| Thank you for giving me an opportunity to research this stuff again. > Not the power plants problem, as per law the government is responsible for it and the utilities have to pay them. The govt is in breach of this by not opening Yucca Mountain. Strange, we assigned blame, yet the problem persists. What are they going to do with nuclear waste until the government acts? [1] I guess you wouldn't be willing to put a barrel or two into your garage, would you? > Thats what insurance pools like the "American Nuclear Insurers" are for I have heard of those. Let's check how much they disbursed for Fukushima. Apparently Fukushima was insured by the German Nuclear Reactor Insurance Association. And apparently the Association did pay out... nothing [2]. Furthermore, liability is often capped for those insurance associations, just like in the USA [3]. In the end the public will pay anyway. > German commercial nuclear power plants for example never received ANY subsidies and they still made a lot of money. The science service of the German Bundestag seems to disagree [4]. A more comprehensive study is here [5]. [1] And "act" could just mean to revoke the law and institute something like in Finland. Proper compensation of risk could certainly speed up finding suited locations. I'm all for it. [2] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/German_Nuclear_Reactor_Insuran... [3] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Price%E2%80%93Anderson_Nuclear... [4] https://www.bundestag.de/resource/blob/877586/4e4dce913c3d88... [5] https://foes.de/publikationen/2020/2020-09_FOES_Kosten_Atome... EDIT: typos, grammar |
You are wrong. It's not the science service of the Bundestag quoted in your link, but the exact same junk-science study by the anti-nuclear "Forum Ökologisch-Soziale Marktwirtschaft" that you quote below
See here: https://dserver.bundestag.de/btd/14/080/1408084.pdf
Antwort des Parlamentarischen Staatssekretärs Siegmar Mosdorf vom 15. Januar 2002 > In Deutschland sind bisher in Leichtwasserreaktoren ca. 3 225 Mrd. kWh erzeugt und in öffentliche Netze eingespeist worden. Subventio- nen für die kommerzielle Stromerzeugung aus Kernenergie gab es nicht. Allerdings wurde die Forschung auf dem Gebiet der Kern- energie durch öffentliche Mittel unterstützt.
Translated:
Answer from Parliamentary State Secretary Siegmar Mosdorf dated January 15, 2002 In Germany, around 3,225 billion kWh have been generated in light water reactors and fed into the public grid. There are no subsidies for commercial electricity generation from nuclear energy . However, research in the field of nuclear energy has been supported by public funds.