Last of the Fraggles
Illuminator
- Joined
- Nov 9, 2006
- Messages
- 3,986
but a wind farm or solar station would not now be threatening millions of lives.
it would simply be off line.
Where are millions of lives being threatened?
No, there was no such comparison by me. What i did was to compare the capacity of wind and solar with the real amount of electricity fed into the grid during one year, and put that in relation to what an average nuclear power plant has as capacity and feeds into the grid. Which turns out to be 85%-90% of the capacity of a nuke can be fed into the grid as electricity, and about 10% of the capacity of wind & solar combined can be fed into the grid, both over the course of one year. I even used a pessimistic 85%-90% figure for the nuke, and as another poster noted, that figure may be higher actually, giving an even better outcome for the nuke.
But yes, it would be interesting to have a comparison how many materials and work is required to produce and install one nuke, and how much of the same would be required to get the equivalent in windmills and solar panels. And that then has to include storage facilities, like hydro storage, to really have a 24/7 supply of energy.
But i guess there is a reason why you will never see such figures from the anti-nuke people.
Greetings,
Chris
I have looked for and never found an independent cradle-to-grave assessment of environmental impact and economic concerns for various different energy sources.
This should be a relatively easy to answer empirical question if we have the data, surely?
There's no shortage of iron, and copper is mostly used in dynamos and distribution, which is no different for nuclear stations.
Agreed, but if the discussion is about nuclear versus renewable (and I'm sure we can all agree that coal and oil for generation is not sustainable for much longer) then it's really not relevant.
Windmills are designed to be no more easily damaged than nuclear power stations. Any installed technology requires maintenance, and it's likely to be cheaper and easier for windfarms and solar farms than for nuclear. The technology is simpler to start with, and the protective clothing required would be familiar to any sailor.
If we decided tomorrow that we're going to make all our energy from wind power we'd have many issues with resources:
1. We'd suddenly be short of materials like steel and copper
2. We'd have no capacity to manufacture the things
3. We'd run out of raw materials for the magnets
4. We'd have no capacity to install them (nor sites to put them on)
Given that most new wind power in Europe at least is heading offshore I think you under-estimate the issues with maintaining these things too.
The infrastructure simply isn't there for a grand scale and quick wind energy roll out and won't be for quite some time, if ever.
5-10MW per windmill.
Full-power hours about 3800 per year for off-shore windparks, means you need two MW windmill for one MW nuclear power.
1 MW windmill means about 1 Million Euro investment.
To replace 1000MW nuclear power you need 2000MW wind power.
Plus some form of storage technology.

