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by teh
3499 days ago
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That's just a list of the positives. I think it'd be useful to your argument to also provide some "real world" nuclear experience. E.g. * The tax payer in Germany is picking up most of the estimated 100+ billion Euro cleanup of their reactors over the next 100 years. * Sellafield cleanup alone is going to be £120 billion [1]. * New reactors in Europe are 2-3x over budget and not finished yet. So if we started constructing immediately then 2030 is optimistic [2]. * The chunk of Japan that's a no-go zone isn't that small. Have a look at Google maps some time. I'd rather spend the 200 billion that new reactors will cost us on energy storage and many lower-risk, known-good providers like wind, thermal to spread risk. [1]
https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachm... [2]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Olkiluoto_Nuclear_Power_Plant#... |
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I did look at the Google map you're referring to and I converted the scary colors to numbers using the hard-to-find scale and was shocked to learn that the numbers were well within the safe zone. Even the orange.
European reactor constructions are looking rough. But that doesn't have to be the only case. In UAE, the South Koreans are building 4 huge PWRs on budget and schedule. The South Koreans somehow consistently deliver on nukes. The Americans and Europeans could hopefully learn from them how this is done.
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0301421516...