Lex Luthor wrote:
Rafael wrote:
*IF* small reactor design and localize power production for markets by decentralizing generation, essentially reducing or eliminating the demand forecasting, load dispatching and distribution functions currently performed by electric companies, then the nature of pricing changes considerably.
I don't think you understand how monopolies work. No rational CEO is going to willingly decrease their revenue just because their costs are lower. Instead, the power companies will probably use this as an excuse to hire more employees and expand the business, stockpile cash, or return more dividends to shareholders.
You didn't comprehend what was written. Power companies won't exist in the same nature they do now because tramission of power will be completely different since small reactor design means that power could be decentralized.
The reason there is a quasi-monopoly now is because power generation is centralized and distributed by semi-public companies, joining the ranks of which, means clearing nearly insurmountable regulatory hurdles. Small reactor design implies the beginning of the end of decentralized power distribution and therefore, the end of the competitive advantage held by the monopoly.