By Robert Rosner, Jeremy Klavans, and Sam Olofin

Discussions of the future of nuclear power often focus on safety, proliferation, waste storage, and carbon emissions - accepting cost as a given. This tool breaks the cost of investing in nuclear power into its component parts and considers the price of three configurations of the "fuel cycle" - that is, the process that includes everything from the mining and production of uranium fuel to the disposal of spent fuel after it has been used to generate electricity. (A more thorough discussion of the development of this tool can be found here.)