Besides the radiation, many of the radioactive elements are chemically toxic. Their dilute and easily soluble presence in coal ash should be a toxicity concern.
Now that's a fear I can get behind. No need to invoke the radioactivity boogyman at all.
Besides the radiation, many of the radioactive elements are chemically toxic. Their dilute and easily soluble presence in coal ash should be a toxicity concern.
Now that's a fear I can get behind. No need to invoke the radioactivity boogyman at all.
I think that it was invoked for one reason and one reason only - not even in the field of dreaded radioactivity is coal power safer than nuclear power.
McHrozni
Yep. Be especially wary of the coal-fired dirty bomb. I'm surprised more terrorists haven't clued in on that.
On the other hand, US coal consumption is about 80 million tons yearly, or 220 thousand tons daily. Coal is usually about ten times less radioactive as the above, but this still means about 40 kg of radioactive material is released in the air daily.
McHrozni
This last bit caught my eye. I have to admit not being well informed on the subject. Are the radioactive elements soluble in air? Are they carried by particulates? How does that work?
I'm trying to get my head around what "released in the air daily" means.
Aren't there filters nowadays to catch a portion of the soot so that all of the radioactives in the coal fuel do not become fallout? Or are those included in emission calculations?
Can I get some layspeak here? Will this thing work or not?
You mean the Lockheed- Martin fusion reactors?
Probably a hoax
McHrozni
I'm trying to get my head around what "released in the air daily" means.
Hoax?
don't be gullible Gawd...
theory sound....many a slip etc but on a tight time frame of a decade this is much easier to chart progress than the behemoths of the "within 30 years scale" sort
after all - they built this with slide rules.
The very fact that Lockheed put it out there ( putting reputation on the line ) and asked for help and used their own money in this is the biggest reason for me to thing there is something to it.
Every one of these arguments: reputation on line; short and therefore verifiable timescale; own money: has been invoked in support of the authenticity of the Rossi e-cat contraption discussed in another very long thread here for the past three years. It is highly improbable that there's "something to it" in Rossi's case, except an impudent swindle.The very fact that Lockheed put it out there ( putting reputation on the line ) and asked for help and used their own money in this is the biggest reason for me to thing there is something to it.
Every one of these arguments: reputation on line; short and therefore verifiable timescale; own money: has been invoked in support of the authenticity of the Rossi e-cat contraption discussed in another very long thread here for the past three years. It is highly improbable that there's "something to it" in Rossi's case, except an impudent swindle.
Are Lockheed not seeking funding for this anyway?
Every one of these arguments: reputation on line; short and therefore verifiable timescale; own money: has been invoked in support of the authenticity of the Rossi e-cat contraption discussed in another very long thread here for the past three years. It is highly improbable that there's "something to it" in Rossi's case, except an impudent swindle.
Are Lockheed not seeking funding for this anyway?
If you were to build a nuclear reactor now, it would have no chance of meltdown, and produce waste that is trivial to handle. All of the problems people associate with nuclear power are faults of older generations (such as Fukushima, which was 40 years old and outdated even when it was new) and have since been solved, but the new plants actually need to be built to take advantage of it.I'm curious, though: does the extra safety measures required to achieve that increase the cost of this form of energy too much to make it viable as a complete replacement for fossil fuel over a short-enough timescale to avert serious climate change? If so, how much can you "skimp a little" on safety before it becomes more dangerous than what we're releasing right now? By "skimp a little" I mean, how vital is it that repositories be kept absolutely or near-absolutely stable over multi-millennial time scales, or could some "seepage" be tolerated when you compare to what has been released with coal? That might open up more disposal sites or making finding them cheaper, if it were possible.
(such as Fukushima, which was 40 years old and outdated even when it was new)
Should I not have done that? I know Lockheed is thought to have cleaned up its act since http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lockheed_bribery_scandals, while back then Rossi was being naughty as well with his Petrol Dragon scam. http://newenergytimes.com/v2/sr/RossiECat/RossiPetroldragonStory.shtml...did you just compare Rossi to Lockheed ?
Originally Posted by mike3 View Post
I'm curious, though: does the extra safety measures required to achieve that increase the cost of this form of energy too much to make it viable as a complete replacement for fossil fuel over a short-enough timescale to avert serious climate change? If so, how much can you "skimp a little" on safety before it becomes more dangerous than what we're releasing right now? By "skimp a little" I mean, how vital is it that repositories be kept absolutely or near-absolutely stable over multi-millennial time scales, or could some "seepage" be tolerated when you compare to what has been released with coal? That might open up more disposal sites or making finding them cheaper, if it were possible.
http://www.world-nuclear.org/info/Country-Profiles/Countries-A-F/France/Nuclear Power in France
(Updated 25 October 2014)
France derives about 75% of its electricity from nuclear energy, due to a long-standing policy based on energy security. This share is to be reduced to 50% by 2025.
France is the world's largest net exporter of electricity due to its very low cost of generation, and gains over EUR 3 billion per year from this.
France has been very active in developing nuclear technology. Reactors and fuel products and services are a major export.
It is building its first Generation III reactor.
About 17% of France's electricity is from recycled nuclear fuel.
http://www.the-weinberg-foundation....ear-technologies-to-stave-off-global-warming/Leading climate scientists call for new nuclear technologies to stave off global warming
November 8th, 2013