Lovering et al. (2016) present data on the overnight costs of more than half of nuclear reactors built worldwide since the beginning of the nuclear age. The authors claim that this consolidated data set offers more accurate insights than previous country-level assessments. Unfortunately, the authors make analytical choices that mask nuclear power's real construction costs, cherry pick data, and include misleading data on early experimental and demonstration reactors. For those reasons, serious students of such issues should look elsewhere for guidance about understanding the true costs of nuclear power plants.
HIGHLIGHTS FROM A REPLY TO "HISTORICAL CONSTRUCTION COSTS OF GLOBAL NUCLEAR POWER REACTORS"• Lovering et al. (2016) claim to accurately assess nuclear plant costs over time.• The authors err by relying on overnight costs, which exclude interest.• The authors cherry pick data (e.g, ignoring problems with French nuclear data).• The article's cherry picked data don't even support the article's own conclusions.• Lovering et al. is not a reliable source for costs of nuclear power. Resubmitted to Energy Policy after addressing reviewers' comments Lovering et al. (2016) present data on the overnight costs of more than half of nuclear reactors built worldwide since the beginning of the nuclear age. The authors claim that this consolidated data set offers more accurate insights than previous country-level assessments. Unfortunately, the authors make analytical choices that mask nuclear power's real construction costs, cherry pick data, and include misleading data on early experimental and demonstration reactors. For those reasons, serious students of such issues should look elsewhere for guidance about understanding the true costs of nuclear power.
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