soylent
Muse
- Joined
- Dec 8, 2007
- Messages
- 968
The US has enough fissile material in spent LWR fuel and weaponsgrade Pu to make ~50 GW of IFR style fast reactors(specific fissile inventory of ~10 tonnes/GW). With metal fuel and with few years of cool down before reprocessing with electrorefining a 20-30 year doubling time is achievable. That's 86-130 years to go from 50 GW installed capacity to 1 TW installed capacity; tack on a couple of decades to build the first 50 GW.
That's assuming no additional natural uranium is mined to start fast reactors(at a tails assay of 0.2% you need ~2000 tonnes natural U to start an IFR style fast reactor) and assuming existing LWRs stop producing more "waste" that can be used to start up fast reactors.
That's just the US centric point of view. Russia, France and Japan could do it to. Sweden, Germany, Belgium, India and a number of eastern European countries have parts of the puzzle but various serious impediments(either strong ideological opposition, or not a lot of spent fuel, or not the knowledge base).
That's also ignoring molten salt reactors. With radial and axial thorium salt blankets and operating in the thermal spectrum an isobreeder could need as little as 1 tonne/GW of U-233 or U-235. You would only need ~200 tonnes natural U to start up such a reactor, which would then breed just enough, or a tiny bit more U-233 to run indefinitely with only thorium inputs. Current rates of uranium mining suffice to install 250 GW of such reactors each year and uranium mining is rapidly increasing to meet demand once weapons U is consumed, with uranium reasonably assured resource increasing just as quickly.
That's assuming no additional natural uranium is mined to start fast reactors(at a tails assay of 0.2% you need ~2000 tonnes natural U to start an IFR style fast reactor) and assuming existing LWRs stop producing more "waste" that can be used to start up fast reactors.
That's just the US centric point of view. Russia, France and Japan could do it to. Sweden, Germany, Belgium, India and a number of eastern European countries have parts of the puzzle but various serious impediments(either strong ideological opposition, or not a lot of spent fuel, or not the knowledge base).
That's also ignoring molten salt reactors. With radial and axial thorium salt blankets and operating in the thermal spectrum an isobreeder could need as little as 1 tonne/GW of U-233 or U-235. You would only need ~200 tonnes natural U to start up such a reactor, which would then breed just enough, or a tiny bit more U-233 to run indefinitely with only thorium inputs. Current rates of uranium mining suffice to install 250 GW of such reactors each year and uranium mining is rapidly increasing to meet demand once weapons U is consumed, with uranium reasonably assured resource increasing just as quickly.
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