Greetings:
Nice thread all the way around, very engaging and informative. I'm not a physicist nor a nuclear engineer, but I would like to make a few points if I may.
1. No question about it, we need an alternate energy source for many reasons not the least of which includes politics and environmental considerations.
2. Nuclear fission proponents sight the following points in thier arguments in favor of pursueing a 'nuclear energy future':
a) New reactor designs are safer--no doubt here, as we gain more and more experience designs will get better and better.
b) Waste disposal isn't the problem it once was.
c) Making comparisons with military or Soviet reactors is pointless because those are so different from commercial US reactors.
Now then:
New reactor designs are (most likely) safer due to our increased experience with nuclear (fission) power. However, designers are human beings. Contractors and construction personnel are human beings. Reactor operators are human beings. And human beings make mistakes.
Waste recycling and containment is also a human endeavor and as such, mistakes will be made. Further, are any of the recycling and containment schemes mentioned in this thread really active today? If they are that means that spent fuel rods are being transported from reactor sites to the recycling and storage facilities. This is being done by human beings. And human beings make mistakes.
No one wants to see one of thier reactors suffer a problem, let alone a major catastophe. Not the military, not the commercial sector. Yes, the goals are different and so any given reactor solution is different, but let's ignore the absurdity of re-inventing the wheel every time some one needs a wheel. These people, including the Soviets, are smart. They are not evil. They are of good moral fiber. They have sons and daughters just like everybody else. They are human beings. And human beings make mistakes.
And mistakes have been made be they military or commercial concerns by almost everyone who delves into nuclear energy. We don't hear about the military mistakes here in the US for obvious reasons of national security, but they happen nonetheless.
We are all human beings. And human beings make mistakes.
Should we be willing accept the risk that must accompany those mistakes?
If a nuclear plant suffers catastrophic failure, land areas the size of US states can be made unlivable for decades, perhaps longer. The number of people killed outright or by radiation induced disease can be conservatively estimated at tens of thousands.
Should we be willing to accept this kind of risk, knowing that, sooner or later, it will in fact happen because we are all human beings and human beings make mistakes?
I just can't see it right now, in spite of the excellent thread.
Nice thread all the way around, very engaging and informative. I'm not a physicist nor a nuclear engineer, but I would like to make a few points if I may.
1. No question about it, we need an alternate energy source for many reasons not the least of which includes politics and environmental considerations.
2. Nuclear fission proponents sight the following points in thier arguments in favor of pursueing a 'nuclear energy future':
a) New reactor designs are safer--no doubt here, as we gain more and more experience designs will get better and better.
b) Waste disposal isn't the problem it once was.
c) Making comparisons with military or Soviet reactors is pointless because those are so different from commercial US reactors.
Now then:
New reactor designs are (most likely) safer due to our increased experience with nuclear (fission) power. However, designers are human beings. Contractors and construction personnel are human beings. Reactor operators are human beings. And human beings make mistakes.
Waste recycling and containment is also a human endeavor and as such, mistakes will be made. Further, are any of the recycling and containment schemes mentioned in this thread really active today? If they are that means that spent fuel rods are being transported from reactor sites to the recycling and storage facilities. This is being done by human beings. And human beings make mistakes.
No one wants to see one of thier reactors suffer a problem, let alone a major catastophe. Not the military, not the commercial sector. Yes, the goals are different and so any given reactor solution is different, but let's ignore the absurdity of re-inventing the wheel every time some one needs a wheel. These people, including the Soviets, are smart. They are not evil. They are of good moral fiber. They have sons and daughters just like everybody else. They are human beings. And human beings make mistakes.
And mistakes have been made be they military or commercial concerns by almost everyone who delves into nuclear energy. We don't hear about the military mistakes here in the US for obvious reasons of national security, but they happen nonetheless.
We are all human beings. And human beings make mistakes.
Should we be willing accept the risk that must accompany those mistakes?
If a nuclear plant suffers catastrophic failure, land areas the size of US states can be made unlivable for decades, perhaps longer. The number of people killed outright or by radiation induced disease can be conservatively estimated at tens of thousands.
Should we be willing to accept this kind of risk, knowing that, sooner or later, it will in fact happen because we are all human beings and human beings make mistakes?
I just can't see it right now, in spite of the excellent thread.