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Power

The Energy In Nuclear Waste Could Power the US For 100 Years, But the Technology Was Never Commercialized (cnbc.com) 170

There is enough energy in the nuclear waste in the United States to power the entire country for 100 years with clean energy, says Jess C. Gehin at the Idaho National Laboratory. CNBC reports: There are 93 commercial nuclear reactors at 55 operating sites in the United States, according to Scott Burnell, spokesperson for the Nuclear Regulatory Commission. Twenty-six are in some stage of decommissioning process. All of the nuclear reactors that operate in the U.S. are light-water reactor designs [...]. In a light-water reactor, uranium-235 fuel powers a fission reaction, where the nucleus of an atom splits into smaller nuclei and releases energy. The energy heats water, creating steam which is used to power a generator and produce electricity. The nuclear fission reaction leaves waste, which is radioactive and has to be maintained carefully. There are about 80,000 metric tons of used fuel from light-water nuclear reactors in the United States and the existing nuclear fleet produces approximately an additional 2,000 tons of used fuel each year, Gehin told CNBC. But after a light-water reactor has run its reactor powered by uranium-235, there is still tremendous amount of energy potential still available in what is left.

"Fundamentally, in light-water reactors, out of the uranium we dig out of the ground, we use a half a percent of the energy that's in the uranium that's dug out of the ground," Gehin told CNBC in a phone interview. "You can get a large fraction of that energy if you were to recycle the fuel through fast reactors." Fast reactors don't slow down the neutrons that are released in the fission reaction, and faster neutrons beget more efficient fission reactions, Gehin told CNBC. "Fast neutron reactors can more effectively convert uranium-238, which is predominantly what's in spent fuel, to plutonium, so you can fission it," Gehin said.

Even as private companies are working to innovate and commercialize fast reactor designs, there are significant infrastructure hurdles. Before nuclear waste can be used to power fast reactors, it has to go through reprocessing. Right now, only Russia has the capacity to do this at scale. France, too, has the capacity to recycle used nuclear waste, Gehin said, but the country generally takes its recycled fuel and puts it back into existing light water reactors. For now, the Idaho National Lab can reprocess enough fuel for research and development, Gehin told CNBC, but not much more.

Private companies commercializing fast reactor technology are pushing for domestic fuel supply chains to be developed. TerraPower says it's investing in supply chains and working with elected leaders to build political support, while Oklo has received three government awards and is working with the government to commercialize fast reactor fuel supply chains domestically. The other option to power fast reactors is to create HALEU fuel, which stands for high-assay low-enriched uranium, from scratch, rather than by recycling nuclear waste. (Where conventional reactors use uranium enriched up to 5%, HALEU is uranium enriched up to 20%.) It's arguably easier to produce HALEU directly than by recycling spent waste, says Gehin, but ultimately, the cheaper option will win out. "It will be largely be driven by what makes sense economically." Regardless, Russia is the only country that has the capacity to make HALEU at commercial scale.

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The Energy In Nuclear Waste Could Power the US For 100 Years, But the Technology Was Never Commercialized

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  • by Maxo-Texas ( 864189 ) on Friday June 03, 2022 @09:39PM (#62591486)

    A nation this big can afford to subsidize continued research and development to the tune of up to 25 billion per year. Actually build and test reactors to continue learning.

    But-- I don't think nuclear is needed for more than base line power and it has as ton of issues around waste, decommissioning, and lack of insurance (so any cost overruns pass straight to consumers).

    I also feel that nuclear is immoral or unethical because the model is "we get cheaper power and executives get big salary but the any excess costs are going to be paid by people not even born yet, most of whom will not get any cheaper power."

    I think larger escrows are in order. And I was appalled that in that one state they just flat out put an extra charge on consumers when the plant wasn't as profitable as promised.

    • by hunter44102 ( 890157 ) on Friday June 03, 2022 @09:44PM (#62591496)
      But Nuclear is an environmentalist dream - no CO2 gasses. Electricity isn't going away and will keep going up especially with electric cars. Wind and solar just cannot produce the massive needed energy. And even if nuclear is more expensive at the moment you can't shut it down because then natural gas demand will skyrocket and make a bigger issue
      • by Maxo-Texas ( 864189 ) on Friday June 03, 2022 @10:01PM (#62591524)

        Wow- hard to believe they nuked you to -1 over :
        "But Nuclear is an environmentalist dream - no CO2 gasses. Electricity isn't going away and will keep going up especially with electric cars. Wind and solar just cannot produce the massive needed energy. And even if nuclear is more expensive at the moment you can't shut it down because then natural gas demand will skyrocket and make a bigger issue"

        Actually- nuclear has some issues with climate warming.

        It needs lots of water for cooling unless it's being run at less than full power. This has already happened in france (and I think germany) where there wasn't' enough water that was cool enough to run the plant so they ran it at lower production. (and that includes the Nutran? micro nuclear).

        Wind and Solar *absolutely* can produce the massive needed energy-- The energy from solar is practically limitless but both need storage. I think the best model would be a day's power storage for every citizen. They would draw the storage down but then it would be refilled. And in times of disaster, they could reduce consumption enough to extend that power to 2 or 3 days. Some could be at individual houses but others could be the iron neighborhood battery storage. And it's not all batteries- gravity storage with heavy dense liquids looks promising.

        There is a place for nuclear and we should absolutely keep working to make it

        * less expensive
        * less toxic
        * more predictable to decomission.

        I'm very leery of nuclear where profit is involved or where government power is involved. We've already seen lots of disasters in many fields due to human factors due to the fact humans underestimate risks sooner or later. And you just can't do that with Nuclear. It's very tricky to identify real risks without overreacting and spending a ton of money to exist alleged risks that are unlikely (but how do you judge "unlikely?" Like the Space Shuttle?"

        • https://www.reuters.com/articl... [reuters.com]

          "Hot weather cuts French, German nuclear power output

          PARIS/FRANKFURT (Reuters) - Scorching temperatures across Europe coupled with prolonged dry weather has reduced French nuclear power generation by around 5.2 gigawatts (GW) or 8%, French power grid operator RTEâ(TM)s data showed on Thursday.

          Electricity output was curtailed at six reactors by 0840 GMT on Thursday, while two other reactors were offline, data showed. High water temperatures and sluggish flows limit the a

          • I can't remember if they were ever taken offline but US plants certainly wind down every summer. This is because the water temp is already elevated and they would dump enough heat to raise it above the danger levels of aquatic life and the dependent ecosystem. So they pull back and reduce power generation. Although they do also get exemptions from those dumping limits as it's summer and killing a few fish is better than people's air conditioning not working.

          • https://www.reuters.com/articl... [reuters.com]

            "Hot weather cuts French, German nuclear power output

            PARIS/FRANKFURT (Reuters) - Scorching temperatures across Europe coupled with prolonged dry weather has reduced French nuclear power generation by around 5.2 gigawatts (GW) or 8%, French power grid operator RTEâ(TM)s data showed on Thursday.

            Electricity output was curtailed at six reactors by 0840 GMT on Thursday, while two other reactors were offline, data showed. High water temperatures and sluggish flows limit the ability to use river water to cool reactors.

            In Germany, PreussenElektra, the nuclear unit of utility E.ON, said it would take its Grohnde reactor offline on Friday due to high temperatures in the Weser river."

            River temperature derates are common in all thermal generating plants (not just nuclear), sometimes there are even derates for lake temperatures though that's more rare. Usually it's done so as not to exceed a certain discharge temperature back into the body of water, as that can disturb fish. It's an environmental precaution, and is waived as external factors warrant. Really no different than the frequent derates a lot of hydroelectric dams experience to maintain lake levels and water quality. It's not

        • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

          by MacMann ( 7518492 )

          It needs lots of water for cooling unless it's being run at less than full power.

          Using molten salt coolant, molten salt thermal storage, and air breathing Brayton cycle turbines and there's no water needed for coolant. It also allows a nuclear power plant to load follow, removing the need for natural gas backup power.

          There's closed cycle water cooling that lowers the need for water significantly. Some still boils away so something has to make up for that. Even in a desert some power used to extract the water back from the air or ground. Using air cooling for part of the cooling and

          • by q_e_t ( 5104099 )

            Using molten salt coolant, molten salt thermal storage

            These are not commercialised technologies. We need to go with what there is and build at scale for nuclear to be relevant. Calling for molten salt coolant is asking for further delays. Do you want further delays?

          • by K. S. Kyosuke ( 729550 ) on Saturday June 04, 2022 @11:43AM (#62592442)

            Using molten salt coolant, molten salt thermal storage, and air breathing Brayton cycle turbines and there's no water needed for coolant.

            If you can do *all those things*, then there's no need for a nuclear reactor either. You can just keep your molten salt molten using the inevitable excesses in renewable generation which will have very low marginal costs. Those *will* exist whether you want them or not. At that point ignoring the virtually free energy that nobody else has other use for and building a reactor instead becomes an economically unsound decision.

          • Okay.. first-- I don't think your post is a troll. What the hell is wrong with Slashdot moderators these days?

            The reason I said you "just can't do that with nuclear" is that the consequences of a nuclear plant failure can be huge. If a wind tower fails or falls over, the risk is much smaller.

            And yes- I agree completely we need to continue doing R&D and actually building nuclear plants. To the tune of about $25 billion a year for the U.S. alone. But I think (after decades), it's *still* too early t

        • I watch ercot's site often. To meet your requirement for just ERCOT, min of 24x50GW would be required, or 1.2TWH of battery storage. Quite alot.
        • by aitikin ( 909209 )

          Wow- hard to believe they nuked you to -1 over : "But Nuclear is an environmentalist dream - no CO2 gasses. Electricity isn't going away and will keep going up especially with electric cars. Wind and solar just cannot produce the massive needed energy. And even if nuclear is more expensive at the moment you can't shut it down because then natural gas demand will skyrocket and make a bigger issue"

          Sigh...no one down modded hunter44102's post. In fact, it's only be up modded. hunter44102's karma is just such that their posts start at -1.

    • by sjames ( 1099 ) on Friday June 03, 2022 @10:00PM (#62591522) Homepage Journal

      While it doesn't address all of your points, actually reprocessing the existing waste will result in net reduction of the waste while providing power. That will reduce some of that unfair burden already placed on future generations.

      Federal strings attached could help by making sure the decomissioning costs are taken off the top of the profits and held in escrow.

      • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

        by Maxo-Texas ( 864189 )

        They are already doing that. The problem is the escrows *still* are not big enough. Frankly, until private insurance is willing to cover decommissioning cost over runs, there's just too much risk. I mean consider what the costs of decommissioning Fukishima are going to be.

        • Frankly, until private insurance is willing to cover decommissioning cost over runs, there's just too much risk. I mean consider what the costs of decommissioning Fukishima are going to be.

          There's not likely to be any private insurance company large enough to cover decommissioning. That's been true for large civil projects going back hundreds of years. If we held everything to that standard then no large wind, solar, wave, hydro, or such project could be made. Because there is savings in economy of scale that means driving up costs by breaking the project into small enough pieces for private insurance.

          It's bullshit like this that's been a backdoor ban on nuclear power projects for decades.

          • by q_e_t ( 5104099 )

            Frankly, until private insurance is willing to cover decommissioning cost over runs, there's just too much risk. I mean consider what the costs of decommissioning Fukishima are going to be.

            There's not likely to be any private insurance company large enough to cover decommissioning.

            Subsidy to the rescue?

        • That's false. Every reactor has money saved up for decommissioning. The only time there is not enough is if the plant was forced to shut down early. Otherwise, they have more than enough to create multiple companies that decommission nuke plants. And with SMRS, the cost will be a fraction.
          • That's false. Every reactor has money saved up for decommissioning. The only time there is not enough is if the plant was forced to shut down early.

            nope [cleantechnica.com], but even in the few cases where it is true, the plants are not being forced to shut down early to make people feel good, but because they have defects. That is not an argument in favor of nuclear power, at all. It is however a fine example of the Streisand Effect, so thanks for that.

            • nope again.
              Most US plants have the money saved up. Some , such as SONGS, will be expensive and does not have the money. Others like Zion will cost less than $400M and Ft. St. Vrain cost less than $200 M.

              However, with SMRs, the construction AND deconstruction costs are MINIMAL. That is the why we need to go forward with these.
              First, the reactors and core plumbing are constructed at a factory, which it is much easier to control QA, and COSTS.
              To put these on-site will take less than 6 months and likel
        • by seth_hartbecke ( 27500 ) on Saturday June 04, 2022 @01:41PM (#62592640) Homepage

          I think you're thinking about it wrong.

          Every EVERY method of power generation has a footprint. And a waste product. Including wind and solar.

          Nuclear power plants take a considerably smaller footprint (literally land footprint) per GW of generation ability compared to Wind and Solar. Which means we can leave the rest of the land quite literally to nature.

          And the waste product, while it requires careful management, is actually of such limited volume you can consider storing it ALL in a hole in the ground (ie: yucca mountain). You can't even fathom that with used windmill blades (that are build of a composite we don't know how to recycle yet) and solar panels (that we are also struggling to learn how to recycle well).

          I've seen figures that if I powered my entire high energy life off of nuclear power, my waste FOR MY WHOLE LIFE would fit in a coffee cup. If you do the "waste refinement / recycling" they talk about here, it shrinks to 1 cubic inch.

          Yea, am I "leaving something to my future generations" to manage. But, it's like ... 1 cubic inch.

          That seems pretty damn responsible compared to everything we're doing now.

      • I agree we should be reprocessing waste. I think the first experimental plants should be in areas where people are pro-nuclear. With that plus the jobs created it might actually happen.

        Based on the behavior of chemical companies I have some concerns. The country is littered with toxic sites because they cut costs, didn't follow regulations, etc. So I think the first reprocessing should be a government project with gold plated safety standards that includes some kind of auditing/safety commission that in

      • by crunchygranola ( 1954152 ) on Friday June 03, 2022 @11:57PM (#62591748)

        While it doesn't address all of your points, actually reprocessing the existing waste will result in net reduction of the waste.

        The waste is already in an extremely compact form and well contained form - spent fuel rods. Storing the rods above ground in concrete casks, as is currently being done presents no problems other than minimal site maintenance and security. The rods are stable indefinitely.

        Reprocessing produces larger volumes of radioactive waste from the chemical processes involved. This is more waste not less, even though the waste contains lower levels of actinides.

        This is true of all of the reprocessing technologies that are available. The new kid in town, pyro-processing, produces the least additional waste but has poor net extraction of long lived actinides (that is, the waste still contains substantial amounts of very long lived radionuclides), the salt product is hard to dispose of, and it has never been used on a commercial scale..

        • by Cyberax ( 705495 ) on Saturday June 04, 2022 @12:41AM (#62591802)

          Reprocessing produces larger volumes of radioactive waste from the chemical processes involved.

          Nope. Modern reprocessing allows to recycle the spent reagents pretty much indefinitely, so they don't contribute to the waste stream.

        • Re: (Score:2, Troll)

          by drinkypoo ( 153816 )

          Storing the rods above ground in concrete casks, as is currently being done presents no problems other than minimal site maintenance and security. The rods are stable indefinitely.

          The rods might be, the casks are not. Dry casks fail due to a combination of corrosion and embrittlement, which is why they are not considered suitable for use at the yucca mountain site. The cask is not purely concrete.

          Reprocessing produces larger volumes of radioactive waste from the chemical processes involved. This is more waste not less, even though the waste contains lower levels of actinides.

          And it raises costs, while nuclear is already the most expensive form of power.

        • by sjames ( 1099 )

          I wouldn't consider a fuel rod with 5% nuclear waste and 95% usable material to be "compact" storage. Once the rods cool off enough for dry storage, they need to be reprocessed for the waste to become "compact". Notably, the actual waste from the reprocessing only needs 250-500 years to decay to the level of background radiation.

          As has been pointed out, there are newer reprocessing techniques that produce less waste. A nice side benefit is they result in perfectly good fuel for the right reactor types that

      • While it doesn't address all of your points, actually reprocessing the existing waste will result in net reduction of the waste while providing power. That will reduce some of that unfair burden already placed on future generations.

        They do this in France and what it does is make nuclear more expensive, which means less money for renewables. Meanwhile, even without reprocessing, nuclear is the most expensive option. There's simply no contortions which make nuclear make sense under capitalism. If profit were not involved I could maybe see it, but even then it has big problems which make it less than sensible.

        • by sjames ( 1099 )

          I'm all for renewables, but there remains the matter of availability. We need power 100% of the time, even on windless overcast days.

          • I'm all for renewables, but there remains the matter of availability. We need power 100% of the time, even on windless overcast days.

            Renewables plus storage are cheaper than coal [latimes.com], let alone nuclear.

            Also, if you build out the grid, you can bring in power from where it is produced. And you have to do this whether you use nuclear or renewables, because nuclear power plants are not sited at the point of consumption for a variety of reasons, and represent a large amount of production at a single point. For some renewables, no grid improvements need to be made whatsoever, because they are located at the point of consumption. For others, it's no more than they would have to be made for nuclear.

            Further, nuclear causes load problems, it does not solve them. We have to use more peaker plants because we use nuclear, and it's not economical to follow load with nuclear. Some designs just can't even do it reasonably.

            TL;DR: the availability objection is bullshit

            • by sjames ( 1099 )

              The same storage can work for nuclear. Run at little above base, use the storage to shave the peaks. Most days, the wind and solar will be at max about the time of the peaks, so they have a contribution to make for peaking as well.

              • The same storage can work for nuclear.

                If you have the storage, you don't need nuclear. And the only thing that would cost more than nuclear would be nuclear plus storage.

    • But-- I don't think nuclear is needed for more than base line power and it has as ton of issues around waste, decommissioning, and lack of insurance (so any cost overruns pass straight to consumers).

      You post this after you read the article and watched the video that had a subject matter expert address those very concerns? Oh, right, this is Slashdot, people post comments after only reading half the headline.

      I also feel that nuclear is immoral or unethical because the model is "we get cheaper power and executives get big salary but the any excess costs are going to be paid by people not even born yet, most of whom will not get any cheaper power."

      I think larger escrows are in order. And I was appalled that in that one state they just flat out put an extra charge on consumers when the plant wasn't as profitable as promised.

      How old are you? You didn't learn yet that if a company stops making a profit that they go out of business? If the electric rates were not raised then the only other option was to not provide power. It would be nice to have another option, but that's not the world we live in.

      If you run a busines

    • But-- I don't think nuclear is needed for more than base line power and it has as ton of issues around waste, decommissioning...

      Which is the point of the article: you don't have to dispose of or store long term waste if you use it as fuel. This has always perplexed me. If the waste is radioactive enough to be dangerous, that means it has a lot of energy left in it. If it doesn't have energy, it's not dangerous. Why are we intentionally throwing away 90%+ of the value in the fuel? It's so (as it were) wasteful.

      and lack of insurance (so any cost overruns pass straight to consumers).

      Insurance might be nice but few companies insure against business success or failure. Does a local restaurant get insurance i

  • by Mspangler ( 770054 ) on Friday June 03, 2022 @09:46PM (#62591498)

    We know, and have known for decades. What's missing is political will and economics.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

    • by fermion ( 181285 )
      And it may not be as practice as the those looking for government hand out believe. In my day it was that government was suppressing water as fuel source for cars. And cars can run on water. A battery for hydrolysis, then burn the hydrogen. Simple, efficient, but the guvment is evil

      And reprocessing has always been an option. But China has spent 50mstudying the issue and going for vitrification. It is like we can recycle 100% of plastic, but we are not going to.

      It is often confounding trying understand t

      • by q_e_t ( 5104099 )

        And it may not be as practice as the those looking for government hand out believe. In my day it was that government was suppressing water as fuel source for cars. And cars can run on water. A battery for hydrolysis, then burn the hydrogen. Simple, efficient, but the guvment is evil

        I presume you are joking, given how inefficient that would be. Plus a typical ICEV won't run well on hydrogen, if at all.

        • a typical ICEV won't run well on hydrogen, if at all.

          With the correct ignition timing it will run great until the hot metal parts suck up hydrogen and break due to embrittlement. It embrittles ferrous metals [imetllc.com] and even aluminum [sciencedirect.com]. You can convert pretty much any ICEV to run on pretty much any gaseous fuel, but some make more sense than others. LPG is the usual conversion fuel. Diesel and otto cycle engines can both run on LPG with zero mechanical modifications. It's also not uncommon to add propane and nitrous together to older diesels, or instead you can upgrade

          • by q_e_t ( 5104099 )

            a typical ICEV won't run well on hydrogen, if at all.

            With the correct ignition timing it will run great until the hot metal parts suck up hydrogen and break due to embrittlement.

            To me, that means not well. OK, maybe well enough, but not for long enough to make it worthwhile.

            • Now that we have viable hydrogen fuel cells it's just idiotic to run an ICE on hydrogen. It requires expensive alloys and/or coatings, and the efficiency, performance, and reliability are garbage by comparison.

              • by q_e_t ( 5104099 )
                It makes most sense to charge up a battery in an BEV first. Second would be fuel cells. Whether third is an adapted ICEV on hydrogen or synthetic fuels I am not sure. The latter would be expensive on fuel, but less of a pain in use.
                • Why would you use synthetic fuels? Grow algae in salt pans using seawater, centrifuge it and put the lipids into a hydrocracker and put the rest into the ABE process, making butanol from it. Most of the energy is free and comes from the sun, even for pumping the water inland (which can be done with solar thermal heat pipes).

                  • by q_e_t ( 5104099 )

                    Why would you use synthetic fuels? Grow algae in salt pans using seawater

                    It's unproven at scale.

                    • I wish the nuclear playboys would admit that about SMRs, and molten salt, and every other thing they think is going to make nuclear power viable

                    • by q_e_t ( 5104099 )
                      Yes. It's all unproven. It's worth researching, but anything we need to build we need to build now, in parallel with any research. For many things (e.g., wind) that's easily done. For nuclear, it means versions of current generations only for the next 20 years.
      • cars can run on water. A battery for hydrolysis, then burn the hydrogen. Simple, efficient, but the guvment is evil

        You're mocking the people that believe this, right? This is Slashdot, so it's hard to tell.

    • by q_e_t ( 5104099 )

      and economics.

      If it's not economic it's unlikely to happen unless government policy tips the playing field to make it happen, e.g., carbon taxes to internalise externalities into the market.

  • Fast breeder reactors sound so good what could possibly be stopping their use? Fast breeder reactors run very hot in two ways both of which have prevented them from being considered as useful. Fast breeder reactors run at very high radiation levels and a high temperature. Both of these factors create serious problems when operating the reactor. The high radiation levels caused by high speed neutrons make more shielding necessary and make the reactor harder and more dangerous to run. The high speed high ener
    • Yes, there's a reason why the SuperPhenix project was abandoned in France. Also making a molten salt reactor with a coolant that can spontaneously combust if exposed to open air does not seem like a super idea.

      The best way to go would be to reuse waste into standard reactors. Some current-gen reactors can and do already run with MOX, which is basically reprocessed waste.

      • There was also the concern of having bomb building materials just sitting somewhere too. And now with ICS (Industrial Control Systems) being what they are, enrichment systems and control systems at these facilities could potentially be compromised.

        The USA proved that w/ StuxNet in Iran, state sponsored adversaries doing the same to us is a very high concern on the fed gov't side.

  • by williamyf ( 227051 ) on Friday June 03, 2022 @10:48PM (#62591604)

    In the cold war, when the technology for nuclear reactors started, you needed two types of reactors:

    1.) Reactors that were safe and reliable (with the technologies of the era) AND could produce Uranium/Plutonium for A/H bombs.
    2.) Reactors that were safe and reliable (with the technologies of the era) AND were compact enough to fit in things like aircraft carriers and Submarines.

    This meant that most of the research money and comercial interest and impetus went to the type of reactors we see now (heavy water, light water, carbon rod moderated and such), leaving other technologies (like molten sodium reactors, peeble reactors and such) as nice experiemnts and nothing more.

    With the cold war "behind" us, and treaties limiting (and sometimes even diminishing) the amount of bombs that the main atomic superpowers have, is no wonder that old designs/technologies that are safer and more efficient with the fuel (but that do not aid the "cold war" effort) are being dusted off and re-researched...

    France is one of the counties with the biggest % of their electricity produced by atomics, so , is fittint to finish my post with the sage words of Gaston LaGaffe:

    M'enfin

    • Wasn't Gaston Belgian?
    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      This is untrue. Check the list of fast neutron reactors that have been built over the years: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

      Clearly very significant funding has gone into fast neutron reactor research. It's just that they create as many problems as they solve and will never be commercially viable.

      In particular, they still produce waste that must be stored for 500 years before it comes safe, and require difficult to handle and often toxic coolant since water can't be used (water is a neutron moderator). Co

      • WHile the article talks specifically about fast neutron reactors, The general idea of the article was of "safer less waste producing reactors".

        That's why, in my comment I never mentioned "Fast Neutron Reactors" even once.

        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          What other type of less waste producing reactors are there that haven't had a lot of investment or development?

          • What other type of less waste producing reactors are there that haven't had a lot of investment or development?

            The ones I named. peeble nuclear reactors and molten sodium nuclear reactors...

            • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

              We tried those too, they were disasters as well. Expensive failures, decades away from commercial scale, and unclear if they will ever be economically viable.

              Maybe once we get the climate crisis under control we can dick around with those again.

  • by quax ( 19371 ) on Friday June 03, 2022 @11:19PM (#62591652)

    One that creates neutrons via spallation. Much safer designm, as they cannot meltdown:
    http://wavewatching.net/2012/0... [wavewatching.net]

    Added bonus, these reactors can also transmute long lasting nuclear waste into much less problematic isotopes.

  • by farrellj ( 563 ) on Friday June 03, 2022 @11:21PM (#62591658) Homepage Journal

    Are not CANDU reactors this type of reactor?

    • CANDU reactors are a lot of things, they are very flexible about the fuel in them. They are not fast reactors, but they can still be used to destroy waste products found in "spent" fuel rods from light water reactors. ("Spent" is in quotes because the rods are "spent" as far as light water reactors are concerned but for a heavy water reactor they could be considered "enriched".)

      It's possible to build a CANDU or similar heavy water reactor so it can use the fuel rod from a light water reactor with no modif

  • by jemmyw ( 624065 ) on Friday June 03, 2022 @11:41PM (#62591722)
    When I was a kid the British nuclear energy company (I can't remember what it was called at the time, British Energy maybe) ran adverts on TV about how they can reprocess nuclear fuel to be used again. So I assume we've known about this for at least 30 years, but only France has really committed to and invested in nuclear energy. Makes me sad to think about where we could be now if the UK and USA had gone hard on nuclear energy too. I've always been an environmentalist and a proponent of nuclear energy. We should be humming along on primarily nuclear energy at this point. Instead we fucked up and I don't see there's a way out of the energy+climate predicament. Renewables won't be enough, nuclear can't be built out in time to bring down CO2 emissions in a meaningful way. Although, I believe we'll start building a lot more nuclear out of necessity.
    • My fear is that we will - out of necessity - keep the shitty older nuclear plants online, far past their projected lifespan.
    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      Two fast breeder reactors were built at Dounreay in Scotland. Both of them were fiascos.

      Emissions of radioactive material were so bad that they had to ban fishing in the area. Later a digger cut through the backup power supply line, which lead to an investigation that uncovered multiple failings of management and safety.

      The French also tried building them, but also ran into problems and very high costs.

      Renewables better be enough because we can't afford to keep pissing money away on nuclear, and in any case

    • When I was a kid the British nuclear energy company (I can't remember what it was called at the time, British Energy maybe) ran adverts on TV about how they can reprocess nuclear fuel to be used again. So I assume we've known about this for at least 30 years, but only France has really committed to and invested in nuclear energy.

      Nuclear energy is expensive, even in France, and reusing fuel makes it much more expensive. They made the decisions based on french national defense, which is funny because that's historically not much of a thing. It only really makes sense if you think of yourself as an island, which is also not a thing for France.

    • by _merlin ( 160982 )

      The trouble is, price estimates for nuclear power generation in the UK and France originally assigned an arbitrarily high value to Pu239 because it was considered a strategically important material, both for building their own nuclear arsenals and, in the case of the UK, for selling to the US where demand for Pu239 for building nuclear weapons outstripped the local supply.

      The trouble is, demand for Pu239 wasn't high for very long. Once you've got enough nuclear warheads to obliterate the world a few times

  • by jonwil ( 467024 ) on Saturday June 04, 2022 @08:01AM (#62592186)

    The US did have spent fuel reprocessing for a while but they banned it because one of the steps in the process produces nuclear material of the sort that could be used to make a nuclear bomb and the US was scared of what might happen if the "wrong people" were able to get their hands on that.

    • This has generally been my impression with nuclear: The better you are at using spent fuel, the closer you are to having weapons grade material. Hence, the US wants to keep it generally harmless and limited. Do you know if I'm wildly off base in this assumption?

  • I'm pretty sure fast-breeder reactors have been long understood, and deliberately not commercialized because what they pump out is DELIGHTFULLY easy to turn into a nuclear bomb, far more so than uranium.

    • by MrL0G1C ( 867445 )

      And this would stop who from building them?

      • Carter signed a treaty saying that the US wouldn't build that type of reactor.

        I'm pretty hard right. But this "feels like a job for the UN." A few "breaders" aka "recyclers" aka "refiners" positioned ... somewhere somewhat neutral that could reprocess the worlds waste into fuel again. Highly HIGHLY staffed by people from lots of nations and heavily monitored to make sure everybody knows what's going in and out of the place.

        The place ... is a sticking point I know. You'd almost need to make "UN Islan

      • Uh, people who can't get the needed stuff?
    • China's PLA is building 2 very large breeder reactors, for just that purpose.
  • If this is true Biden has a chance to not go down as the most catastrophic President in history.
    • not even close to the worse. Trump would have that distinction, esp. with what will happen this week.
  • So the EBR-II project was the prototype for a thing called the "Integral Fast Reactor" which is not mentioned in this article.

    The key distinction in this type of "fast" reactor is that it is a "burner" reactor as opposed to a "breeder" reactor.

    A breeder reactor creates plutonium where as a burner reactor creates fissile ash. That makes burner reactors a "anti-proliferation" device as weapons grade plutonium and DU can be used as fuel, which is an important aspect of solving the waste issue accompanyin

    • Could not believe that W had it most of the way built and the gd dems stopped it. CLinton has said that this was one of his bigger mistakes (along with transmars ).
      I would not be opposed to restarting the project IFF it is 100% funded up front and the dems, esp. the GOON SQUAD, are not allowed to stop it.
  • Back in the 70s/80s, PNAS and other American journals (science, JAMA, etc) were top science journals in the world. Only Chemistry was in Germany (and in German, which is why all American Chemist had to learn German ), and then apparently moved to America in the 90s/00s. Great. That makes life easier.
    Then for the last 20 years, China (and other Asian science) has been a total joke. With CHina, it was easily 1/3 upwards to 1/2 of their science was bogus.
    Now, I read this kind of garbage that is obviously as

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