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Russia's Floating Nuclear Plants Under Fire From Greens 234

slashdotmsiriv writes with a link to an International Business Times article about Russia's plan to build floating nuclear power plants (a subject we discussed some time ago). The project is getting a lot of flack over possible safety problems from green groups. "The first floating power plant will be named 'Academician Lomonosov.' Mikhail Lomonosov was an 18th- century Russian scientist who achieved worldwide acclaim for his work in chemistry and physics and was founder of Moscow's state university. Customers could include Russian state-controlled gas giant Gazprom, the northern region of Chukotka and countries from Namibia to Indonesia, according to industry sources."
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Russia's Floating Nuclear Plants Under Fire From Greens

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  • Surprising? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Jarjarthejedi ( 996957 ) <christianpinch.gmail@com> on Friday April 20, 2007 @06:54PM (#18819117) Journal
    Has ANYTHING Nuclear related not taken flak from green groups? I'm not surprised at all that they're objecting, I mean this is a perfectly clean form of electricity which wouldn't pollute anything and, in the event that it sank, would only deposit nuclear materials back where they came from, the Earth's Crust. Oh sorry, my anti-green group side is showing...
    • Re:Surprising? (Score:5, Insightful)

      by ArcherB ( 796902 ) * on Friday April 20, 2007 @06:56PM (#18819137) Journal
      Has ANYTHING Nuclear related not taken flak from green groups? I'm not surprised at all that they're objecting, I mean this is a perfectly clean form of electricity which wouldn't pollute anything and, in the event that it sank, would only deposit nuclear materials back where they came from, the Earth's Crust. Oh sorry, my anti-green group side is showing...

      I think you can broaden your question to be "Has ANYTHING Energy related not taken flak from green groups?"

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by CiderJack ( 961987 )
      "perfectly clean form of electricity which wouldn't pollute anything"

      Right! And nuclear waste is NOT pollution! </snark>
      • Waste != Pollution (Score:5, Insightful)

        by Firethorn ( 177587 ) on Friday April 20, 2007 @08:34PM (#18819873) Homepage Journal
        Right! And nuclear waste is NOT pollution!

        I make a distinction between waste and pollution.

        A barrel of waste in a containment facility isn't pollution. Mercury, in a container, is a valuable product for commercial use. Mercury that's escaped the smokestack of a coal power plant is pollution.

        Basically, since we contain all the nuclear waste quite successfully(esp compared to coal power), it's not pollution.

        Having seen the figures for realworld deaths caused by the pollution of coal power, combined with it's safety record and the figures screamed by the greens for worst-case nuclear disasters*, I'd rather go with the proven safety record of nuclear.

        *That aren't even panned out for the worst nuclear power disaster in history, Chernobyl.
        • How do you know how many deaths will be involved with radioactive waste with a 10,000 year half-life? Should the last 65 years* be considered statically significant on the performance for the next 100,000 ?

          * By the way, it's not good:
          http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_civilian_nucl ear_accidents [wikipedia.org]
          http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_military_nucl ear_accidents [wikipedia.org]
          • by AaronW ( 33736 ) on Friday April 20, 2007 @09:29PM (#18820317) Homepage
            The sad part is is that there are viable methods of recycling a lot of the nuclear waste, i.e. breeder reactors. I'd love to see the US push nuclear power and build breeder reactors to deal with the waste and create more fuel.

            A breeder reactor can reuse almost all of the high-level nuclear waste. I hate to see them just bury some potentially useful fuel, especially when the future supply of fissionable material is limited.
            • I see some sort of recycling reactor coming to the fore within the next hundred years.

              A breeder reactor can reuse almost all of the high-level nuclear waste. I hate to see them just bury some potentially useful fuel, especially when the future supply of fissionable material is limited.

              It's limited only by the fact that we built up quite a stockpile during the cold war and that's limited continued exploration.

              For that matter I've always figured that if they interred used reactor rods in Yucca Mountain or els
            • Its probably the Greens which are causing Nuclear to stagnate.

              If Nuclear was perceived as safe by the voting public then they probably would recycle more.
          • by Firethorn ( 177587 ) on Friday April 20, 2007 @10:23PM (#18820703) Homepage Journal
            1st: Something with a 10k half-life actually isn't that dangerous, especially if you spread it around(dilution), rather than trying to keep it concentrated. It even neglects that there's still 90-99% usable fuel in that 'waste', it just needs some reprocessing. Some of the newer designs are even capable of using it with minimal reprocessing.

            Should the last 65 years* be considered statically significant on the performance for the next 100,000?
            * By the way, it's not good:


            Not good? Compared to what? Coal power?

            Particulate emissions from power blamed for 30,000 deaths/year [sierraclub.org]
            Coal power blamed for 22,000 premature deaths, in the USA, per year [nrdc.org]

            From your links:
            2000-2006: 13 workers exposed to 'slight' or 'trace' levels of radiation, one plant had increased radioactive levels about 10% over ambient for "several days" in Hungary. This was considered a critical event. Overall level probably still less than ambient in Colorado Springs. Deaths: None.
            1990's: Deaths: 2 Japanese workers at a uranium reprocessing facility who violated procedures. Will likely increase to 3 eventually. Exposed: 2k or so Russian workers exposed to up to 50mSv(half the allowed 5 year dosage). Happened at a plutonium reprocessing facility; most likely nuclear weapons related. Unknown number(but probably under ten) Georgian soldiers; from a military training source, not nuclear power.
            1980s: Chernobyl, currently blamed for 93k possible future deaths by Greenpeace(hardly a dispartial source), current death toll by the other side is placed at just over a hundred. The models predicting thousands of deaths use the linear no-threshold model, which is in dispute. Studys on low level radiation exposure actually suggest a negative correlation with cancer(IE more radiation, up to a point, leads to less cancer). Besides Chernobyl, there was 1 other civilian fatality, and 13 Russian navy members died in two submarine accidents. There were four other exposure incidents; half military half civilian, two escaped containment.

            I'm skipping earlier than the 1980s. Nuclear power in the '70s was just under development, it'd be like using the model-T to express car safety. The models are just that different.

            Even if we take greenpeace's number, pad to to 100k for two decades, that's still 1/6th the death toll as experienced in the USA ALONE for coal power over the same time. And Chernobyl was a worse than worst case scenario; especially when compared to the safety of US plants.

            Even Russian power plants are far safer today; Chernobyl was their wakeup, as TMI was ours.
            • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

              by Rei ( 128717 )
              TMI was not our "wakeup call", nor Chernobyl theirs. TMI and Chernobyl were our respective PR disasters. Before TMI, the Us had nuclear accident after nuclear accident. The USSR had dozens of nuclear accidents after dozens of nuclear accidents (their nuclear industry really devastated a number of regions; they really seemed to have no concept of how much they were destroying their own country). It wasn't only confined to us two nations -- the Windscale disaster being a good example.

              We still continue to
              • TMI was not our "wakeup call", nor Chernobyl theirs. TMI and Chernobyl were our respective PR disasters.

                TMI was the first US meltdown of an operational power plant. Most of the rest of the accidents and disasters were at experimental plants. Those are to be expected, much like Marie Curie [wikipedia.org]'s death because we didn't have a clue about radiation at the time. Today we have that knowledge.

                I'm still going to call it a wakeup call because it spured a fairly massive shift towards safety in nuclear operations. Ch
          • The "waste" only has a 10,000 year half life, because recycling the stuff is illegal.
          • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

            by arivanov ( 12034 )
            In less then 50 years we will have the radioactive waste problem solved. There is a very big landfill where we can dump it. Big. Yellow. Heated to a million degrees C. Right above your head.

            So in fact you do not have a 10000 year storage problem. You have "we do not invest enough into the exploration of space" problem. Anything else aside, there is plenty of space to dump stuff or leave it cool off once you leave the confines of the earth atmosphere.
            • We shouldn't be shooting the waste into the sun. We should be using it in breeder/IFR reactors for even more power. As for the low level stuff, grind it up and mix it with earth to seal old mines.
      • Not to mention the fact that Russia is single handedly responsible for the largest nuclear waste accident known to man. Honestly, scientists aren't a 100% sure about the results of that crap seeping into the ocean through the groundwater. Hell one of the longest standing theories on disposing of nuclear waste is to keep it the fuck away from the groundwater. Usually this implies burying the crap deep in a natural clay basin so, that 2,000 years later when the drums begin to leak the crap doesn't immediately
        • Never mind, I hadn't realized the scale of these power plants. Still not so sure I believe ...

          Much thought has been given to protecting the plant from external factors. For example, if an airliner, even one as big as a Boeing, were to fall on the plant, there is no way it would destroy the reactor.

          ...otherwise it's really a neat idea, so long as they aren't bullshitting everyone. Wouldn't want to see a tsunami prove these guys liars and all.

      • Re:Surprising? (Score:5, Interesting)

        by TheRaven64 ( 641858 ) on Friday April 20, 2007 @09:02PM (#18820077) Journal
        You know, I'm still not convinced by the concept of 'nuclear waste.' The reason it's dangerous is that it's radioactive. If it's radioactive, that means it's a good energy source. A lot of so-called nuclear waste would work well as a power source for betavoltic generators or similar.
        • There is quite a bit of truth to this. The difference between "nuclear fuel" and "nuclear waste" is mostly economic or political.

          There's a lot of fissionable material left in most modern nuclear "waste" (fuel rods removed from reactors) which isn't recovered for political reasons (Carter banned reprocessing in the U.S. because he thought it would encourage weapons production elsewhere). That stuff would even be economical to reprocess, according to most analyses that I've read.

          Beyond that, once you've fissi
      • Right! And nuclear waste is NOT pollution!
        If nuclear fuel is properly recycled, the waste is less harmful than it was before it was mined.

        Or do you think all that Uranium naturally sitting in the ground, or dissolved into the ocean, is harmless?
        • Trivia fact: Using current methods and an IFR reactor(99.5% efficient), it's possible to filter enough transuranics from the ocean using distillation methods to keep the thing powered.

          And get usefull amounts of other valuable metals while you're at it. The mounds of salt might be a pain in the butt to move though...
    • by GuyMannDude ( 574364 ) on Friday April 20, 2007 @08:29PM (#18819845) Journal

      Has ANYTHING Nuclear related not taken flak from green groups?

      You've obviously never watched "Godzilla vs. The Smog Monster". Those Japanese hippies partying on the side of Mt. Fuji get damn near wiped out by Hedorah before Godzilla saves their grubby, unwashed, marijuana-reeking asses. By the end of the movie, they're so damn happy they've lived to smoke another joint that they'd probably OK the installation of a Chernobyl-style reactor right next to the free-love commune where they all live.

      GMD

    • Actually that's not quite true. Quite often nuclear power produces a number of extremely deadly highly radioactive short half life products which either break down or are burnt up by the fuel cycle. If those were to escape it would be bad (and would pollute the oceans not the crust with different elements than we mined).

      Don't get me wrong, I support nuclear power. I think we should get a good nuclear power design with certain requirements on building locations etc, have it pretty strict, but once approved h
    • Yeah the Greens are still preferring coal power plants to Nuclear power in Australia.
  • So, S.T.A.L.K.E.R. 2 would be like Waterworld [imdb.com], with 'Academician Lomonosov' being the center of the zone?
  • by atomic777 ( 860023 ) on Friday April 20, 2007 @06:58PM (#18819157)
    Why aren't these groups up in arms about nuclear-powered subs that have navigated our oceans for quite some time? How is this really any different on a fundamental level?
    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward
      Sub reactors are tiny. And they ARE up in arms against them.
      • by Harmonious Botch ( 921977 ) * on Friday April 20, 2007 @08:10PM (#18819753) Homepage Journal
        I'll bet that this is surplus from one of their submarines.

        Even with the cost of Russian labor, it would be tricky just to move and install this thing, complete with power cables, mooring lines, etc for 200K. It therefore follows that they already have the reactor. Where do Russians get surplus reactors? From subs that aren't seaworthy any more.
        • by arivanov ( 12034 )
          It is not a one off. They have circa 10 nuclear icebreakers all of which except the first (Lenin) use the same reactor design.

          The only difference here is that you put it on a small dedicated ship and not on a monster the size of some smaller supertankers dedicated to going at 16+ knots through the arctic ice.
      • by Chas ( 5144 )
        "Sub reactors are tiny."

        Okay then. What about the reactors in some of our Navy's aircraft carriers?

        They sure as hell aren't "tiny" by any stretch of the imagination.
    • by Timesprout ( 579035 ) on Friday April 20, 2007 @07:01PM (#18819205)
      Well fundamentally it's different because unlike the submarines the power plant cant launch missiles and torpedoes at you if you complain too much.
    • by misleb ( 129952 )
      Because there's no telling the military what that can and cannot do. You think fighting city hall is hard.... :-)

      -matthew
    • > Why aren't these groups up in arms about nuclear-powered subs that have navigated our oceans for quite some time?

      They were up in arms, until the Russian government took the critics on a safety demonstration to the Barents See in one of their subs.
    • by Bo'Bob'O ( 95398 )
      Most I've known can't stand them, but its a much more effective to try and stop something before it starts, rather then years after its become common practice.
  • First of all, the objections were noted last time Slashdot covered this topic. Secondly, the greens are always complaining about nuclear power plants.

    Also I see a some discrepancies between this article and others. Aside from the obvious claim that this is the first floating nuclear power plant in history (I guess if you don't count 11 carriers, a couple dozen cruisers, and well over 100 submarines for the USN alone, none of which have had a nuclear accident, btw), the BBC quotes it as costing $336 milli
  • by zymano ( 581466 ) on Friday April 20, 2007 @07:00PM (#18819195)
    http://news.independent.co.uk/europe/article234753 6.ece [independent.co.uk]

    Do you think Putin cares about the green party.
  • by Lord_Slepnir ( 585350 ) on Friday April 20, 2007 @07:04PM (#18819233) Journal
    There will be a meeting for anyone interested in protesting held in the woods about 2 miles outside of town at about 11pm tonight. Bring a shovel.

    --VladP

  • by Edward Kmett ( 123105 ) on Friday April 20, 2007 @07:10PM (#18819271) Homepage
    http://www.google.com/search?q=fuel+rods&ie=utf-8& oe=utf-8&aq=t&rls=org.mozilla:en-US:official&clien t=firefox-a [google.com]

    Fuel Rods
    Whatever you're looking for
    you can get it on EBay
    www.eBay.com
  • by Archwyrm ( 670653 ) on Friday April 20, 2007 @07:11PM (#18819275) Homepage
    Just how many light years away is this gas giant, Gazprom?
  • Scandals around gasprom is well known. Even martians know that russia is a state that is run by mafia. I dont think that these grunts would care for environmental concerns.
    • by X.25 ( 255792 )
      Scandals around gasprom is well known. Even martians know that russia is a state that is run by mafia. I dont think that these grunts would care for environmental concerns.

      US (and quite many other countries) are also run by mafia. Just different kind of mafia. So, point is ...?
  • by starseeker ( 141897 ) on Friday April 20, 2007 @07:13PM (#18819303) Homepage
    If you think about it, one of the most significant difficulties with building nuclear power plants is the "not in my backyard" problem. This could move the problem onto the oceans, perhaps the safest place for it. (This doesn't address the "any nuke is a bad nuke" arguments, but those are likely to prove impractical in a power hungry world in the long run...)

    Benefits:

    1) No immediate population centers. This gives any fallout time to disperse in case of a major failure.
    2) Portability. Aside from the commercial advantages (shift reactors to high demand areas, no building costs for new locations/shutdown and cleanup costs for areas suddenly with low demand, etc) things like this could be moved off the coasts of disaster regions to provide major power to devastated areas quickly.
    3) If they build it to be submersible, they can simply ride out any storm below the wave level. This means a lot of the extreme construction required for fixed-target plant defenses (storm and hostile) becomes less critical.

    Risks:

    1) Reliability engineering may prove a challenge for large scale plants. This is unknown at present, and I didn't see enough information handy as to studies done on the designs. You need to simulate the heck out of these things, and design failsafe (I wonder if it could be made provably failsafe...)

    2) If a large amount of radioactive material gets dumped accidentally into a major ocean current (I should think this an unlikely failure mode with correct designs, but just suppose...), I'm not sure about the effects - better or worse than venting into the atmosphere? Will it simply sink and stay in one area, eventually recoverable?

    Using truly modern designs, I am willing to believe the risk of major disaster can be made very small. (It seems like the human element was the least accounted for in older designs, so including that in the designs this time around should help...) This is a very interesting idea, and I think it deserves a detailed study to ascertain its risks, benefits, and whether it is practical with current technology.
    • by SixFactor ( 1052912 ) on Friday April 20, 2007 @08:06PM (#18819725) Journal
      To address your risk points:

      1. Reliability. For any nuclear power plant of any design, the key to reliability is ensuring its structures, systems, and components (SSCs) are by themselves reliable (a chain only being as strong as its weakest link), and more importantly, qualified to meet rigorous standards during harsh (i.e., accident) operating conditions. In the U.S., the Maintenance Rule (10CFR 50.65) requires that reliability and unavailability records be always available for NRC audit. This is a big factor in why US plants have astronomical production records compared to even 10 years ago. Simply put, using proven components is a Good Thing(TM).

      2. Radiation material release. Dilution is the solution to pollution. The risk of cancers (thyroid, bone) is already conservatively overestimated by using current methods, and conservative standards ensure these risks are further minimized. And let's be clear on this: any operating nuclear power plant periodically performs a controlled release of radioactive material into the environment during the course of its operation. These releases ensure that the activity levels are low, the wind is going in a proper direction, and that once diluted, are inconsequential with regard to risk. I'd like to say nuclear is pollution-free, but it I would be lying. But the nature and level of that pollution's release is tightly controlled so as to be safe.

      You are absolutely correct about the effects of human intervention: if the machine was left alone, TMI-1's core collapse would not have occurred (operations belatedly closed off the source of the initial primary coolant loss - a stuck-open valve - but it also closed off the core's cooling path, which was through this valve); Chernobyl's catastrophic reactivity/steam explosion would not have occurred if operators did not conduct an ill-conceived experiment to maximize production.

      Modern Western designs incorporate a great deal of lessons learned from the past. They incorporate a great deal of redundancy, or have features that allow an operator a great deal of time to take action, in case of an emergency.

      One other thought: I'll call these "barge" nukes - are not a new concept. They were conceived in the 60's, and several US nukes in operation today were originally intended to be on barges, towed to a transmission site, and operated from there. Typically, these units had small containment volumes, which necessitated the invention of ice condenser systems to absorb the energy from a loss of coolant accident. The barge thing didn't fly, but these plants currently operate on land, but retain the ice condenser feature. Nice cold containments.
    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      by DerekLyons ( 302214 )

      If you think about it, one of the most significant difficulties with building nuclear power plants is the "not in my backyard" problem.

      There is very little ocean that is a) within the (legal) control of the US that is b) not in somebody's backyard. Just for one example.

      Benefits:

      1) No immediate population centers. This gives any fallout time to disperse in case of a major failure.
      2) Portability. Aside from the commercial advantages (shift reactors to high demand areas, no building costs for

    • by samkass ( 174571 )
      Benefit: Russia won't have to build that multi-billion dollar tunnel to ship its electricity to Alaska after all. Just float it over.

    • Reliability engineering may prove a challenge for large scale plants.

      Materials science and QA has progressed a lot in the past 20 years. For project design and management you'd probably want Norskies or Canucks. For construction, South Korea is probably best, but for mega-projects things tend to get distributed around the world. Facilities this size are modular and are quite amazing to see happen.
  • I'm a convert (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Cervantes ( 612861 ) on Friday April 20, 2007 @07:17PM (#18819335) Journal
    I used to be solidly anti-nuclear, but after I educated myself and weighed the pro's and con's, I realized that it's the way to go. One plant, with it's few tonnes of radioactive waste that can be reprocessed several times and then securely stored away even though it's not an immediate mortal threat, can produce as much energy as many ugly, smelly, waste-by-the-megaton, coal plants.

    Really, it is the appropriate mid-range solution. Hydro plants are very good (the one in Quebec is amazingly huge), but you're limited in where you can have them. I don't agree with man-made lakes feeding Dam hydro, and tidal/wind are a ways off yet... nuclear is the way to go to get rid of gas and coal plants, that are doing more to mess up our environment than one glowing bar lost in Homers shirt ever could.

    And a floating plant? It's not like it's riding on an inner tube, where one errant bb pellet is going to take the whole thing down. It doesn't exactly fill me with joy to consider it, but at the same time, it does have aspects that make sense, and if it'll get some more strip mines closed, I'm all for it.
    • Take a look at IFRs( Integrated Fast Reactors). [wikipedia.org] Now, Imagine the following.
      1. All of the current above ground fuel (spent and unspent) in america could power ALL of America's electrical need for about 100 years (I am not certain about that if we switch to electrical cars).
      2. All of the current above ground fuel (spent and unspent) in Europe could power ALL of Europes's electrical need for about 150 years (ditto on electrical cars).
      3. I am not certain about canada, but they would certainly have enough to last wi
      • Somebody mod this guy insightful.

        You're right, of course, and everyone keeps overlooking reprocessing. The problem seems to be capitalist in nature, because I doubt the mighty Uranium Mining Conglomerate has enough power to hold back this technology, but somebody sure is. There is, technically, no reason (that I know of) that we should even be digging for more right now... use what we have, reprocess, and use again, until it's nothing left but an inert carbon rod. Then we put it in the back of a car, parade
        • Well, 30 years ago, we would have had the fuel out and yes, there could have (and probably would have) been proliferation. As it is, the IFR is the right way to do this. Load the fuel and it only comes out when it is all spent. The funny thing is that Poppa bush started this project. If clinton had been thinking he would have allowed it to be finished (this was one of his bigger mistakes). But what I notice more is that W. gives alternative energy and even nukes pure lip service. We need to restart the effo
  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday April 20, 2007 @07:30PM (#18819469)
    I'm not surprised they can find someone to object to this idea - if you go far enough out, you can probably find people who object to the human race on the grounds the Earth would be better off (for some definition of "better" that I don't really understand) without us. There are people to whom the word "nuclear" is associated with nothing but disaster/mass destruction. This is understandable, but other objections have been raised to almost every form of power imaginable. Minimizing unnecessary damage to our environment is good, and I applaud the efforts to push for this goal, but there are limits to how far this can be done without becoming unrealistic. For example:

    1) Wind farms are decried for noise, wiping out birds, and ruining the view.
    2) Solar power is objected to in terms of the materials/processes needed to make the cells and the ecological effects of shadowing large portions of the landscape.

    Geothermal is probably the only case where I don't know of any major objections, but geothermal cannot power everything we do. The fundamental truth is that extraction of energy from the surrounding environment (or introduction of it from storage by increased thermal/other emissions due to combustion/nuclear processes) MUST have an impact on the system. We cannot live without having an impact on the world around us - it is simply not possible. The concern is to minimize the negative effects of our activities while still doing what we need to do. Solar and wind appear to be much less intrusive compared to most current large scale power generation methods, and as such seem like logical directions to pursue. Reducing power usage is good but in the end our population is likely to expand either in activities or numbers to consume all possible economic power that we can generate.

    I'm wondering if the folks objecting to this one are objecting on the grounds of practicality, or simply on the grounds that it is nuclear, period. If the latter, I think they will eventually need to face up to the fact that fossil fuels won't last forever and we are not going to abandon large scale power usage. The problem is thus defined as how do we sustain that usage without undue risk, not how do we live on power levels low enough to be generated without significant impact of any kind. The later is simply unrealistic and not a useful basis for discussion.
    • by 3waygeek ( 58990 )
      you can probably find people who object to the human race on the grounds the Earth would be better off (for some definition of "better" that I don't really understand) without us.
       
      You mean these guys [vhemt.org]?
    • if you go far enough out, you can probably find people who object to the human race

      Many leaders of the "antis" have a political axe to grind and recruit well-meaning, attention-seeking but reality-challenged youth.

  • so (Score:2, Funny)

    by k1e0x ( 1040314 )

    The project is getting a lot of flack over possible safety problems from green groups.
    "So! `Dis is soviet russia.. who give shit about "green group" send them to Siberia to study earthworm!"

    Ahh.. the good old days.. j/k
  • by miracle69 ( 34841 ) on Friday April 20, 2007 @08:23PM (#18819825)
    Elements from Nature. Check.

    Basic Nuclear Physics. Check.

    Water. Check.

    What's not to like? Uranium is all-natural.
  • by IonOtter ( 629215 ) on Friday April 20, 2007 @08:42PM (#18819925) Homepage
    After spending nine years in the US Navy, five years on a US Warship (USS Reuben James), and one year on a USNS (John Lenthall), I can say that nearly 60% of all time on ships is spent doing MAINTENANCE.

    US Warships will degrade into a complete rustbucket if you stop doing maintenance for even a single week. One of the biggest expense accounts on any ship is the paint locker and it's associated gear of chipping hammers, knuckle dusters, needle guns, grinders and deck crawlers. You chip paint and then re-paint every single day, non-stop, 365 days a year. And every three years, you pull into drydock to get scoured from stem to stern in a right proper job, inside and out.

    And this is just the painting maintenance.

    Add in broken electronics, broken pumps, broken valves, broken flanges, bent hinges, worn gaskets and the flood of everyday things that continuously need fixing, upgrading or maintaining, and you suddenly understand why so much of our ship's budget goes towards maintenance.

    The ocean is a VERY harsh environment, and it breaks things. Easily.

    Our military is able to keep things running smoothly because they have the following:

    1. MONEY.
    2. Highly trained people. (Yes, even the deck apes.)
    3. Highly trained civilian contractors on shore that can be sent to a ship in less than 48 hours.
    4. Rules and regulations carved in steel that must be followed or else officers get fired or sent to Leavenworth.
    5. MONEY.

    This is why we can have nuclear reactors on aircraft carriers without them going *BOOM*. Also, ours are very small, meant only to supply power for the ship and it's crew.

    Now then...

    The Russians have:

    1. No money.
    2. No more highly trained people. (They all left because they weren't getting paid.)
    3. No civilian contractors that aren't part of the Russian Mafia in some way.
    4. No rules that can't be bent with a few rubles.
    5. No money.

    So please...explain to me just how having the Russians putting nuclear reactors-meant to supply power to cities on the shore-on THEIR ships would be a good idea?
  • From the fine article:

    "This is the most dangerous project that has been launched by the atomic sector in the whole world over the past decade," said Ivan Blokov, campaign director of Greenpeace Russia, Thursday. "It is scary as this is basically going to be a floating atomic bomb."

    I bet Mr. Blokov has no idea how brain-damaged that statement is. There are reasons to be concerned about floating nuclear power plants, but calling them "floating atomic bombs" just reveals his personal ignorance.

    And labeling th
  • ...is a new twist on the idea of a floating grid!
  • so, why not floating on the Oceans, etc.?

    (Maybe a city that's lost its power plants to terrorist bombs can Rent-a-Nuke, until they are replaced)

    On the other hand, aren't Global Warming scientists predicting ever LARGER STORMS?

    If they're right, who wants a floating nuke to spill radioactive bits into the sea?
  • This is stupid (Score:3, Interesting)

    by ShooterNeo ( 555040 ) on Friday April 20, 2007 @10:25PM (#18820723)
    This is a positively idiotic idea. While I am for nuclear power, I am dead set against this implentation. I am for tracts of breeder reactors in the deserts of nevada, not something like this.

    1. As anyone who has ever been aboard a boat or a ship knows, saltwater and the pounding from the sea shifting means an IMMENSE amount of maintainence has to be done, compared to keeping the same machines somewhere in a building on land. The tight passages that a ship has, or a floating vessel containing a power station, don't make things any easier. This means the salt water will rust all sorts of things, reducing the reactors life and making accidents more likely.

    2. If in the event of a meltdown, the nuclear waste melts through the metal of the ship and drops into the ocean. While the 'china syndrome' may be FUD, (a melted nuclear pile going through rock til it hits groundwater - unlikely) this is very possible. Once in the ocean, the waste will be constantly polluting the seas through diffusion, and be extremely difficult to recover - how do you grab tons of highly radioactive slag off the seafloor?
  • They are called aircraft carriers.

    Also many (most?) submarines are nuclear powered, and they are designed to float (surface) from time to time.

  • The green people complain about EVERYTHING. They say even windfarms are damaging because they kill birds. Then they'll drive their car, and leave the lights on at home while recycling aluminum cans. Its like they have drive and passion, but they just don't have a direction to funnel the passion, so they complain about EVERYTHING. Why not complain about just the big things like the fish population dying, or the rain forests being stripped. I'm sure if someone was smart, they could lead this desperate gr
  • by posterlogo ( 943853 ) on Saturday April 21, 2007 @04:01AM (#18822141)
    ...the same dumbfucks who brought us Chernobyl. Seriously, there's no evidence they learned a single thing from that incident, and in fact, the government has never admitted, acknowledged, or recompensed for any part of it. Of course they should come under the highest possible scrutiny for any new nuclear plant designs. This is not a time for political correctness -- they could seriously damage the global environment with a catastrophe at sea and they need to heavily scrutinized at this time.

"Being against torture ought to be sort of a multipartisan thing." -- Karl Lehenbauer, as amended by Jeff Daiell, a Libertarian

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