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Short Version
Autor:innen
Herausgeber
Quelle
Schlagwörter
Förderkennzeichen (FKZ)
3722 41 508 0
Forschungskennzahl
41
Zitation
Pistner, C., Englert, M., Gensch, C.-O., Harthan, R., Herold, A., Kopp, A., Liu, R., Loreck, C., Mendelevitch, R., Möller, M., Rausch, L., & Sutter, J. (2026). Climate and environmental impact of nuclear power (Deutschland. Umweltbundesamt, Ed.). https://doi.org/10.60810/openumwelt-8532
Zusammenfassung englisch
The report assesses nuclear energy’s role in the transformation to net-zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050. It contrasts top-down net-zero pathways from five integrated assessment models with a comprehensive bottom-up review of national programmes, including newcomer countries, and benchmarks these against the COP28/29 pledge to triple nuclear capacity. It further analyses system requirements in renewables-dominated grids, climate-change risks to plant reliability, and a harmonised cradle-to-grave environmental footprint of nuclear power across 40 regional life-cycle chains (2020 and 2030). Severe-accident impacts and proliferation risks are discussed, and life-cycle costs and GHG abatement costs of new nuclear (incl. SMRs) are compared with wind and solar.
Übersetzungen
Verbundene Publikation
Climate and environmental impact of nuclear power
(German Environment Agency, 2026)
The report assesses nuclear energy’s role in the transformation to net-zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050. It contrasts top-down net-zero pathways from five integrated assessment models with a comprehensive bottom-up review of national programmes, including newcomer countries, and benchmarks these against the COP28/29 pledge to triple nuclear capacity. It further analyses system requirements in renewables-dominated grids, climate-change risks to plant reliability, and a harmonised cradle-to-grave environmental footprint of nuclear power across 40 regional life-cycle chains (2020 and 2030). Severe-accident impacts and proliferation risks are discussed, and life-cycle costs and GHG abatement costs of new nuclear (incl. SMRs) are compared with wind and solar.
