Nuclear Energy - I need to vent/rant

It's a round minus the charge. It is ...surprisingly... heavy, for it's size. I got it from an A10 warthog tech pal of mine. It's enough to keep my silly-ass brother-in-law out of our house --- he has a fear of all things nuclear.
 
If I remember correctly, he did account for an airliner that size. He didn't calculate what the burning fuel would do, that's right...

...It took a long time for the structural engineers to figure out that the supports had bent with the heat and pulled the structure in on itself. Steel wasn't supposed to yield that way. In fact, months later they were still talking about what unexpected reaction had actually caused some of the steel to melt...

...Because jet fuel burns well below the point that steel melts, so it was hard to explain the molten steel...
I would suggest you immediately head to the Conspiracy Theories forum. There are actual architects and structural engineers who post in that forum and they will be happy to answer any technical questions you may have over the collapse of the WTC towers and the events and conditions which precipitated it.
 
If you see the blue flash...nothing else will matter...

glenn:p

Pfah! It's not a magical +1 flash, so it can't touch me.

Rob_Lister said:
It is ...surprisingly... heavy, for it's size.

No kidding!

It's enough to keep my silly-ass brother-in-law out of our house --- he has a fear of all things nuclear.

Tell him it's too late. Just talking to you on the phone is enough to get contaminated.
 
I would suggest you immediately head to the Conspiracy Theories forum. There are actual architects and structural engineers who post in that forum and they will be happy to answer any technical questions you may have over the collapse of the WTC towers and the events and conditions which precipitated it.

Yeah. But be warned, Luddite. Aside from the calm, well-mannered architects and engineers, there's also ME in the CT forum.
 
Finally found something on the subsidy issue..



http://www.uic.com.au/nip71.htm

The subsidies are substantial for nuclear power...but it seems it has given more back for the investment.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Energy_Policy_Act_of_2005

The energy policy has now been revised and this wiki site seems to have a reasonable set of highlites.

glenn
Glenn, I've been trying to get unbiased sources. I can get quite a number of sources like Greenpeace, the Sierra Club, Suzuki Foundation and others that peg nuclear subsidies as astronomical.

Your source is the Uranium Information Centre of the Australian Uranium Association. Now I'm not saying they're making things up. But they do massage their numbers to be favourable to nuclear.

First of all, in your quote, I noticed that the amount of wind power produced for the subsidy was not quoted. They noted that nuclear subsidies paid off better than solar. This is unfair. Nuclear is for baseload power, solar tends to be for peak. Yes, there's less peak power, but it's also more expensive all-around. It's also replacing dirty alternatives. If we built nuclear peaking plants, the economy of nuclear would go out the window.

They split the R&D subsidies for nuclear into fission and fusion but lump all renewables together, noting they're not very good at delivering electricity. Well, if they include the enormous ethanol subsidies, I guess that would be true. These are ridiculous comparisons.

Finally they make unsubstantiated assertions that are routinely challenged by proponents of an expanded renewable grid:

for intermittent and essentially opportunistic supply of wind- or solar-generated electricity to a grid system, the maximum potential appears to be about 20% of the total

Nuclear energy fully accounts for its waste disposal and decommissioning costs in financial evaluations.
 
I would suggest you immediately head to the Conspiracy Theories forum. There are actual architects and structural engineers who post in that forum and they will be happy to answer any technical questions you may have over the collapse of the WTC towers and the events and conditions which precipitated it.
I am so sorry I ever started this. I do not want to get into the conspiracy theories. And all my questions have been satisfied. The thin relevant point to this forum was that engineers routinely screw up. And they screw up big time often enough that we shouldn't be complacent. That's all. The details are actually irrelevant.
 
Pfah! It's not a magical +1 flash, so it can't touch me.
You're behind in the times. D&D updated to 3rd edition, where complete immunity is nearly impossible to come by. :D

(Though who knows what 4th edition will be like?)

Glenn, I've been trying to get unbiased sources. I can get quite a number of sources like Greenpeace, the Sierra Club, Suzuki Foundation and others that peg nuclear subsidies as astronomical.

Greenpeace is not unbiased. In fact, the founder of Greenpeace has left the organization in disgust when it was hijacked for political activism that focused more on being anti-corporation than pro-environmental. Greenpeace also has a long history of distorting facts to suit their activism, and have participated in terrorist activities to accomplish their goals instead of trying to be productive. Not an "unbiased" source in my mind.

Or are they "unbiased" only if they agree with you?

The Sierra Club does not totally oppose nuclear reactors.
The Sierra Club opposes building new nuclear reactors, both fission and fusion, until specific inherent safety risks are mitigated by conservative political policies, and regulatory agencies are in place to enforce those policies. Fusion is currently opposed due to its probable release of the hydrogen isotope tritium[5].

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sierra_Club

I don't know about the Suzuki Foundation personally.

Luddite said:
The thin relevant point to this forum was that engineers routinely screw up.
Sure. And yet, nuclear has an astonishing safety record if you look past the handful of accidents. Hydroelectric has had far more. Of course, hydroelectric is "green", so that's okay. People getting killed is okay if it's by green sources, right? ;)

And they screw up big time often enough that we shouldn't be complacent. That's all. The details are actually irrelevant.

If your biggest piece of evidence that they "screw up big time" is pointing out 9/11, then you fail entirely.

It would be like me saying a facility was designed to take a bomb, and then shout out that engineers failed entirely when it didn't take a direct hit from a thermonuclear blast.
 
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Luddite seems to be a very honest person.

I wonder if he will reconsider his position as a whole given the facts presented in this thread.

It's really, really, a great thread.
 
Greenpeace is not unbiased. In fact, the founder of Greenpeace has left the organization in disgust when it was hijacked for political activism that focused more on being anti-corporation than pro-environmental. Greenpeace also has a long history of distorting facts to suit their activism, and have participated in terrorist activities to accomplish their goals instead of trying to be productive. Not an "unbiased" source in my mind.

Sorry if I was unclear. That's my point. I've been avoiding Greenpeace and others as sources for a balanced view. But I think it's equally or more unfair to quote the uranium industry. Greenpeace does not get money directly for opposing the nuclear industry. The uranium industry benefits directly from promoting it.
 
If your biggest piece of evidence that they "screw up big time" is pointing out 9/11, then you fail entirely.

No, that's not my biggest piece of evidence. That was the last in a list of screwups. I also included dams in my list, by the way.

Which is why I'm so sorry I brought it up. Because you say anything that involves 9/11 and it gets magnified. It was a small part of a small point.
 
Sorry if I was unclear. That's my point. I've been avoiding Greenpeace and others as sources for a balanced view.
Oh. I apologize. I misunderstood.

But I think it's equally or more unfair to quote the uranium industry.
The thing is, I'd rather trust the experts that actually deal with and research how nuclear reactors work. I'm not saying that companies are necessarily reliable, though.

Greenpeace does not get money directly for opposing the nuclear industry.
Well, money isn't the only reason people have for being biased.

The uranium industry benefits directly from promoting it.
That may be so, but I would like to see more words from people that actually work with the matter. I would trust a nuclear engineer over an armchair philosopher on the issue.

No, that's not my biggest piece of evidence. That was the last in a list of screwups. I also included dams in my list, by the way.
Fair enough. However, should we ignore the long safety record of all the nuclear plants that haven't had accidents, or that among the handful of mistakes, the majority has been contained?
 
Luddite seems to be a very honest person.

I wonder if he will reconsider his position as a whole given the facts presented in this thread.

It's really, really, a great thread.
I reconsider my positions all the time. I'm cautiously tending to thinking nuclear waste is not as dangerous as I thought. Though I've still got research to do.

I've known for years that the routine emissions from nuclear plants, while not insignificant, pale in comparison with the dangers of other forms of generation which are accepted more easily.

I remain unconvinced that nuclear is economical without substantial subsidies. I remain unconvinced that in a level playing field renewables wouldn't do very well, with a much higher penetration rate. I remain unconvinced that there is anywhere near enough uranium to maintain our current worldwide electrical needs, never mind the transportation requirements.

In fact, I'm convinced of the opposite. The Energy Watch Group seems to do very careful work. And they're expecting uranium to peak in a few decades at current rates of use.

I think one big difference between me and some of the others on this forum is that they begin with a premise that we need x amount of energy. I begin with the premise that we have x amount of resources. And every serious analyst I've seen, and I've seen many, indicates that the resources we have, no matter how we bend and twist and exploit them, simply cannot supply our "energy needs". Most serious analysts predict that we will need to dramatically drop our energy demands.

I've spent several decades knowing that there would be an energy crisis because of global warming and oil depletion, and counting on some technological miracle. There has been every policy incentive to encourage this technological innovation. Enormous subsidies have been poured into developing alternatives. The fact that they haven't materialized is strongly suggestive to me that they will not. A few years ago, I gave up.

We are now in a situation where emissions reductions in the next 5-10 years are absolutely critical for climate stability. And nuclear simply cannot deliver them. We cannot possibly build enough nuclear plants to make a dent in emissions. There has been no serious attempt to deny my assertion that you have to count on 10 years to build a nuclear plant. And the facilities simply aren't there to build more than a few a year anyway.

And every dollar poured into the nuclear industry is a dollar not spent on things that will deliver emissions cuts faster.

I think renewables will be a big part of the answer. They go up fast and can be expanded quickly. And wind is cheap and getting cheaper. It's definitely cheaper than all the natural gas plants they're putting up. I'll say it's a lot cheaper than nuclear, although people on this forum will disagree.

But by far the biggest answer will be in conservation. Recently on this forum, someone pointed out that conservation has only delivered small cuts. That's true, but there are two reasons for this:

1. We've made only feeble attempts to promote it, mostly as we approached a crisis such as transmission constraints.

2. Energy has been really cheap. You get an energy-efficient fridge and that just leaves you with enough money to buy an electric lawn mower. And ironically you don't even think about the lawn mower as you feel virtuous about your fridge.

These two conditions will not continue. It is my hope that they will not continue because we come to our senses and address global warming with appropriate carbon taxes or quotas or emissions caps or other hard measures that will drive down overall demand, not just increase efficiencies in individual appliances. But even if we're so stupid as to not address the climate crisis, oil and North American gas are both right around peak now. And as much coal as there is, it cannot realistically replace all the transportation fuel and home heating that oil and gas provide.

So energy will become more expensive and more rare. In economic terms, that's one and the same. And if we hit a crisis point, utilities are only too aware that the ONLY thing that can immediately meet the difference between supply and demand is conservation.

So where do I see nuclear fitting in? Not much, really. If the Energy Watch Group is correct, and I see no reason why they wouldn't be, there is a limited role for nuclear power anyway from a resource perspective. Again, I'm looking at it from the resource point of view, not from the energy needs. Supply rather than demand. If the supply just isn't there, prices will rise until demand falls. That's all there is to it.

I've said all along that I'm very sympathetic to the voices of people who say we need it all. When I'm talking to analysts who look at the total resource mix and scratch their heads and say "80-90% reductions in energy use are simply unavoidable", I'm extremely sympathetic to people who say "I'll take 80% instead of 90%, please". Just keep in mind when you're saying that, that nuclear is also finite, so we're pushing for a future not too far ahead when you'll have to do without it anyway. So the only way I can see the point of investing the time and money in technology that remains dangerous is with the recognition that this is an interim measure to ease the transition to a truly sustainable future.

I know about fusion. Like I said, it's not like we haven't had ample incentive to figure it out in the last 30 years. We haven't. At this stage, I think it would be wildly irresponsible to count on a high energy future. Hope for one? Sure. Continue building up our cities and industries counting on one? That's just stupid.

And then there's one other concerning aspect of nuclear power which has never been addressed in this forum. The nasty fact that it involves uranium mining. And the only way that uranium mining has been profitable is by leaving the tailings behind. Whole communities are left with radium and other crap in their water. The dust that's disturbed settles on agricultural lands. Cancer rates go up, deformities in children go up. This has been overwhelmingly imposed on first nations populations. In Canada, coincidentally, native lands are under federal jurisdiction, which happens to have much lower standards for radiation safety than any of the provincial standards. I have yet to see a plan where uranium mining is cleaned up. I have yet to see remediation plans that address existing messes from past uranium mines. Looking at the piles of tailings, it's hard to imagine. And I absolutely will not impose more mines on communities that derive little benefit from nuclear power unless we either figure out how to do it with a lot less impact or demonstrate that the resulting lack of power would cause far more widespread destruction.
 
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I reconsider my positions all the time. I'm cautiously tending to thinking nuclear waste is not as dangerous as I thought. Though I've still got research to do.

I've known for years that the routine emissions from nuclear plants, while not insignificant, pale in comparison with the dangers of other forms of generation which are accepted more easily.
I see a claim here that I don't think has been addressed. What routine emissions are those?

I remain unconvinced that nuclear is economical without substantial subsidies. I remain unconvinced that in a level playing field renewables wouldn't do very well, with a much higher penetration rate.
The question is, can renewables provide the power needed to grow, process, and transport enough food for the world? And that is a question that needs to be explored in far more depth before nuclear is rejected, because we cannot afford to be wrong.

I remain unconvinced that there is anywhere near enough uranium to maintain our current worldwide electrical needs, never mind the transportation requirements.
Now you're just not reading this thread. Did you not see that uranium has been extracted from the ocean, and did you not see that the estimated amount in the ocean is orders of magnitude more than all the known sources on land?

I think one big difference between me and some of the others on this forum is that they begin with a premise that we need x amount of energy. I begin with the premise that we have x amount of resources. And every serious analyst I've seen, and I've seen many, indicates that the resources we have, no matter how we bend and twist and exploit them, simply cannot supply our "energy needs". Most serious analysts predict that we will need to dramatically drop our energy demands.
If you start from we have x amount of resources, why do you keep ignoring proven resources in your estimations?

We are now in a situation where emissions reductions in the next 5-10 years are absolutely critical for climate stability. And nuclear simply cannot deliver them. We cannot possibly build enough nuclear plants to make a dent in emissions. There has been no serious attempt to deny my assertion that you have to count on 10 years to build a nuclear plant. And the facilities simply aren't there to build more than a few a year anyway.
You're now denying data that have been presented on this thread; and in fact, there has been a serious attempt to show you that your assertions that it will take ten years are incorrect. That you continue to claim it shows that in fact, you are not honestly evaluating the data you are presented. You're making the same claims over and over, and ignoring reality. I'm sorry, I have no more time for this. I put you on ignore once for this type of behavior; the next time, I will not take you off so easily.
 
Schneibster, I'll answer your questions one by one as time permits.

I see a claim here that I don't think has been addressed. What routine emissions are those?

I was talking about routine venting of gas, with radioactive particles. This has been agreed to by Buzzo. Also, at least in Canada, there is an issue of tritium releases into water. As I said, these are not trivial concerns, but I recognize that the routine emissions from coal burning, or even burning natural gas are far more serious.
 
Now you're just not reading this thread. Did you not see that uranium has been extracted from the ocean, and did you not see that the estimated amount in the ocean is orders of magnitude more than all the known sources on land?

I understand that uranium is everywhere. That doesn't make it economical to extract. The Energy Watch Group accounts for price increases with demand and comes up with a peak of production which factors these things in. They might very well be wrong about the dates. But it's clear that with every resource, it gets more and more expensive to extract as you go for poorer deposits. And if they've done anything like careful analysis, their conclusions won't be off by orders of magnitude.

Their conclusions aren't really that far off from more common ideas either. People always quote the years "at current rates". I think the number is 80 years for nuclear. But the peak is always well before. After that, the resource declines. So you get a lot more than 80 years, but at steadily declining rates.

It's also abundantly clear that barring some completely unforeseen technological innovation, more than half the oil we know about will stay in the ground, because extracting it will require more energy than it can deliver. They don't even count this as a "reserve". I think sea water may fall into the same category.
 
If you start from we have x amount of resources, why do you keep ignoring proven resources in your estimations?

What am I ignoring?

Actually, I can answer that, maybe. Thorium I have not addressed. I know relatively little about it. There's also some plutonium we've produced that could be burned. I've not seen studies that show how much there is. Sorry.
 
You're now denying data that have been presented on this thread; and in fact, there has been a serious attempt to show you that your assertions that it will take ten years are incorrect. That you continue to claim it shows that in fact, you are not honestly evaluating the data you are presented. You're making the same claims over and over, and ignoring reality. I'm sorry, I have no more time for this. I put you on ignore once for this type of behavior; the next time, I will not take you off so easily.

I think ten years is conservative. For Canadian reactors 15 or 20 years has been the more accurate assessment. Glenn pointed out that in Korea, reactors were built in 6 years from first concrete. So maybe 8 years from proposal at the very earliest? And he pointed out that with the regulatory environment in the US it would take longer.
 
Schneibster, I'll answer your questions one by one as time permits.



I was talking about routine venting of gas, with radioactive particles. This has been agreed to by Buzzo. Also, at least in Canada, there is an issue of tritium releases into water. As I said, these are not trivial concerns, but I recognize that the routine emissions from coal burning, or even burning natural gas are far more serious.
The radiation from a color TV is more "serious."
 

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