclear will be able
to take and how quickly they would be able to do that.
So what's your takeaway from this new arrangement of odd bedfellows, Microsoft and Three Mile
Island?
I think it just speaks to what the power demand is going to be and like the links that people
would be willing to go to secure that power.
The demand coming from the tech industry so far appears to be insatiable and that we're
going to need more forms of power generation coming online in the coming years to be able
to meet that. That's all for today, Friday, October 4th.
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Have you ever been to Three Mile Island?
I have not.
Me either. I have not. Me either.
I have not heard great things.
It's maybe not the biggest tourist destination.