From the article:
There is so much drivel here, it's hard to know where to start. The person who wrote this piece is an idiot when it comes to all things nuclear.
The person believes in higher rates of disease near plants? Nuclear power plants emit next to ZERO radioactive waste to the atmosphere.
What emissions, exactly, contribute to these imaginary increases in disease? None. This persons belief that there are higher rates of disease near nuclear plants is fantasy. (With respect to plants in the US, not the Ukraine)
Nuclear power remains one of the safest power-generation industries on the planet when you look at the safety record over the course of more than 12,000 combined reactor-years worldwide. That's including the disaster that was Chernobyl and the Three Mile Island non-event.
Nuclear power is also one of the least expensive ways to produce electricity when you factor in CAPACITY FACTORS into the equation. When you see numbers on the Internet comparing various methods of producing power (Solar, Wind, Coal, etc...) you will see cost/kwh. That is the bottom line that utilities look at when deciding on methods of future generation. That is also why utilities WANT to build new nuclear plants. The government is giving incentives, yes, but these utilities that have been operating nuclear plants for decades know how reliable and cost-efficient nuclear power is.
The alarmist's point of view on the high cost of nuclear power has been debunked time and time again. Take this article from 2001:
http://www.rmi.org/sitepages/pid508.php
Is the author enjoying his crow sandwich knowing that numerous utilities are already staffing for the new nuclear plants that will be online within the next 5 to 7 years?
Solar and Wind are, and will be, important, alternative, sources of energy, but they cannot provide base load power for any part of the power grid in the United States. They are simply not reliable/stable enough. Nuclear power plants are extremely reliable (back to capacity factors here), which is why nuclear plants always provide base load power on their respective grids. It's not magic, it's simply fact.
Incidentally, solar power remains the most expensive method of producing power interms of cost per kwh.
James
Nuclear Plant Operator