America's Nuclear Reactors Can't Survive Without Government Handouts (fivethirtyeight.com) 464
Slashdot reader Socguy shares an article from FiveThirtyEight:
There are 99 nuclear reactors producing electricity in the United States today. Collectively, they're responsible for producing about 20% of the electricity we use each year. But those reactors are, to put it delicately, of a certain age. The average age of a nuclear power plant in this country is 38 years old (compared with 24 years old for a natural gas power plant). Some are shutting down. New ones aren't being built. And the ones still operational can't compete with other sources of power on price... without some type of public assistance, the nuclear industry is likely headed toward oblivion....
[I]t's the cost of upkeep that's prohibitive. Things do fall apart -- especially things exposed to radiation on a daily basis. Maintenance and repair, upgrades and rejuvenation all take a lot of capital investment. And right now, that means spending lots of money on power plants that aren't especially profitable... Combine age and economic misfortune, and you get shuttered power plants. Twelve nuclear reactors have closed in the past 22 years. Another dozen have formally announced plans to close by 2025.
A professor of engineering and public policy at Carnegie Mellon University points out that nuclear power is America's single largest source of carbon emissions-free electricity -- though since 1996, only one new plant has opened in America, and at least 10 other new reactor projects have been canceled in the past decade.
The article also describes two more Illinois reactors that avoided closure only after the state legislature offered new subsidies. "But as long as natural gas is cheap, the industry can't do without the handouts."
[I]t's the cost of upkeep that's prohibitive. Things do fall apart -- especially things exposed to radiation on a daily basis. Maintenance and repair, upgrades and rejuvenation all take a lot of capital investment. And right now, that means spending lots of money on power plants that aren't especially profitable... Combine age and economic misfortune, and you get shuttered power plants. Twelve nuclear reactors have closed in the past 22 years. Another dozen have formally announced plans to close by 2025.
A professor of engineering and public policy at Carnegie Mellon University points out that nuclear power is America's single largest source of carbon emissions-free electricity -- though since 1996, only one new plant has opened in America, and at least 10 other new reactor projects have been canceled in the past decade.
The article also describes two more Illinois reactors that avoided closure only after the state legislature offered new subsidies. "But as long as natural gas is cheap, the industry can't do without the handouts."
I don't have much of a problem with this (Score:5, Insightful)
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There STILL is no long-term waste storage or reprocessing program in place. Nuclear is no-go until this problem is dealt with on a Federal level, period. Thousands of pools around the country waiting to explode is not acceptable.
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Re:I don't have much of a problem with this (Score:4, Informative)
You're so full of shit.
https://www.livescience.com/59... [livescience.com]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
The lie that nuclear waste "has never harmed anyone in human history", comes from a industry lobbying group called, "The Center for Nuclear Science and Technology Information". It is pure horseshit.
Re:I don't have much of a problem with this (Score:5, Informative)
You're so full of shit.
Both of the sites your links refer to are so full of...nuclear weapons program waste. Militaries are not bound by the safety standards that apply in the nuclear power industry.
Have you read the article you linked ? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:I don't have much of a problem with this (Score:4, Informative)
Over 20 workers had been injured by 18 March, including one who was exposed to a large amount of ionizing radiation when the worker tried to vent vapour from a valve of the containment building.[1] Three more workers were exposed to radiation over 100 mSv, and two of them were sent to a hospital due to beta burns on 24 March.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fukushima_50
Maybe you don't know as much as you thought? Lol, impossible!
Re:I don't have much of a problem with this (Score:4, Informative)
How many people have died mining uranium? A lot more than you think.
That's the weird thing about these stats. You include any and all deaths by coal, either at the production of coal, shipping of coal, firing the boilers, the production of power, people killed by the resulting electricity...everything.
When you count the deaths due to nuclear you only count those deaths caused directly by someone standing next to an exposed fuel rod, and even then only when we knew about the fuel rod, and only after lots of deliberation as to whether it was a new fuel rod or a spent one. It's impossible to prove any given case of cancer was caused by radiation exposure so you can wave away the deaths as mere coincidence.
This is selection bias. You want to believe nuclear is safe so you distort reality to assist your belief. You're a tool for the nuclear industry, congratulations. Die in a fire.
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Don't you mean "spent fuel AKA nuclear waste"?
In any case, I think the first responders at the Chernobyl incident might take issue with you.
If they were alive, that is. They were harmed by exposure to spent and unspent fuel, and radioactive byproducts thereof.
Yes, I know you're not talking about accidents like Chernobyl, but any exposure would be accidental, no?
Re:I don't have much of a problem with this (Score:4, Informative)
First I meant unspent fuel aka nuclear waste. We only use about 1%-5% of the energy in the fuel rods, hence the word unspent.
Second less than 60 deaths can be attributed to Chernobyl. Luckily the estimated deaths never occurred because the linear no threshold used to estimate radiation deaths is bullshit. More people died today from fossil fuels than have ever died from nuclear energy.
And third we have 4th generation reactors which cannot meltdown. NuScale is building their first Small Modular reactor in Idaho. These reactor have already been certified as being unable to meltdown and has passed phase 1 of the NRC review. They are factory built which will greatly reduce the costs. Are you suggesting we should not build these types of reactors because of an accident in the USSR that killed less than 60 people?
Do you know that climate change is real? And that the leading driver of climate change is from emissions from fossil fuels? And that the top climate scientists have called nuclear energy the only viable path forward on climate change?
Re:I don't have much of a problem with this (Score:5, Insightful)
OK spent/unspent is a bit of a misnomer, though. If it's removed from a reactor because that reactor can't make use of it anymore, I'd call it spent. If it can be re-processed and put in another reactor to continue to provide energy, then it's fuel.
I'm really not disputing your overall position - you're just over-stating your case and that harms your position. The first responders at Chernobyl were exposed to high doses of radioactive material, which causes cell damage both immediate and long-term. I think it's settled that they died from damage caused by radiation exposure. Arguing statistics and methodology isn't helpful. Point is, you said "no-one" and that's simply not true.
And I've been living off-grid on solar PV for >20 years. I ride a motorcycle instead of driving a car when and wherever I can. I take climate change seriously and I agree that nuclear energy plants are one of the least polluting options - but they've *never* been able to deliver on "too cheap to meter" promises, so between media meltdowns about accidents, and the less serious but real consequences of those accidents, broken promises about abundant energy, and all the other BS from lobbyist-influenced politicians, I'm not surprised that people don't trust the proponents of nuclear energy, and I'm not surprised at the surge in wind, PV, and gas-sourced electricity.
Your Nuclear Idealism is Evil. (Score:2)
I get it that you want the best for everybody, however transposing your belief system onto reality and then subjecting everybody to it is propagating the PR the Nuclear Industry has concocted to conceal their failures. Unlike shills, they get paid.
From that perspective, it's immoral to support Nuclear Power.
Re:Your Nuclear Idealism is Evil. (Score:5, Interesting)
That belief _is_ reality.
Actual victims of nuclear power do exist, but their numbers are several orders of magnitude lower than the victims of fossil fuel. What he said about "More people died today from fossil fuels than have ever died from nuclear energy" is absolutely true, there is no way anyone can fudge the math to make that not reality.
Re:Your Nuclear Idealism is Evil too (Score:3)
That belief _is_ reality...
to you. That's why it is a belief system, a Nuclear Ideology.
All of you afflicted with this Nuclear Ideology refuse to acknowledge the facts placed before you and take rhetoric as truth. When confronted with fact or an analysis I've observed Nuclear Ideologists descend into babble and double speak hardly worthy of spending anytime wading through. This has been consistent on slashdot for over a decade. NIMBY blah GREENIES blah, breeder blah, new reactor babble ignor anything you don;t understand or pr
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Second less than 60 deaths can be attributed to Chernobyl.
It also left us with a 1000 square mile exclusion zone.
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There were several thousand people who lived no more than a decade after their exposure at Chernobyl
This reeks of conspiracy theory bs. Are you claiming, without evidence, that all of the deaths in Chernobyl were covered up by the USSR? That is a massive conspiracy. There have been cases of thyroid cancer, but that has a very low fatality rate and it is treatable.
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Why yes, now that you mention it, it does look an awful lot like a propaganda outlet [nuclearconnect.org]. Thanks for getting me to check it out.
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Wow, you really did convince me with your witty and insightful comments.
Oh, sorry, no.. the opposite of that. You quite obviously dont have enough base IQ to enter in to an adult discussion.
I suggest you go back to your disney channel and leave the adults to talk.
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Except, of course, all the chemistry and physics and engineering that's required to shape a specific type of nuclear material into a specific size and shape and force it into critical mass using a specific trigger and circumstances in order to make it explode.
Or did you think the entirety of the Manhattan Project was based on "Hey...let's just through a bunch of radio
Re:I don't have much of a problem with this (Score:4, Informative)
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Care to compare that with the number of people who dies in the actual disaster, which was the tsunami?
Care to compare it with the number of people dead from coal mines (directly, ignoring the polution), or solar installers, wind, natural gas plants? any of them?
Thought not.
Hell, more people died from the stress of relocation at Fukoshima than would have died IF THEY HAD STAYED PUT, thats how smart people have got.
BTW, why dont you push out the '10,000 years uninhabitable' boat while you are at it? After all
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Re:I don't have much of a problem with this (Score:5, Insightful)
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There's also a reason why about 90% of your comment history consists of cheerleading for nuclear. Care to let us know what that is?
Well, no (Score:4, Interesting)
The vast majority of nuclear waste is not spent fuel, it is decommissioned equipment and disposable maintenance supplies that have been made radioactive by exposure to ionizing radiation. None of this stuff can be reprocessed in any meaningful way. Yet, frustratingly, it is still dangerous.
While I am pro-nuclear, I do not think we win when we make strawman arguments.
Re:Well, no (Score:5, Insightful)
High-level nuclear waste is spent fuel. That's the stuff which can remain "hot" for tens of thousands of years if it's not reprocessed.
Re:I don't have much of a problem with this (Score:5, Informative)
they would have standardized on a single reasonably modern design ten of fifteen years ago
They did. It is the AP1000 [wikipedia.org]. It didn't solve any of the problems that you claim it magically would.
The future of nuclear power is still happening ... in China, where government subsidies are less controversial.
Re:I don't have much of a problem with this (Score:5, Interesting)
they would have standardized on a single reasonably modern design ten of fifteen years ago
They did. It is the AP1000 [wikipedia.org]. It didn't solve any of the problems that you claim it magically would.
The future of nuclear power is still happening ... in China, where government subsidies are less controversial.
I was a project manager for the AP1000 projects Sumner and Vogtle. I've told this story before, but these projects failed - along with the rest of the failed nuclear renaissance in America because of NIMBY and a conjoined abomination of regulation and oversight. For example: In ~2011(ish) ASME redefined SA316 Stainless Steel to change the tensile strength and allowable radius of forged material, which in turn affected the sourced materials and design plans for already purchased / designed / built components in stage 2 containment. These designs required congressional approval, which ASME is not beholden to.
The changed definition of SA316 required congressional approval....but congress wasn't in session. Tens of millions of dollars in cost overruns not withstanding, this tiny little thing caused a two year delay. Add together dozens of these type of issues happening across a myriad of issues, and that's why we can't have nice things.
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In other words nuclear power is brittle and the very high safety standards needed to keep it safe can massively increase costs.
Compared with the alternatives it's not very attractive.
Re:I don't have much of a problem with this (Score:5, Insightful)
In other words nuclear power is brittle and the very high safety standards needed to keep it safe can massively increase costs.
Except it's really not clear that the insanely high safety standards are actually required. The regulations have created an industry that is orders of magnitude safer than any other large scale power generation industry. That indicates significant over-engineering. And given that regulatory-based engineering is never efficient in the sense of minimizing cost for a given level of effectiveness, looking only at the safety record almost certainly underestimates the excess.
The fact that Congress has to approve any design changes is mind-boggling. In any reasonably-regulated industry, Congress creates an agency and directs it to do the job of rulemaking and enforcement, then lets it do its job. There is absolutely no reason for Congress to get involved beyond that... it's not like the politicians can evaluate the design changes in any meaningful way. The only reason for that requirement is to place arbitrary bureaucratic and political obstacles in the way of construction.
If it's not clear (Score:4, Insightful)
I keep saying this, but I won't trust nuclear in America until we can run a safe plant cheaper than a dangerous one. Americans have a long history of privatizing crap that shouldn't be privatized. Hell, look at our response to Flint, MI's water crisis or the PR hurricane. I don't trust Americans with anything dangerous (and yes, I'm an American). We're cheapskates who like to tell ourselves God will take care of it. And in 2018 the rich don't have to live near the damage they cause.
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But there is a reason - Congress socialized the insurance of nuclear reactors and it's the underwriter and actuary. It's completely stupid and causes almost all of our problems but it's not like it's inexplicable.
Fallout is also not very attractive. (Score:5, Insightful)
Fukushima has shown us that a loss of power for 36 hours at any of these facilities will cause them to boil off all their coolant, melt their containment vessels, and poison the surrounding environment for thousands of years. This includes both the reactor vessels and the waste/spent fuel rods in the local storage ponds.
The exact same GE model that failed in Fukushima runs 30 miles upstream from me on the Mississippi. Should it lose power as Fukushima did, the Mississippi river will be lost to our country. This reactor was scheduled for closure and was saved by my state legislature, and it should not be running.
Re:I don't have much of a problem with this (Score:4, Insightful)
Your Wikipedia link says that nuclear is the most expensive in many other countries too, including poster child France that is supposed to be a model for others to follow.
Your pdf link is produced by the nuclear industry, which has been shilling for decades. Got any independent sources?
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third world countries like Ukraine
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Well, :D
it is a kind of "american definition" of 1st, 2nd and 3rd world.
They don't care that the rest of the world defines it different
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Claiming that the "second world" exists is an explicit claim that the Cold War never ended.
Maybe you're right, but you've got a lot of legwork to do if you want that to be the default position that the world believes in. ;)
Either you believe in Soviet Putinland, or else there is just 1st and 3rd world.
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Anyway, if we're gonna run nuke plants I want them run without a profit motive. Otherwise there's too much incentive to cut corners on safety.
One does not follow the other. You can have a non-profit, but you still need contractors to do the actual work. And the contractors are naturally included to cut corners to make a bigger buck.
And if we're gonna have the gov't run every aspect to prevent that from happen then what's the bloody point of letting private companies run them?
Nobody in a government position has the expertise to run a nuclear reactor. They always end up hiring people to do the actual job for them. And every time a new government is elected, there's a chance that the work will be moved to a different group. Just look at other projects that the government has managed, and see
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Chernobyl had government owned and operated nuclear reactors. Fukushima was a privately owned and operated nuclear power plant. Which one resulted in more death and destruction?
Governments do not care about you. A private entity might not care about you either, that is until you stop paying your electric bill. Dead people don't pay their bills. Dead people don't vote either but then the survivors just get substandard services and get to bury their dead family and friends.
I'll take a greedy capitalist o
Blame the lawyers (Score:4, Insightful)
Sorry, can't resist... (Score:5, Funny)
There are 99 nuclear reactors producing electricity in the United States today.
99 nuclear reactors.
If one of those reactors should happen to fail,
98 nuclear reactors producing electricity in the United States.
Sing it with me!
Re:Sorry, can't resist... (Score:5, Funny)
99 nuclear reactors around
99 nuclear reactors
melt one down
radiation abound!
98 nuclear reactors around
Hows that?
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98 nuclear reactors around
98 nuclear reactors
Blow four up
Go "OH FUCK!"
94 nuclear reactors around
Yep, I like this game :)
We can't keep burning fossil fuels forever! (Score:3, Interesting)
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If Jimmy Peanut hadn't banned "breeder" reactors, we'd be able to create our own nuclear fuel.
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I think the fact that nobody anywhere in the world has overcome the technological, economic or security issues involved with breeder reactors in the 40 years since his decision pretty much proves him correct.
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Those experimental government-sponsored reactors were/are trying to work out the problems I mentioned, but without success.
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There are only two commercial-scale breeders operating anywhere in the world, and they are both prototypes built and supported by the Russian government. They haven't sold any to anyone.
Reprocessing breeder reactor spent fuel is too expensive. And the cost of handling the new fuel rods (which are quite radioactive due the hot actinides in them) is far higher than with natural enriched uranium fuel.
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How does Jimmy Carter still control the U.S. government energy programs 38 years after he left office? How is he maintaining this unshakeable ban?
Carter was followed by 12 years of pro-nuclear Republican rule, who also went on a deficit spending spree. Why didn't they build a demonstration breeder reactor? Pro-nuclear Republicans have held office for 21 years since then, why no action? How does Carter control them?
But the U.S. is not the only country with a large nuclear infrastructure. France, China, Russi
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How long will the U-235 last us?
Several thousand years.
Uranium is a minor cost in nuclear power, and can tolerate large increases in uranium price without significantly affecting the economics of nuclear power. Uranium on the spot market has already on occasion (2007) exceeded the estimated extraction cost of uranium from seawater (~$350/kg actual uranium), and at that price uranium is still a minor contributor to operating costs.
Actual seawater uranium mining won't happen (barring a breakthrough) until existing terrestrial resources have
Not a new problem (Score:2)
It takes a lot of time and money to build traditional nuclear power plants, so if the financial and political system shifts underneath a potential plant builder then they can go bust with a partially built plant and nothing to show for it. The financial risk is huge and has alread
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Have to design good foundations. Found out whats below the site.
Have to find workers who can do the foundations. That wont fail over the initial span of the design.
Bring in the experts to do the design and welding.
People who understand the metal, long term radiation design work.
Build the reactor. Build the rest of the plant and support services.
Pay the locals to work at the site f
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It lost to not having anyone to sell the power to. The nuclear power building boom was based on projections for electricity demand that had been climbing (on a per capita basis) since 1960 until 1975 one a constant trend-line then started falling way off the trend-line even declining slightly in 1981 and 1982.
WPPSS signed up for an aggressive reactor construction program in 1971 and went bankrupt that first year actual demand dropped (1981). It was basic market economics.
If you haven't noticed (Score:5, Funny)
Government handouts are A-Ok as long as they are given to the rich, large corporations, or defense contractors. Just like Jesus taught.
If Only We Had A National Policy to Reduce CO2 (Score:4, Insightful)
Handing money over to private businesses to achieve some public policy goal should be on the table as policy option, but only if it is a cost-effective way to achieve that goal. But before that discussion can even begin here we need to have a government that recognizes that reducing CO2 emissions is extremely important as a public policy goal. Only then can actual goals be set, and the cost of policy options drawn up to meet them.
Subsidizing existing nuclear power plants may be a cost effective way of reducing CO2 emissions. I am not saying it is (or isn't) but it should be evaluated along with all of the other options. Even building new nuclear power plants should be considered - but cost-effectiveness should be the ruling criterion.
The current administration's scheme to subsidize both coal and nuclear power is incoherent and obviously a case of political corruption -- transferring money to a private company from the public purse simply as pay-off for support. That one part of it, nuclear power, reduces carbon release is merely accidental.
One could imagine what an optimal plan (most cost effective) for nuclear power to contribute to CO2 emissions would look like. In addition to simply keeping current plants operating, building new ones would break from past practice by building a single standardized design that has passed all design approvals (siting approvals will always be necessary), and would build them on a regular schedule so that the production infrastructure can be built, and efficient production techniques instituted, and replacement parts kept available at reasonable cost.
Each nuclear power plant unit produces 0.2% of the nation's annual electricity consumption, 66% of which is supplied from a carbon releasing source. If you build 5 units a year, that would knock 1% off of that 66%, and after 25 years, would have made a major contribution toward getting it down to zero.
A long term public-private partnership to accomplish a public policy goal is a pipe dream in the U.S. for the forseeable future, but it isn't impossible. U.S. governments can carry out expensive long term plans. New York City's Water Tunnel No. 3 [wikipedia.org] is a very costly and complex engineering project to dig a 24 foot wide tunnel, deep underground, 60 miles long, running the length of New York City, that has been under construction for 50 years (almost completed now). A national plan to build nuclear reactors could be created - Republicans have always been nuclear power enthusiasts, and Democrats support CO2 reduction - so the basis for the broad support required exists.
How much of that is the anti nuclear lobby? (Score:5, Insightful)
Literally how much of the cost inflation is the effect of political activism?
We have the same problem with the death penality where interference with the logistics is so heavy that they are having a hard time getting their hands on the drugs required to perform a lethal injection.
Some of the drugs have dual uses for other medical proceedures... and the shortages are so heavy that patients that need those drugs to treat them can't get access to the drugs.
Here is another point on that, look at countries outside of the US regulatory system... say in China etc... they're clearly highly econonical absent anti nuclear activism inflating costs. We can see that very clearly in nations where it is not politically relevant.
You can also talk to nuclear engineers that have designed newer reactor designs and they'll validate this position.
Here is what we need to fix the situation:
1. We need a reasonable place to store spent fuel.
2. Life time of reactor regulations that don't change after the fact. An investment problem is that you can sink billions into a reactor and then the regulations change which make a good financial move a bad one. This ex post facto legislation makes nuclear more risky than other systems that don't suffer from that pattern. You fix this by locking relevant regulation to what it was when the reactor was built. New reactors would follow new rules but older reactors would be shielded from changes because it impacts costs dramatically sometimes. Subsidizing reactors that follow new rules is a good compromise. So old reactors follow new rules but you make the situation whole by paying for the cost of new regulation.
3. Smaller new reactors instead of the giant old reactors. They're safer, less conspicuous, and a much smaller investment.
4. The Not In My Back Yard ism (NIMYism) is out of control with nuclear. No one wants to live next to an airport or a water treatment facility, but we need them. If we place it 10 miles away from you, then that should be good enough. Often people complain about reactors that are 400 miles from them. Its fucking stupid.
Naturally none of this is going to happen. The environmental lobby wants to reduce CO2 but doesn't want to use the only technology that will actually do it.
its a giant stupid shit show. Cue lots of ignorant people saying wind and solar. Which is just a vote for natural gas and coal. Which means the CO2 argument is at best inconsistent.
And yes, I know you're angry and about to post about how great wind and solar is and how wrong it is for me to call you ignorant. But what you've probably failed to do is address the natural gas and coal issue. If you can't answer why every solar and wind project has to be backstopped by as much coal and natural gas... and really everything is just an emotional sputter of mindless outrage... it just validates my point.
So seriously, if you think I'm wrong... natural gas and coal... why are they rolled out to back stop the solar and wind?
Less than zero. Next question? (Score:3)
None, because the USG doesn't give the tiniest, greenest little shit about people or activists when there is corporate money involved. See DAPL or Occupy Wallstreet for two recent examples. Or the FBI charging people with terrorism for protesting factory farms. Or leaving BP in charge of cleaning up the Gulf of Mexico they worked hard to destroy.
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There is not anywhere near enough potential capacity for pumped hydro, let alone actual capacity.
The US had 82GW of wind capacity in 2016. If we assumed a capacity factor of 50% (generous) and that you require about 1 days worth of storage (somewhat of an understatement) and also assumed that we could do pumped hydro for this, we would need:
- 41 * 24 equals approximately 2TWh of energy storage required, or 1000GWh,
- The largest such facility in the world has a capacity of 34 GWh
- You
Re:How much of that is the anti nuclear lobby? (Score:4, Informative)
China put all new nuclear that wasn't already under construction on hold after the Fukushima disaster, and eventually cancelled it.
They hit peak coal years ago too. They are concentrating on renewables now, which is both good for the environment and makes economic sense because that's where the growth is.
So even absent NIMBYism they decided nuclear was inferior.
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That wiki article is obviously bollocks, the result of industry shills trying to "improve" it. Think about it: they are "planning" to add 58GW in the next 18 months but have not even started building them yet...
If you follow the link you find that it's an article from 2014 from "World Nuclear News", an industry propaganda site.
Come on buddy, at least read the most obviously bullshit link that your entire argument hangs on. You know I'm gonna.
Wind and Solar seem to be doing just fine (Score:3)
They NIMBY's have a point. America has a poor track record of safety, especially in poor counties. Sooner or later some politician gets bought off, privatizes the thing and looks like other way while a plant that should have been shut down decades ago keeps running. You're a couple of elections away from disaster.
If you want nuke plants make one that's cheaper to run safely than not. Either that or fundamentally change Ame
And yet we fly... (Score:5, Insightful)
The basic argument against the nuclear industry boils down to the idea that nuclear is a complex, unforgiving technology whose safety depends on constant monitoring.
I have an even better example of this kind of industry for you - aviation. Today, because of the elaborate precautions we take with air safety, most people feel perfectly safe on commercial aircraft. Yet we all know that somewhere in the world, about once a year, a planeload of people is lost. That's 200 or more at once each time, yet we generally feel that such numbers are not significant enough to worry about, even though most air accidents occur near airports, and can involve urban ground fatalities.
What would happen if a nuclear accident killed 200 people - just one? Now look at the converse: 6.5% of Americans are afraid to fly and opt to never get on a plane. When was the last time you saw even one of them protesting at an airport?
The difference between these industries is all in the politics.
Nope. Cost is what kills nuclear power. (Score:3)
Except:
Airlines offer the fastest travel available - nuclear doesn't offer anything you can't get from other renewable energy sources for a fraction of the cost in a fraction of the time.
Airlines aren't setting the world up with a hazardous waste problem that will last thousands of years.
The difference is that nuclear power cannot be justified based on cost alone. It cost
We could replace them (Score:2, Interesting)
But nuclear plants can't compete with the subsidies that wind and solar receive in the form of exemptions from onerous environmental regulations.
Focus on smaller/cleaner reactors and Solar (Score:3)
We are at a technological point that we should actively work on phasing out these old/large reactor installations. If nuclear is used, make much smaller, less radioactive, Thorium based, localized installations that power suburbs. And of course keep expanding solar/wind power because of it's obvious benefits.
Nuclear Power is the long term answer (Score:3)
Fusion reactors are right around the corner and are a far better long term choice. Solar and wind with natural gas backup for peak loads are the right choice for today. This is also the opinion of the invisible hand of capitalism because that where the money is invested.
Fission reactors based upon today's designs are a bad idea at this point because the waste issue is intractable.
Meanwhile in China... (Score:3)
Meanwhile, China [world-nuclear.org] has 20 new nuclear power plants under construction, and more about to start construction.
Of Chinese nuclear plants, almost 70% (865 GWe) was built within the last decade, whereas in the United States half of the fleet (580 GWe) was over 30 years old.
Longer-term, fast neutron reactors (FNRs) are seen as the main technology for China, and CNNC expects the FNR to become predominant by mid-century. A 65 MWt fast neutron reactor - the Chinese Experimental Fast Reactor (CEFR) - near Beijing achieved criticality in July 2010. Based on this, a 600 MWe pre-conceptual design was developed, the CFR600 began construction in December 2017 at Xiapu in Fujian province, and commissioning is expected in 2023.
Fusion is coming (Score:2, Funny)
Fission is just treading water until then.
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If you really were scared of CO2 emissions, you would be fine with 100% of nuclear power costs being subsidized, to reduce emissions.
Why? sounds much more practical to tax fossil fuels instead. And use that money to reduce other less efficient taxes, such as income taxes.
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Right, let's do what Germany did and tax fossil fuels. That means people with low incomes get saddled with higher costs while the government makes gobs of money on the taxes. Of course the government wants to tax carbon emissions, it's something that people will have to buy to fuel their cars, cook their food, and heat their homes. There's no escaping a carbon tax.
Maybe people could just buy an electric car, a heat pump, or whatever, to replace the fossil fuel equivalents they have now. To do so they'd
Re:Do you believe in global warming from CO2 or no (Score:4, Interesting)
But, it's not a single choice.... nuclear OR carbon dioxide. Wind, solar, geothermal, wave.... all of those things provide the same "no CO2" benefit, and none of the "radioactive contamination for 10,000 years" downside. Additionally, solar can be applied small scale, like solar panels on rooftops, which is an immense benefit as you don't have to invest billions just to get a single site up and running.
https://www.carbonbrief.org/so... [carbonbrief.org] read the Carbon Debt section to see why your "nuclear has a smaller footprint than any other" is wrong. The first generations of solar panels, for example, are made using energy from conventional power generation (whether it's coal or natural gas in that area), BUT, as those solar panels get put into use, the origin source for the energy to make the next batch changes... it no longer comes exclusively from coal or natural gas. And that process accelerates.
Showing concern that the first of something is going to be more expensive than the 100th, or 1000th (whether in actual dollars, or in this case a carbon debt) really is only an argument for never, ever, doing a damn thing to innovate anything.
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Here in the Pacific Northwest the government is doing a horrible job of handling the waste, so I don't think it is a good idea to ask the government to run it unless you're going to mandate that they use specific technologies; preferably with an emphasis on reusing existing waste as fuel!
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Point is solar has a CO2 cost too (Score:4, Insightful)
Building solar panels produces CO2. You need about 5000 acres of solar panels to equal one nuclear power plant - assuming the sun shines 24x7. Wait, it doesn't? Make it 20,000 acres then [deregulatetheatom.com]... That's a vastly greater amount of CO2 generated from even solar power than a nuclear power plant produces in construction.
Re:Point is solar has a CO2 cost too (Score:4, Insightful)
You don't think CO2 isn't produced when making a nuclear plant? There's a lot of concrete and steel in a plant and both of those create plenty of CO2 when being made. I'd like to see the numbers you are using to say that solar panels creation makes vastly more CO2 than the construction of a nuclear plant. Land use shouldn't be part of the calculation.
As for the land, you can put the solar panels in places where it doesn't stop it from being used. For example on top of large buildings (schools, factories, shopping centres, grocery/large stores, etc), in fields with grazing animals, or even floating on bodies of water (reservoirs for drinking water which would have the added bonus of cutting evaporation).
Solar rooftop is limited (Score:2)
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If you really were scared of CO2 emissions, you would be fine with 100% of nuclear power costs being subsidized, to reduce emissions.
Why? The risk that you and I die due to CO2 emissions is basically zero.
The risk to die in an reactor accident or due to fall out is higher than that.
Re: Do you believe in global warming from CO2 or n (Score:2)
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We're about to see electricity become a much larger fraction of the nation's total energy requirements. If Los Angeles is not to be the next large city after Cape Town to run out of water, it will have to start desalinating to supply its 14 million population. Other coastal cities will follow. Car and truck traffic, a huge user of energy, is starting to move from the ICE column into the electricity column. We're not going to be able to fulfill current power demand by paving over the sacred Environment with
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So you're saying that you, of all people, care even one iotoa about CO2 emissions?
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For the massive cost to build a nuclear plant there are much better ways to spend the money. I used to be for nuclear power but it's just become too expensive. Five or six years ago the province of Ontario sent out a request to build a new plant with two reactors and the least expensive reply was two to three times the maximum amount they were willing to spend.
The better thing to do is take the money and spread it out over solar, wind, geothermal, micro hydro, storage, and conservation. All the talk is abou
Global warming doesn't require a moron's belief (Score:4, Insightful)
You're a moron. The costs of dealing with climate change SO GREATLY surpass whatever difference in cost of power generation so completely it's really not comparable. You're repping short-sighted as if it's a virtue. So stupid.
It's entirely conceivable that everyone you know is also a moron. Kendall here shines in that regard.
In both the short run and the long run solar is obviously and easily the cheapest power source for the next 100 years. You have to invest in anything up front, whether it's firewood, gasoline, nuclear, or panels. Learn basic shit please.
Global warming doesn't need a moron like you to believe it's real to have real world effects. Your opine just doesn't factor in, sorry.
Re:Do you believe in global warming from CO2 or no (Score:4, Insightful)
A few melting glaciers flooding a few beachfront homes on some far away coast [un.org] is an "I don't give a shit" issue.
TFTFY.
(SPOILER: About 40% of the world's population lives within 100 km of a coastline. That's about 60 miles.)
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Nuclear waste is extremely localized in effect (Score:2)
If you agree to store all the spent nuclear waste in your backyard
I live near Rocky Flats. Bring it on.
I'm also not a little baby-man scared of a little radiation that might affect a mile or two of land instead of the entire earth like CO2 effects. The U.S. had a great plan to store ALL the U.S. nuclear waste in a salt cave in Utah, meaning it would be sealed essentially forever. Great idea? "Environmentalists", bent on polluting the earth with CO2 and killing the entire planet, did not agree and killed
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The concrete can of course be modern carbon-neutral stuff that actually absorbs concrete.
But the point is that for the power produced from a CO2 plant you build once, you would be dumping many orders of magnitude more CO2 into the atmosphere building the 5000 acres of solar panels needed to make as much electricity as one nuclear plant (and modern panels do not have the same lifespan as a plant, so every 10-20 years you'd be replacing that - triple that figure).
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Already debunked. You can stop repeating yourself now.
What? (Score:2)
Did you really just say that they are lowering their prices to keep up their profit margins?
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Currently the fund is underfunded by about $22 billion out of the $76 billion that is estimated to be required.
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I didn't realise the Russian Army had fallen on such hard times.