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Power

Sweden Makes Regulatory Push To Allow New Nuclear Reactors (reuters.com) 169

Sweden is preparing legislation to allow the construction of more nuclear power stations to boost electricity production in the Nordic country and bolster energy security, Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson said on Wednesday. Reuters reports: Kristersson has made expanding nuclear power generation a key goal for his right-wing government, seeking to reverse a process of gradual closures of several reactors in the past couple of decades that has left the country relying more heavily on renewable but sometimes less predictable energy. Sweden's energy mix consists mainly of nuclear, hydro and renewables and while it so far has been less affected by the turmoil surrounding gas supplies due to Russia's standoff with the West, electricity prices have been high and volatile since Moscow launched its invasion of Ukraine.

The proposed new legislation, which still needs to be passed by parliament, would allow new reactors to be constructed at additional locations across Sweden and was seen being in place in March next year. The new legislation would scrap existing rules that caps the total number of reactors at ten and prohibits reactor construction in other locations than where they currently exist, opening the door to building smaller reactors that many see as the most cost-effective nuclear option. [...] Sweden currently has six operational reactors, half of what it once had, and temporary closures for maintenance of some of them have contributed to push up electricity prices in the Nordic country in recent months.

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Sweden Makes Regulatory Push To Allow New Nuclear Reactors

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  • It's a waste of time. Nuclear is hopelessly unable to compete on market terms in the nordic electricity market. No private contractor is going to foot the bill, so it will be up to the swedish tax payers, and they won't be too happy forking over €12bn a pop the reactors are likely to cost (given the prices seen on Hinkley Point, Olkiluoto and Flamanville).

    This is mostly the right wing politicians trying to appease voters. No new nuclear reactors are likely to be build in Sweden anytime soon.
    • by muffen ( 321442 )
      I have to agree with this. Electricity and fuel prices went up significantly (putting it another way, my mining rigs were profitable running in Northern Sweden even after ETH went POS, but now they are closed down).

      There was recently an election in Sweden, the right-wing government that is now installed promised to protect consumers from high energy bills, and they promised to half the cost of fuel. Obviously, this would have created chaos in the current high-inflation environment, as made evident by Liz
    • by gweihir ( 88907 )

      This is mostly the right wing politicians trying to appease voters. No new nuclear reactors are likely to be build in Sweden anytime soon.

      Indeed. Nuclear is old, failed and obsolete. Of course, the right-wing assholes always associate "nueclear" with "might" (because contrary to what some liars like to claim of course the only real reason ever for nuclear power was the possibility to make the bomb and no) and will not let go. Of course, they always try to force the sane rest to fund their deranged dreams.

      Fortunately, the excessive cost and extreme unreliability of nuclear power (look at France), which comes on top of all the _other_ problems

      • Nuclear is old, failed and obsolete. Of course, the right-wing assholes always associate "nueclear" with "might" (because contrary to what some liars like to claim of course the only real reason ever for nuclear power was the possibility to make the bomb and no) and will not let go.

        Or not. Historically, nuclear power (including TMI (no deaths), Fukushima (1 death), and Chernobyl (a couple hundred deaths, maybe) is cleaner than coal, gas, hydro, solar (yeah, the average number of deaths annually from solar

      • Re:Waste of time (Score:5, Informative)

        by sonlas ( 10282912 ) on Friday January 13, 2023 @07:25AM (#63205306)

        Fortunately, the excessive cost and extreme unreliability of nuclear power (look at France), which comes on top of all the _other_ problems it has will prevent new construction except in the countries that need them to maintain their nuclear arsenal (like France and the UK).

        This is a perfect example of FUD strategy. Some reactors were indeed shut down in France for **planned** maintenance that had been delayed due to COVID and other external factors. Enough of them have already been restarted so that France is now a net exporter of electricity to neightboring countries (+13000MW at the time of writing, you can check here: https://www.rte-france.com/eco... [rte-france.com]).

        Compare that to Germany, which invested heavily in wind power, and has to now heavily rely on coal-burning plants... The average emissions in 2022 for Germany was ~400CO2eq/kwh, whereas France is sitting at ~40CO2eq/kwh. This is taking into account the full lifecycle of all infrastructures by the way, not just the "generation" part.

        Get your facts straight, propose solutions.

        • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

          by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          It's far more than maintenance that has been plaguing France's reactors. The majority of them are coming to end of life, having already been extended. They checks that need doing get more and more numerous and disruptive, as the reactor vessels start to fail. Being highly radioactive, they can't be repaired.

          France can't build any new reactors either. EDF is already a basket case, which had to be fully naitonalized recently due to the staggering amount of debt it has exceeding the value of its ageing assets.

          • It's far more than maintenance that has been plaguing France's reactors. The majority of them are coming to end of life, having already been extended. They checks that need doing get more and more numerous and disruptive, as the reactor vessels start to fail. Being highly radioactive, they can't be repaired.

            Most maintenance operations don't happen near radioactive parts at all, I have no idea what you are talking about... Most maintenance at the moment is linked to the PWSCC issue (Primary Water Stress-Corrosion Cracking, some readings here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]), which is expected and already well-known. The maintenance operation in France consists of replacing the corroded parts. In North America, which has less stringent security measures, soldering/welding/sleeving is also an accepted solutio

            • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

              The old reactor vessels are cracking. They need to be carefully monitored, with equipment to detect microscopic cracks. Obviously there is no way to repair those cracks inside the vessel, as it is highly radioactive and heavily contaminated.

              Anyone can pass a directive, doesn't mean it will happen.

          • It's far more than maintenance that has been plaguing France's reactors. The majority of them are coming to end of life, having already been extended. They checks that need doing get more and more numerous and disruptive, as the reactor vessels start to fail. Being highly radioactive, they can't be repaired.

            France can't build any new reactors either. EDF is already a basket case, which had to be fully naitonalized recently due to the staggering amount of debt it has exceeding the value of its ageing assets. EDF is already mired in other nuclear projects around Europe, all massively delayed and all massively over budget.

            Germany is transitioning from a bad place to a good one. Judging them half way through is silly. And in any case, if they had instead decided to build new nuclear plants on the scale they have built new renewables, they would be in an even worse position and years away from that energy coming online, and paying at least 5x as much for it when is ready.

            It's because some morons, like the Germans, decided to phase out Nuclear power, so of course the plants haven't been replaced, things was scheduled for EoL, etc.

            It's great that EDF was nationalized, all critical energy and infrastructure should be.

            Despite all the issues, France runs the cleanest grid in Europe outside of unicorns like Iceland or Norway. Germany spent 20 years on renewable transition but is still half way through according to you.

        • by gweihir ( 88907 )

          My facts are straight. You are a lying asshole or an uninformed arrogant asshole. Probably both.

        • by Ichijo ( 607641 )
          Also, heat waves force France's nuclear plants offline. [slashdot.org] What works really well on hot sunny days are solar panels! Add a little storage, perhaps electric vehicles with bidirectional chargers, and you've covered the time between when the sun sets and the night breeze picks up enough to spin the wind turbines.
        • This is a perfect example of FUD strategy. Some reactors were indeed shut down in France for **planned** maintenance that had been delayed due to COVID and other external factors. Enough of them have already been restarted so that France is now a net exporter of electricity to neightboring countries (+13000MW at the time of writing, you can check here: https://www.rte-france.com/eco [rte-france.com]... [rte-france.com]).

          France achieves nuclear economy by deciding on a standard design, and then building all of its plants to that design. But because the existing standard is now fifty years old, which is why they are finally getting maintenance problems in the old plants, a new Generation IV standard is being started. The first build of the new generation, at Fessenheim, is going through the usual process of debugging that a new design takes. Once this process is complete, EDF can then have all of its new builds use that desi

          • Oh, what a surprise, you forgot to mention French nukes are paid for by massive govt subsidies, without which no private company would build them, a fact nuke nuts always seem to miss, funny that.

            • Oh, what a surprise, you forgot to mention French nukes are paid for by massive govt subsidies, without which no private company would build them, a fact nuke nuts always seem to miss, funny that.

              Remember when everyone used to say that about space programs?

        • Compare that to Germany, which invested heavily in wind power, and has to now heavily rely on coal-burning plants...

          You're FUDing equally in the other way. Yeah Germany is struggling with a general lack of wind, but that's not at all the cause of them burning coal, a process they started before the wind lull during the past summer. Maybe you want to look up why we're bailing out Uniper (who don't generate wind power), and maybe look into a little minute conflict happening in eastern Europe. When you do so you may find out why Germany (as well as much of the rest of Europe) have kicked their coal plants into overdrive.

          • You know you could just look at the data, and it's clear that they had to burn shitloads of coal when there was almost no wind at the beginning of December (brown, teal): https://i.imgur.com/AIxo33P.pn... [imgur.com]
            Best case, this would've been gas if they operationalized NS2.

  • by atomicalgebra ( 4566883 ) on Friday January 13, 2023 @10:28AM (#63205726)
    Adding new nuclear capacity will reduce their emissions which are already low due to their current use of nuclear. It will lower their energy costs. It will make them less reliant on fossil fuels. A strong nuclear baseload will drive their economy for the rest of the 21st and into the 22nd century.
  • by jddimarco ( 1754954 ) on Friday January 13, 2023 @12:57PM (#63206164)
    I don't have strong views on this topic one way or the other on this topic but I note especially the anti-nuclear people here (gwehir, animojo, drinkypoo) seem to me very emotional about their opposition to it. I do understand being emotional about some topic, but please note that expressing these emotions (e.g. ranting about nuclear assholes and cockery and whatnot) on a forum like this, while perhaps cathartic, isn't particularly persuasive to readers, at least not to me. It also impacts my perception of the posters themselves. Anti-nuke folks, could you maybe tune down the emotion and turn up the information? Or don't. You can post what you like, you don't have to please me, but I do want to let you know that I don't find your current stuff to be particularly persuasive.
    • The goal is to decarbonise, no ifs or buts and it will be hard, concrete, steel, plastics, the building blocks of our modern world are based upon CO2 intensive production. Wind and solar are intermittent, they provide cheap power on their terms. Nuclear is the Cinderella technology, spurned by those who should be embracing it.
      Nuclear in breeder reactors is renewable and only leaves short lived waste, by this I mean that they can make new fissile material from exiting non fissile resources and there is billi

  • "nuclear, hydro and renewables" Strange formulation from TFS. Hydro IS renewable.

    For the rest, good news. But not overly surprising. Support for nuclear energy has always been strong in Sweden.

Where are the calculations that go with a calculated risk?

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