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Power

Germany Pushes To Extend Lifespan of Three Nuclear Plants (reuters.com) 199

German Chancellor Olaf Scholz has asked the economy, environment and finance ministries to lay the legal framework to keep the country's three nuclear power plants operational until as late as April 15, 2023, a letter seen by Reuters showed on Monday. Reuters reports: Germany had planned to complete a phase-out of nuclear power by the end of this year, but a collapse in energy supplies from Russia because of the war in Ukraine has prompted the government to keep two plants on standby. Lengthy disagreements within the ruling coalition government over the merits and drawbacks of nuclear energy delayed the implementation of a draft law to put the two plants on reserve beyond their planned phase-out at the end of this year.

As well as the Isar II and Neckarwestheim II plants already included in the draft law, Finance Minister Christian Lindner has been pushing to keep a third plant, Emsland, operational, which Economy Minister Robert Habeck -- whose Green Party is historically anti-nuclear -- agreed to. The three plants have 4,300 megawatts (MW) of power capacity, contributing 6% to Germany's electricity production this year. Scholz also requested that the ministries present an "ambitious" law to increase energy efficiency, and put into law an agreement to phase out coal by 2030.

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Germany Pushes To Extend Lifespan of Three Nuclear Plants

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  • by 93 Escort Wagon ( 326346 ) on Tuesday October 18, 2022 @03:23AM (#62976115)

    Just look up what you posted the last eight times a story about this specific topic has been on Slashdot, then copy and paste it here.

    • by poptopdrop ( 6713596 ) on Tuesday October 18, 2022 @04:03AM (#62976149)

      Summary of the opinion of the normal, reasonable people:

      Greens need to get on board the fight against global warming and suck up nuclear power as part of the solution to that.

  • Sorry, I worked for a German Nuclear company (though I was IT) until we all pretty much got laid off. Your (my former company) knee-jerk reaction to Fukushima without any research was the stupidest thing you ever did. Don't worry, the US one upped you in 1996 with the Integral Fast Reactor (ya know, the one that burned nuclear waste as fuel, but was canceled because it created nuclear waste - IQ -20 Dems that did that - IQ -200 Republicans are promising they can control inflation statewide - when stupid mee

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      It was hardly knee-jerk, Germany had been trying to phase out nuclear power since the late 90s. All Fukushima did was speed it up very slightly, and by slightly I mean 11 years later and those plants are still operating.

      The writing was on the wall long ago. Anyone with half a brain could see that projections of 10 years and â10 billion to build a new nuclear plant was unrealistic, and sure enough here we are in 2022 with EDF having proven that the real timescale is 20 years and the real cost is at leas

    • by gtall ( 79522 )

      The federal reserve doesn't control inflation. They didn't control the economy shutting down and then roaring back to life. They don't control the world oil markets or the supply chains. Those, along with the sainted American people spending out the whazoo and American companies gouging because they could, are what drives inflation the U.S. There was a minor addition from the stimulus packages Congress passed, and there was a big addition from the Republican tax cuts of prior years. The ongoing deficit spen

  • Charles Montgomery Plantagenet Schicklgruber "Monty" Burns.

  • by Viol8 ( 599362 ) on Tuesday October 18, 2022 @04:13AM (#62976175) Homepage

    Its not the 1980s any more.

    Is nuclear perfect? No, it has serious (but manageable) waste issues.
    Is it better than burning fossil fuels? Hell yes.

    Sure , in a perfect world it would be renewables all the way but the wind doesn't always blow, the sun doesn't shine at night and tidal power isn't much use for landlocked countries.

    Its really time people dragged themselves out of the CND mindset. Thats yesterdays protest, climate change trumps a tiny amount of radioactivity which is actually less than emitted by unfiltered coal fired stations anyway.

    • ... in a perfect world it would be renewables all the way but the wind doesn't always blow, the sun doesn't shine at night and tidal power isn't much use for landlocked countries...

      Read this: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org] ... since you are clearly unaware of it's existence.

      • by Viol8 ( 599362 )

        Wow, you're so insightful!

        Do you know how much undersea connectors cost and how much current they can transport? Go read up on it.

        The UK already has quite a number of them but its single digit percentage of the amount of power the country needs.

    • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

      by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      It's got nothing to do with any of the things you mention. The two big problems with nuclear are

      1. It's by far the most expensive form of generation.
      2. It currently takes 20 years to build a new plant in Europe.

      The usual response to this is "but SMRs will fix all that!" There are exactly two grid connected and operating SMRs in the world, one in China and one in Russia. Neither are in mass production, and the Russian one looks like a dead end as they haven't build any more.

      After that the argument changes to

      • Use the high-speed rail analogy. China built a HSR network from basically scratch in 15 years while California spent the same time playing with toy shovels. The point is that the West sucks at building ALL infrastructure. We need to relearn the fine art of slapping NIMBYs aside.
        • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

          HSR in California is simply a way to transfer government money to wealthy Dem donors who will pretend to create a high speed rail system while dragging their feet for years to keep the money flowing. It was never meant to actually build anything useful.

        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          In Europe wind farms are currently around 1-2 years from being approved. Most governments pre-approve a site, then auction off the rights to develop it. Lowest cost electricity wins.

          • Is the energy from wind farms reliable enough to provide baseload power for things like factories and electric trains?
            • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

              Indeed it is. You just need lots of over-capacity and a bit of demand shaping. Since wind is so much cheaper than every other source, in the region of 1/4th coal and 1/6th nuclear, and offshore the capacity factor is pretty decent, it's all doable.

    • climate change

      With you right until you mentioned climate change. You can dedicate all resources you want to building nuclear power right now. The first plant won't be online until after we missed our climate target.

      Yeah absolutely build nuclear. It's a great idea. It just won't solve climate change. For that we need something we can build now, tomorrow, and in the next 5 years. Not something that we may be able to bring online sometime in the late 2030s.

      • by Viol8 ( 599362 )

        I don't think anyone claimed it would solve it. But fossil fuels will still be being burnt in the 2030s so even if nuclear doesn't come online until then it'll still help. Climate change isn't something that will come to an end in the next few decades, its an ongoing process.

  • This move is of little utility other than political easing to prepare for a return to research and funding in feasible transitory nuclear fission with modern mini-reactors should the need arise and a net positive ROI for nuke fission actually need possible with rising energy prices and the increase in usage of electricity.

    This is not a complete u-turn and running Brockdorf and Co. any longer makes little sense other than the reason mentioned above.

    Germans will continue to do the arithmetic on nuclear fissio

  • Then revert it, pretty simple.
    Just consider it as if you got a city bombarded by russian planes, you just rebuild the thing.

  • A 100% renewable(wind and solar) electrical grid is not viable. Meaning everyone who opposes nuclear energy supports fossil fuels. That is the historical reality, and continues to be the reality moving forward.

The most exciting phrase to hear in science, the one that heralds new discoveries, is not "Eureka!" (I found it!) but "That's funny ..." -- Isaac Asimov

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