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EU Power

Is Germany Ready To Lean Back Into Nuclear Power? (spiegel.de) 392

The German news magazine Der Spiegel spoke to a 54-year-old who had always been in favor of the company's plan to phase out nuclear power by the end of 2022. Until now — with fears about Russia curtailing supplies of natural gas.

And he's not the only one: A poll commissioned by DER SPIEGEL has revealed some rather shocking numbers. According to the survey carried out by the online polling firm Civey, only 22 percent of those surveyed are in favor of shutting down the three nuclear plants that are still in operation in Germany...as planned at the end of the year. Seventy-eight percent of those surveyed are in favor of continuing to operate the plants until the summer of 2023, a variant that is being discussed in the political sphere as a "stretch operation" — in other words, continuing to keep them online for a few months, but without the acquisition of new fuel rods. Even among Green Party supporters, a narrow majority favors this approach....

The answers suggest that the attitude of Germans toward nuclear power has changed significantly. Sixty-seven percent are in favor of continuing to operate the nuclear plants for the next five years, with only 27 percent opposed to it. The only group without a clear majority in favor of running the plants for the next five years are the supporters of the Green Party....

On the question of whether Germany should build new nuclear power plants because of the energy crisis, 41 percent of respondents answered "yes," meaning they favor an approach that isn't even up for debate in Germany. The results are astounding all around, especially compared with past surveys. Thirty-three years ago, a polling institute asked a similar question on behalf of DER SPIEGEL. At the time, only a miniscule 3 percent of respondents thought Germany should build new plants.

Officially, Germany is supposed to be transitioning to green energies, but these polling figures suggest that people may be interested in returning to the old energy status quo.... It had already become clear in recent years that support for the nuclear phaseout was already slowly crumbling. The Russian war of aggression against Ukraine has now accelerated this shift, calling into question many old certainties, or overturning them completely.... The energy security that people took for granted for decades in Germany has been shaken ever since Russia cut gas deliveries and costs rose.

The result being that an old German dogma now seems to be crumbling: the rejection of nuclear energy. Concerns are either being put on the backburner or are evaporating. Radiation from nuclear waste? Safety risks? Danger of large-scale disasters? Who cares. Those are things you worry about when you have working heat. Electricity first, then ethics.

Thanks to Slashdot reader atcclears for sharing the article
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Is Germany Ready To Lean Back Into Nuclear Power?

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  • Wait till winter (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Kernel Kurtz ( 182424 ) on Sunday August 14, 2022 @12:41PM (#62788826)

    The answers suggest that the attitude of Germans toward nuclear power has changed significantly.

    Being cold and dark will do that.

    • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday August 14, 2022 @12:57PM (#62788882)

      an old German dogma now seems to be crumbling: the rejection of nuclear energy

      Rejecting nuclear power was always stupid and short-sighted, but they could get away with it because of the availability of cheap natural gas from Russia.

      • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

        You will NOT get rid of dependency on Russia by switching from natural gas power generation to nuclear power unless you build more uranium enrichment plants outside of Russia. Russia currently owns something like 45% of world's total uranium enrichment capacity, so it's not like world's nuclear power industry can get rid of the dependency on Russia right now any faster than natural gas consumers can. As to whether LNG terminals or enrichment plants are built faster, that's more of an academic question for t
        • Re:Wait till winter (Score:5, Informative)

          by Freischutz ( 4776131 ) on Sunday August 14, 2022 @01:42PM (#62789008)

          You will NOT get rid of dependency on Russia by switching from natural gas power generation to nuclear power unless you build more uranium enrichment plants outside of Russia. Russia currently owns something like 45% of world's total uranium enrichment capacity, so it's not like world's nuclear power industry can get rid of the dependency on Russia right now any faster than natural gas consumers can. As to whether LNG terminals or enrichment plants are built faster, that's more of an academic question for the next few months.

          Westinghouse, who built the German nuclear plants has already confirmed that they can deliver a complete set of new fuel rods by next year.

          • Fuel rod manufacturing and uranium enrichment are two different nuclear fuel manufacturing steps. Westinghouse owns no enrichment facilities; it has to purchase enriched fuel from companies that do.
            • Re:Wait till winter (Score:5, Informative)

              by Freischutz ( 4776131 ) on Sunday August 14, 2022 @03:07PM (#62789274)

              Fuel rod manufacturing and uranium enrichment are two different nuclear fuel manufacturing steps. Westinghouse owns no enrichment facilities; it has to purchase enriched fuel from companies that do.

              According to the Westinghouse they'll have the things ready in 2023. I'm sure they'll have done an inventory of their Uranium supplies before making that promise. I'm no nuclear fetishist but since obscene amounts of German taxpayer money has been sunk into these plants and Westinghouse can deliver fuel rods we might as as well use these money pits to offset the end of Russian gas supplies until these plants can be replaced.

              • Possibly, but Germany isn't planning to have any nuclear plants operating past 2023.
                • Re:Wait till winter (Score:4, Informative)

                  by Kernel Kurtz ( 182424 ) on Sunday August 14, 2022 @03:29PM (#62789348)

                  Possibly, but Germany isn't planning to have any nuclear plants operating past 2023.

                  The entire premise of the article is that without secure gas supplies that may have to change.

                • by drnb ( 2434720 )

                  Possibly, but Germany isn't planning to have any nuclear plants operating past 2023.

                  Opinions on that political decision were changing as environmentalists started getting realistic about nuclear, recognizing it as a necessary part of the solution to fossil fuels. That green washing could only get Germany so far.

                  Opinions have been changing at a greater rate since the invasion of Ukraine.

                  The once politically unthinkable is now being considered.

                • by sfcat ( 872532 )

                  Possibly, but Germany isn't planning to have any nuclear plants operating past 2023.

                  Reality voted differently.

        • Re:Wait till winter (Score:5, Informative)

          by crunchygranola ( 1954152 ) on Sunday August 14, 2022 @02:18PM (#62789118)

          Nearly half of this Russian enrichment capacity can be discounted from the picture due to significant slack in the world enrichment capacity (which discounts 40%) and the fact that Russia uses part of the capacity for itself (about another 8%). So only about half of it needs to be replaced - a significantly less dire picture.

          But no one is building new nuclear power plants on the time scale of a a few years. It takes much longer than that everywhere. So we are only talking about keeping existing plants operating in Europe. Supplying new fuel rods to these plants is not a problem in the same sense that shipping LNG is. The rods can be shipped even if that requires cutting back on nuclear plant operations somewhere else in the world.

          Cutting out Russia from the world enrichment market as form of sanctions is a different issue, which does need to be addressed. Both URENCO and China would probably like to capture that Russia's portion of the world market, and expanding both their capacities by about 50% would just about do it. China actually did add that amount of capacity from 2015 to 2020.

          Nearly all the world's capacity is from gas centrifuges these days which are particularly amenable to capacity increases because of the small incremental nature of gas centrifuge cascades. Since centrifuges wear out all operations need to keep production lines open, so scaling up existing lines is what is required.

          • It's perfectly possible that just the fuel for Germany can be served from the existing spare capacity. What about the whole EU? The whole non-Russian part of Europe? The world? Yes, it's possible that Western companies will expand their capacity. *Will* they do that?

            China actually did add that amount of capacity from 2015 to 2020.

            Uhh...because of Taiwan, is relying on PRC *really* something you want to do? Really?

            The rods can be shipped even if that requires cutting back on nuclear plant operations somewhere else in the world.

            Temporarily you can do the same with hard coal, so for Germany *that* should not be a problem.

        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          The bigger problem is converting millions of gas boilers to heat pumps. As well as the cost of the pump, they need to be retrofitted, and the building's radiators upgraded.

          They will be paying whatever it costs for gas this winter.

      • an old German dogma now seems to be crumbling: the rejection of nuclear energy

        Rejecting nuclear power was always stupid and short-sighted, but they could get away with it because of the availability of cheap natural gas from Russia.

        It makes sense. Nuclear is the most expensive possible power generation option out there that requires obscene amounts of state subsidies so since you've already wasted taxpayer funds on these money pits you might as well use them as stop gaps to plug the Russia gas gap while you build something more cost effective.

      • an old German dogma now seems to be crumbling: the rejection of nuclear energy

        Rejecting nuclear power was always stupid and short-sighted, but they could get away with it because of the availability of cheap natural gas from Russia.

        The move was always political.

        It was a big win for that Russian Soviet era support for the German green movement.

    • Re:Wait till winter (Score:5, Informative)

      by K. S. Kyosuke ( 729550 ) on Sunday August 14, 2022 @01:01PM (#62788894)

      That has nothing to do with it, since the majority of Gerrmans have gas heaters installed. Nuclear power plants can't make gas heaters emit heat without gas, nor can they produce enough power for direct heating of houses (too inefficient), nor can enough houses be insulated and heat pumps be installed until winter (very efficient, but not enough companies in the market to renovate the whole of Germany in a few months). So, no, "being cold" has absolutely nothing to do with that.

      As for "being dark", this is trivially solved in Germany in a short-term horizon by employing some of the spare capacity of German coal plants (their utilization dropped very sharply in the past ten years due to rapid growth of renewables).

      So, to sum it up, the first problem is unsolvable by nuclear power in the short-term horizon of a few years and the second is not even a problem now. So why would any rational actor "change attitude toward nuclear power" for either of the two reasons when it solves neither of them?

      • Many people use resistive electrical heaters, which are as easily powered by nuclear as anything else. It is also possible to use electricity to produce methane, which will work in place of natural gas. You'd have to pass some special exemptions to get enough capacity built before winter, but it would be possible from a technical standpoint.

        • Many people use resistive electrical heaters, which are as easily powered by nuclear as anything else.

          As a fun lab exercise, yes. Now do the math for a heating switch from natural gas to resistive heating for Germany and compare it to their nuclear plant capacity. Tell us the results.

          • Many people use resistive electrical heaters, which are as easily powered by nuclear as anything else.

            As a fun lab exercise, yes. Now do the math for a heating switch from natural gas to resistive heating for Germany and compare it to their nuclear plant capacity. Tell us the results.

            That was the point. If people with gas heat have no gas this winter, they are going to need a shit ton of additional electric generating capacity for emergency measures. Probably they will need to spin up both all of the nuclear and coal they have.

            • They won't have any extra nuclear plants since you won't be able to repair them before this winter comes. So that's not really an option.
              • They won't have any extra nuclear plants since you won't be able to repair them before this winter comes. So that's not really an option.

                They can't build LNG terminals to get gas imports from elsewhere fast enough for this winter either, but the time to start is still now.

                It would be dumb to think the gas shortage is a temporary thing. They need to be planning for winter 5 years from now, as it is entirely possible Putin will still be in Ukraine.

                The underlying rationale is, they can never go back to relying on Russia for gas. Ever. Govern yourselves accordingly, as they say.

                • They can't build LNG terminals to get gas imports from elsewhere fast enough for this winter either, but the time to start is still now.

                  The LNG terminals serve a purpose that nuclear plants don't: they provide German industry with natural gas for high-grade heating and chemical feedstock. Therefore the LNG terminals are necessary in a way that nuclear plants aren't.

          • All the more reason to build more of them. A lot of countries are now switching to gas in order to reduce CO2 emissions, but the Netherlands (as a country already heated almost 100% by gas) is switching away from it, to heat pumps augmented by resistive heaters or waste heat from industry. We'll need a lot more electric power generation, and here there is a renewed interest in nuclear power to meet that demand.
            • The 2010 and 2012 EU building efficiency directives that went into full force in 2020 ensure that the whole EU will do the same conversion that the Netherlands is undergoing now. But whether near-zero-energy building actually necessitate more power seems debatable. The "near-zero" part in "near-zero-energy building" is there for a reason, and it's *not* to consume *more* power.
        • It is also possible to use electricity to produce methane, which will work in place of natural gas.

          Oh, and for this you don't even need to use nuclear plants; excess renewable production would be about twice as cheap because the vast majority of cost for this is the price of electricity. So that's not a good argument for nuclear power either.

        • Actually few people in Germany use resistive heaters. So few that it doesn't even show up in statistics and gets lumped together with the 6% "Other types". Gas accounts for close to 50%, Oil still accounts for nearly 30%, the other big player is district heating (mostly from gas power stations).

          Anyway no need to argue with the GP, he was talking out of his arse. The whole point of the discussion of extending nuclear power and coal power was to reduce the load on the some 100 billion kWh of gas burnt generat

      • the majority of Gerrmans have gas heaters installed.

        I have had for years many kinds of electric heaters. In a world where a lot of German houses are going to be cut off from heating at some point this winter, the ability to quickly and easily drop electric heaters into peoples homes that really need them can correct that issue easily.

        But, in order to do so, you need an abundant supply of electricity...

        • But, in order to do so, you need an abundant supply of electricity...

          Well, yes, and as we've established, all the spare non-nuclear sources massively exceed the spare nuclear sources in Germany.

      • by Kernel Kurtz ( 182424 ) on Sunday August 14, 2022 @01:22PM (#62788938)

        That has nothing to do with it, since the majority of Gerrmans have gas heaters installed. Nuclear power plants can't make gas heaters emit heat without gas, nor can they produce enough power for direct heating of houses (too inefficient)

        If you have gas heating and no gas, resistive heat, no matter how inefficient, is going to be the number one fallback.

        As for "being dark", this is trivially solved in Germany in a short-term horizon by employing some of the spare capacity of German coal plants (their utilization dropped very sharply in the past ten years due to rapid growth of renewables).

        And they are doing exactly that.

        https://www.businessinsider.co... [businessinsider.com]

        So the real question is should we spin up the already available nuclear capacity, or the already available coal capacity. Using nuclear power from already built plants is much more environmentally friendly that burning more coal. The anti-nuke people deserve more coal though. That has been their primary legacy over many decades.

      • by sjames ( 1099 )

        Because some people are able to think about events more than 6 months in the future and realize that being beholden to Putin is NOT a desirable situation, now or ever. They further recognize that actions taken now can make getting in or remaining in that undesirable situation more or less likely over time.

        • Yes, and the future beyond 6 months in the future involves expansion of renewables, installation of LNG terminals, and ESPECIALLY renovations of houses in accordance with the 2010 and 2012 EU bulding energy efficiency directives that went into full effect in 2020. All of these things ALREADY solve the natural gas problem for Germany even without new nuclear power.
      • That has nothing to do with it, since the majority of Gerrmans have gas heaters installed.

        Natural gas to feed power plants competes (and bids) for the same natural gas that feeds gas heaters. So while not directly fungible, adding power to the grid would take pressure off stratospheric gas prices [statista.com].

        • This is very much true, and decreasing the share of gas generation in German grid frees up natural gas for heating, if only a little bit. But you don't need German nuclear plants for that. Delaying the last shutdowns is very likely the only thing that will happen when it comes to future developments of German nuclear power.
      • That has nothing to do with it, since the majority of Gerrmans have gas heaters installed. Nuclear power plants can't make gas heaters emit heat without gas, nor can they produce enough power for direct heating of houses (too inefficient), nor can enough houses be insulated and heat pumps be installed until winter (very efficient, but not enough companies in the market to renovate the whole of Germany in a few months). So, no, "being cold" has absolutely nothing to do with that.

        "Being cold" absolutely has quite a lot to do with it because Germany has a lot of gas fired power plants [cleanenergywire.org], Every megawatt-hour of electricity supplied with nuclear or coal means more gas available for home heating.

        • You call that "a lot"? That's like 600 PJ of gas. Germany consumes several thousand PJ of gas annually. Do you free up some gas? Yes. Does that achieve more than turning down German thermostats? That's *extremely* unlikely.
      • Any statistics on what percentage of Germany's 2021 winter natural gas use was for residential heating?

        It seems odd that it would be a huge portion comparing to what I understand about Sweden. Sweden has a fair bit of district heating in cities small and large, but the vast majority is hydronic heat pumps.

        Industrial process heat is a hard one to solve, but for commercial buildings adding a partial-capacity heat pump is often a fairly easy piping and controls modification.

      • That has nothing to do with it

        It has EVERYTHING to do with it. The whole discussions about nuclear power and coal power currently running are for the sole purpose of reducing the gas consumption in gas fired power stations.

        As for "being dark", this is trivially solved in Germany in a short-term horizon by employing some of the spare capacity of German coal plants

        That is also done. The existing coal plants have already had their lives extended or are in the process of it. But you can only extend the life of a running plant or restart a mothballed plant. The majority of German's coal fired power stations shutdown are not in any state to be restarted without significant work and

    • by shanen ( 462549 )

      Going for funny, eh? Didn't get there.

      I'm always more interested in going deep, and in this case it's easy to see which way to look. Over in Ukraine it appears they are already reaching the limits of how much blood they are able to pay for freedom. If they don't get some major victories against Putin, and fairly soon, then... Yeah, Germany's situation looks bleak, but over in Ukraine the Russian victory actually is an existential threat.

      • Yes, Ukrainians are already "reaching their limits" and that's why Russian commanders are fleeing from Kherson?
        • by shanen ( 462549 )

          I'm mostly referring to the crucial martial law legislation which is about to expire. Zelensky asked his legislature for an extension, but how many times can he do that? Or have I missed some major Ukrainian victories since the first battle of Kyiv way back when?

          This story is focused on collateral damage in Germany, but being forced to extend the use of nuclear power is a rather weak form of damage compared to blood.

    • by hey! ( 33014 )

      More like natural gas prices [ft.com].

      Natural gas is not a huge part of Germany's electricity generation mix, but if they're going to pull the plug on 4 GW of nuclear generating capacity they don't have many other sources they can simply turn up to make up the difference. Coal plants operate near capacity, and you can't just conjure one out of thin air.

      With cheap natural gas they can afford to shutdown nuclear. With expensive natural gas they're looking at increased electricity prices. They're already on the verg

      • if they're going to pull the plug on 4 GW of nuclear generating capacity they don't have many other sources they can simply turn up to make up the difference. Coal plants operate near capacity, and you can't just conjure one out of thin air.

        Germany shut down so many coal plants that temporarily finding 4 GW of spare capacity surely isn't an issue? It's not about "thin air". 10 GW of extra capacity was online just two years ago. Presumably from much newer plants, even. A lot less of a problem with those.

    • The answers suggest that the attitude of Germans toward nuclear power has changed significantly.

      Being cold and dark will do that.

      yes. The Germans are learning that electricity doesn't just come from a wall outlet...

      • Gas heating uses pipes, not wall outlets.
        • Gas heating uses pipes, not wall outlets.

          However, when the lights go out it may be problematic. Germany became to reliant on Russian gas and now is scrambling to try to make up for a scarcer supply. As to heat, electrical shortages mean electric heaters can't substitute for a lack of gas heat.

  • We hate being cold, but burning stuff seems to be vile.

    What solutions are the old and new hippies going to suggest to keep us from being cavemen again?
  • by blahabl ( 7651114 ) on Sunday August 14, 2022 @12:44PM (#62788836)
    "electricity first, then ethics". Seriously Slashdot? That is the level of editorializing you're into now?
    • Yup. Where exactly does "ethics" come into the nuclear energy debate? If anything, it's more ethical NOT to buy anything from a government that's actively doing evil things.

    • It's a quote from the source... BUT it's egregiously distorted.

      The next sentence is "However, some people believe nuclear power is both ecologically and morally sound "

    • Yeah it's completely off base. There's nothing ethical about putting a nation of 80 million people into a crisis with many already in a position where they can't afford to heat their homes in the winter all to keep some imaginary what-if scenario at bay.

  • What a load. They talked to a guy in Germany. Who cares? The law hasn't changed. If support is still at 41% on a stupid poll when the issue isn't even before the people, and they're at the worst point in a minor crisis, that suggests there will be very little support for whatever specific changes somebody proposes later.

    Stupid article, written for stupid people.

    • and they're at the worst point in a minor crisis,

      Don't you think it will be worse during the winter?

    • Re:Horse Pucky (Score:4, Interesting)

      by MacMann ( 7518492 ) on Sunday August 14, 2022 @02:05PM (#62789070)

      What a load. They talked to a guy in Germany. Who cares? The law hasn't changed.

      Then what happens in January when energy demand is high, temperatures are low, and the nuclear power plants close as scheduled? My guess there's a scramble for changing the law because the lights and heat went out in the parliament building.

      Maybe Germany keeps the lights and heat running after they close their nuclear power plants but it will mean higher energy prices. That's what happens in a supply-and-demand economy when supply is restricted. I'll see people claim that keeping nuclear power plants open won't help the natural gas shortage but Germany gets about 10% of their electricity from natural gas right now, so what happens when there's less electricity produced? Might there be a demand for more natural gas to those existing power plants? I would think so.

      Higher prices makes it feasible to bring in natural gas by sea. Putting natural gas on a chemical tanker ship is expensive so this is typically only done in dire circumstances. The tankers capable of shipping natural gas are also usually equipped to move ammonia. More ships moving natural gas means fewer ships moving ammonia, that means fertilizer costs go up. Higher fertilizer costs means higher food costs. This means more land for food instead of clothing fiber, and so higher clothing costs. This is a cycle for shortages in many other markets, and price inflation for most everything.

  • by VeryFluffyBunny ( 5037285 ) on Sunday August 14, 2022 @12:51PM (#62788852)
    ...and get the answer you want.

    e.g. [after months of the media declaring that nobody will have heating this winter because Russian gas is going to be shut off] "Should we shut down nuclear power stations now?"

    However, if you asked whether nuclear power should be phased out & replaced with renewables in a planned, controlled, & timely manner, you might get a different response.
    • Why are you suggesting that the Spiegel was being duplicitous? They framed the question in a few different ways: do you want to extend existing nuclear until next summer, for the next 5 years, and/or do you want to build new plants as well? There is a large majority who want to to extend the existing plants. There is no majority for building new plants, still, 41% of Germans want that, and apparently that is a huge increase from just a few years ago. So the answer seems clear: Yes, Germany wants to keep
    • Why ask if the nuclear power plants should be shut down in a planned manner? Who says no to that? The question was framed as it was because that is what is being debated in parliament. Frame the question any other way and it doesn't inform anyone on how the people feel about the issue.

      The question on if nuclear should be replaced by renewable energy sources assumes that it can be done. Sure, it wold be nice if nuclear power was replaced by renewable energy sources but how much will that cost? Does it l

    • It wasn't even framing the question. It was incorrectly determining the cause behind a question that which didn't provide one. Yeah Germans don't want nuclear power stations shutdown. Unless the survey asked "why" the answer has nothing to do with "the attitude of Germans toward nuclear power has changed significantly"

  • by backslashdot ( 95548 ) on Sunday August 14, 2022 @12:51PM (#62788854)

    For fucks sake, nuclear is the way to go. It would be cheaper than anything else if it wasn't for extraneous regulatory BS that does nothing for safety. Solar has a 10x higher death rate than nuclear energy. I believe in regulations, but not excessive regulations. Let's pile on regulations onto coal, solar, and natural gas -- which are deadly.

    Reference: https://www.nextbigfuture.com/... [nextbigfuture.com]

    • by rta ( 559125 )

      The Western's world's (minus France, of all places) rejection of nuclear power (and of advancements in nuclear power technology) is a reminder of the power of fear and demagoguery.

      Germany is particularly weird because one of their political parties came out of anti-nuclear protests back in the 70s and they've been beating that drum every since. So it's become an identity issue over there. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

    • Be prepared to be accused of cherry picking your sources and moderated down for it. As much as the accusation of cherry picking goes about there seems to be little realization that this cuts both ways. It's cherry picked data against cherry picked data. Assuming the accusation of cherry picking comes with any data at all. The typical response is a bunch of name calling. Everyone is apparently a paid shill on Slashdot. Being a shill cuts both ways too. Being a shill doesn't mean they are wrong, becaus

  • wow (Score:5, Insightful)

    by sfcat ( 872532 ) on Sunday August 14, 2022 @12:54PM (#62788870)

    The result being that an old German dogma now seems to be crumbling: the rejection of nuclear energy. Concerns are either being put on the backburner or are evaporating. Radiation from nuclear waste? Safety risks? Danger of large-scale disasters? Who cares. Those are things you worry about when you have working heat. Electricity first, then ethics.

    Wow, let us know how you really feel? It is unethical for this journalist to write such non-factual things. Nuclear is the safest and least polluting energy technology we have. And yes, solar panels and windmills make lots of pollution. Large amounts of coal are required to purify the poly-silica used to make solar panels. Industrial amounts of strong acids are used (once) to mine the large amounts of rare earths needed to make windmills. The sorry truth is that there are many environmental challenges we face. We need to make large amounts of CO2 free energy and we need to drive down the cost of energy. We need to be able to recycle plastic. And we need a way to recycle strong dyes.

    If you want to extract less fossil fuels, the only real way to do that is to lower the cost of energy which makes extraction unprofitable. Otherwise all that happens is the pollution is off-shored somewhere else (China) and pollution doesn't honor natural boundaries. But the leaders of the environmental movement are directly opposed to lower energy prices and nuclear power. They wallow in their own ignorance and instead wag fingers at everyone else (which is what they really want to do). I'm sure AmiMojo will be along soon to provide us an example of such a person.

    • The journalist wrote that... followed immediately by ""However, some people believe nuclear power is both ecologically and morally sound ""

      Submitter cropped it.

    • Wow, let us know how you really feel? It is unethical for this journalist to write such non-factual things. Nuclear is the safest and least polluting energy technology we have.

      [citation needed]

    • the people who aren't ok with nuclear are people like me, who do not believe it can be run safely in our countries. Maybe Germany can, as they tend to keep things that should be don't by gov't done by gov't.

      I'm not going to give your average corrupt American businessman a nuclear power plant to manage, or pretend that my fellow citizens won't do that in exchange for a very, very small tax cut or rate cut. I watched what happened in Fukushima. Not a lot of deaths, but an entire city evacuated for 10 year
  • Statistically nuclear power is safer than most alternatives if you weigh all the tradeoffs, but in a world full of terrorists and gullible coup-y troll puppets, they just make me nervous.

    • by CrimsonAvenger ( 580665 ) on Sunday August 14, 2022 @01:14PM (#62788918)

      Statistically nuclear power is safer than most alternatives if you weigh all the tradeoffs,

      If you define safety in terms of "how many people die as a result of producing a certain amount of power", then nuclear power is still a clear winner.

      To date, we've had a few hundred deaths due to nuclear power in the last half century, as opposed to the few hundred deaths per year for any of the alternatives.

      And a few hundred deaths per DAY in traffic is considered "normal"....

      • Statistically nuclear power is safer than most alternatives if you weigh all the tradeoffs,

        If you define safety in terms of "how many people die as a result of producing a certain amount of power", then nuclear power is still a clear winner.

        To date, we've had a few hundred deaths due to nuclear power in the last half century, as opposed to the few hundred deaths per year for any of the alternatives.

        [citation needed]

  • Nuclear energy needs massive amounts of water. This is why France, who is basically getting all its energy from nuclear power plants, is struggling currently, as in every dry and hot summer.
    And sometimes in winter, too.

    • No, that is not why they are struggling now.

      They are struggling because COVID has delayed inspection of the older plants. So now they are inspecting a lot of them at the same time. And they have to shut them down to inspect them. And the plants of the 1990's need an inspection to check IF they have a corrosion problem.

    • We have nuclear power plants in very "dry" areas already, they just use the sea for cooling water. A shortage of fresh water is not the same as a shortage of sea water. It is "water water all around and not a drop to drink". Use sea water, the seas aren't running dry. Once that is done then maybe do some desalination so people have something to drink.

      Oh, and people think wind and solar don't need water? Cooling a nuclear power plant with sea water is a solved problem. If we spray seawater on solar pan

  • They don't want coal, nuclear or gas.

    https://www.cbc.ca/news/world/... [www.cbc.ca]

    I often wonder if any of these protesters have jobs, or if they just live in tents from protest to protest.
  • ... if you can keep the morons away from the plants.
  • The crop of the quote is egregiously misleading. It wildly distorts the summary of the linked article to give it an anti-nuclear bias the article absolutely does not have.

    The way this is clipped implies that der spiegel is saying nuclear power is immoral.

    The very next sentence in the linked article is "However, some people believe nuclear power is both ecologically and morally sound " and they then proceed to discuss that. This quote isn't stopping at the end of the article's summary or even a new section

    • by arete ( 170676 )

      Personally I don't really understand anyone who is anti-nuclear in a world where we still burn coal, throwing literally more radiation into the air not to mention everything else. Leading visionary climate scientists like James Hansen support nuclear and it's even more true as we become more and more literally on fire.

      And the article discusses all that in reasonable ways...

    • by arete ( 170676 )

      also, omg my sig is so old. Guess I haven't posted in a while.

  • We are talking about three reactors which are giving a small percentage only of the German electricity. Most plants have already been phased out. Decision by Shröder who went then working for Gazprom.

    But i welcome a less dogmatic attitude by the Germans. The Belgians have taken a similar decision with also a limited scope. If their hate of nuclear recedes, they will have more options on the long term. More dispatchable ones.

    But that would take a lot of time: Germany has no more a big nuclear industry a

  • Nuclear power plants now may be used to blackmail any continent, as Russia now experiments. The international reaction is rather mild making this kind of action more likely for the future. If the Zaporizhzhia events turn bad, expect countries reconsidering nuclear power with a less naive approach as taken by nuclear power activists.

  • until they get enough wind and solar installed.
  • Magical thinking gets a shock when the rubber meets the road.

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