You're not quoting Al Gore, you're quoting some blogger trying to "interpret" what Gore said.
That blogger correctly quotes We Can Solve It:
The group “We Can Solve It”, founded by Gore, reports that his plan includes a mix of energy sources, including “existing nuclear”.
That blogger then bizarrely "interprets" this very clear statement to mean something completely different.
Gore's plan is on www.repoweramerica.org, there's no need to "interpret".
Gore's plan is for 10 years, not 100 years. He keeps nuclear generation at current levels, which can be done by extending the licenses of existing reactors, so no, he doesn't say we need to build new reactors. Keeping nuclear generation at current levels means that as a percentage it falls from 20% now to 17% in 2020. He also mentions that other scenarios could reduce nuclear further:
http://www.repoweramerica.org/plan/analysis/<snip>
* Repower America Scenario A: Energy efficiency policies and programs reduce demand by 28%, nuclear and hydropower – neither of which emits CO2 – remain at current levels, America ramps up wind consistent with recent sectoral growth rates, solar thermal with storage is deployed at scale, and solar PV and geothermal grow at levels consistent with the projections of industry experts.
* Repower America Scenario B: Like Scenario A, includes a mix of efficiency, renewables, and existing generation but assumes fossil fuel industries deploy approximately 20 large coal and natural gas power plants that capture and sequester their CO2 emissions (these are known as coal and natural gas plants with CCS). Wind levels are reduced commensurate with the additional contribution from fossil power with CCS.
* Additional Scenarios: As referenced earlier, there are numerous possible pathways for reaching 100% clean electricity by 2020 — it would be impossible to predict exactly what technologies will comprise the mix. Once the transformation to a system that is highly efficient, renewables–based and connected via a unified smart grid commences, a variety of configurations become possible. For example, industry experts indicate that the 2020 generation mix could include larger contributions from geothermal, solar photovoltaics, and other rapidly emerging renewable technologies — along with new ways to improve efficiency. A modernized grid diminishes the magnitude of traditional baseload plant required for system stability, potentially allowing decreased reliance on aging nuclear power resources. For reference, the ranges described below represent Scenarios A, B, and portfolios with higher geothermal and solar PV levels supported by industry analysis.
The Scenario Details:
Start with carbon-free power at today’s levels: In all scenarios, today’s generation from nuclear and conventional hydropower is held constant. These two sources combined provide over 1 million GWh or 23% of the 2020 projected demand.
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