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by xeckr 765 days ago
The reliance of the Austrian power grid on nuclear energy, combined with their total refusal to produce it domestically is certainly ironic. This phenomenon also predates any notion of green energy transition by several decades.
3 comments

They don't rely on nuclear energy.

They rely on the grid. Just like the rest of the connected countries. Just like nuclear country France does.

What kind of energy is cheap at the moment there is irrelevant. If nuclear energy would be turned off on the grid, like it happens all the time when the French fleet needs repairs again for example, no lights go out in Austria. Just like no lights go out in France.

What you do is the same thing as making fun of humans because they rely on supermarkets and don't go out on the streets and shoot some animals.

Times change.

Following your metaphor, those humans eat meat while voting to outlaw the killing of animals. But only after spending a billion dollars on hunting equipment.
No. The metaphor is humans voting to stop hunting whales but eat whales before starving to death.
Not really. They've spent that money on hunting equipment only to realize that it would have been more clever to ask the people whose money they spend, if they should do it.

This is why it never happened again.

Learning from mistakes is something good.

> If nuclear energy would be turned off on the grid, like it happens all the time when the French fleet needs repairs again for example

It happened a single time in 40 years and the European grid almost died so no, they do rely on nuclear whether they are happy or not.

What are you talking about? Where is the grid "almost died"? :D

Do you have any trustworthy sources for that?

> like it happens all the time when the French fleet needs repairs again for example

The one time this happened in 40 years was quite a problem for European supply reliability.

When is this supposed to be? Because the time I've been talking about is not that long ago...
It happened in 2022. That’s not exactly «all the time» or even «again».
When exactly? Do you have any sources on this? An URL? Something?
At some stage one Austrian politician said that Austria won't buy nuclear contaminated energy from Hungary.
As Austrian it's a national pride, and certainly not ironic.

Germany only followed after their Wackersdorf debacle, matching Tschnernobyl, and then finally Fukushima.

The rest of Europe is still in the hands of the energy lobbies.

And Austria does not rely on nuclear at all. It's rather the other way round, that all the others rely on Austria (and Swiss) expensive peak energy from their high mountains. When Europe turns on all it's power switches at the very same time the grid would collapse without Austria.

In 2023, 12% of Austria's electricity had a nuclear origin [0]. As for the risk of a meltdown, look at a map of reactors in Europe. The reactors Austria is buying that power from aren't much further away from major population centres than Zwentendorf.

[0] https://w3.windmesse.de/windenergie/pm/46044-ig-windkraft-at...

Austria does not rely on nuclear at all. The biggest power station in the country (south of Graz) went off grid a few year ago, because gas and coal became too expensive, but could be turned on immediately.

Zwentendorf of the very same size cannot be turned on again fortunately. The meltdown and earthquake risk with all the insecure Russian reactors around is of course still around.

> When Europe turns on all it's power switches at the very same time the grid would collapse without Austria.

Would you happen to have a source?

Talked in person to my two friends at the top of the Austrian grid
I have a friend who works on the Czech grid (so a neighboring country), and Austria never came up in the conversation as an important factor, it's always Germany causing problems.
The Czech and Slovak powerplants are both close enough to our border that it doesn't really matter.
That's how it sponsored Putin's war for decades, by being reliant on Russian oil and gas. Austria is still doing that, until maybe Ukraine closes down or blows up the pipeline.

https://www.euractiv.com/section/energy-environment/news/we-...

Not really European countries, no.

Quote from your article:

> With the exception of Hungary, which has recently signed an agreement with Rosatom for the expansion of its Paks nuclear power plant, European countries have been seeking to diversify away from the company since the full-scale invasion of Ukraine.

> Not really European countries, no.

Is nuclear energy a European energy source, or how is this comment related?