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The Rise of Small Nuclear Plants

ColdWetDog writes "The Oil Drum (one of the best sites to discuss the technical details of the Macondo Blowout) is typically focused on ramifications of petroleum use, and in particular the Peak Oil theory. They run short guest articles from time to time on various aspects of energy use and policies. Today they have an interesting article on small nuclear reactors with a refreshing amount of technical detail concerning their construction, use, and fueling. The author's major thesis: 'Pick up almost any book about nuclear energy and you will find that the prevailing wisdom is that nuclear plants must be very large in order to be competitive. This assumption is widely accepted, but, if its roots are understood, it can be effectively challenged. Recently, however, a growing body of plant designers, utility companies, government agencies, and financial players are recognizing that smaller plants can take advantage of greater opportunities to apply lessons learned, take advantage of the engineering and tooling savings possible with higher numbers of units, and better meet customer needs in terms of capacity additions and financing. The resulting systems are a welcome addition to the nuclear power plant menu, which has previously been limited to one size — extra large.'"

490 comments

  1. Since they're small, by aquila.solo · · Score: 1

    I'll take three.

    1. Re:Since they're small, by ceraphis · · Score: 1

      Be sure to hide one in the janitor's closet of the room where one is hiding in plain sight.

    2. Re:Since they're small, by sycodon · · Score: 1

      I'll volunteer my back yard.

      --
      When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
    3. Re:Since they're small, by davester666 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Yeah, that's the problem. No matter what the size of the reactor, NIMBY.

      And since NIMBY is so hard to overcome, if you do manage to overcome it, you might as well build a honking big one instead of a small or medium sized plant.

      And in the US, tack on a few more acres for storing the waste indefinitely, as the Federal Government is unlikely to get it's act into gear and actually create a storage facility for it anytime soon.

      --
      Sleep your way to a whiter smile...date a dentist!
    4. Re:Since they're small, by rtb61 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Smaller plants can of course get by this problem by running low reaction, low temperature reactors. For example if you were to pulse the reaction rather than have a sustained reaction you can substantially reduce the temperature of the reactor whilst increasing the life of fuel and use a hydrocarbon lubricating reactant (liquid to vapour) in a closed cycle turbine, where the nuclear reaction is enclosed within the main active turbine blades and the reaction then drives an array of passive turbine blades. So a shipping container sized reactor ie many smaller, simpler, safer, reactors in a power plant (they are safer because of course the substantially reduced operating temperatures and the fuel rods last the life of the reactor, no refuelling).

      --
      Chaos - everything, everywhere, everywhen
    5. Re:Since they're small, by OldeTimeGeek · · Score: 1

      And in the US, tack on a few more acres for storing the waste indefinitely, as the Federal Government is unlikely to get it's act into gear and actually create a storage facility for it anytime soon.

      The Department of Energy already did. Nevada didn't want it, so it's dead (gotta love state's rights). The search for options begins again with to a new Blue Ribbon Comission.

    6. Re:Since they're small, by Mysticalfruit · · Score: 1

      If we really wanted to get our act together, what we should do is actually reprocess the tons and tons of perfectly good uranium that has traces of plutonium in it. I'm sorry... a uranium fuel rod that's gone from 99% to 96% used doesn't seem too spent to me.

      --
      Yes Francis, the world has gone crazy.
  2. Small nukes by countertrolling · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Great for pumping stations and desalination plants... probably the cheapest way.

    --
    For justice, we must go to Don Corleone
  3. This is good. by elucido · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Nuclear energy is probably the best chance we have are breaking our addiction to oil. Nuclear energy is also relatively clean. I don't know why the government doesn't just fund the development of a bunch of nuclear power plants and put them on the coast or on the ocean somewhere. We could generate enough power to power the entire country, not to mention we could probably put hundreds of thousands of nuclear power plants in the desert.

    1. Re:This is good. by ickleberry · · Score: 2, Insightful

      There is no one fix to this problem. For the past 100 years or so oil was an all you can drink buffet but now the end is in sight. There is talk of a Peak Uranium which may already have passed. Nuclear has its uses as a reliable base load but its not the one great solution that will solve all our energy problems.

      Solar, wind, geothermal, pumped storage all have their place but really the national grid should be designed to better accomodate micro-generation and 'unreliable' generators like wind turbines - efficient power plants that can easily reduce their output in a way that actually saves fuel so that no wind or solar energy ends up wasted.

    2. Re:This is good. by h4rr4r · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Peak Uranium? So then we move to thorium, or get uranium out of the sea, or burn our spent fuel. This is a solvable issue.

    3. Re:This is good. by Daryen · · Score: 1

      Well, I'm not sure how many plants we could put in the desert, as nuclear energy usually requires a large amount of water.

    4. Re:This is good. by Tubal-Cain · · Score: 1

      Read Asimov's "The Last Question" some time. No power source lasts forever.

    5. Re:This is good. by master0ne · · Score: 1

      Because a lot of politicians and "regular people" are scared shit-less of nuclear power because of incidents like 3 mile island, and chernobyl. It becomes a NIMBY issue, no one wants the plants anywhere near them, and they will fight vehemently to prevent them from happening.

      --
      Noone writes jokes in base 13!
    6. Re:This is good. by JackCroww · · Score: 5, Interesting
      I recently was part of a discussion about energy here in the US and this was my brother's contribution:

      It's quite simple, actually. The United States has not built a nuclear power plant since the seventies. Almost all of the plants we built then, and all of the plants that are still online, are pressurized light water (PLW) designs. This means that that coolant in the reactor, which also moderates the nuclear reaction, is ordinary water under great pressure (typically at least twice the industrial norm of 600 lb/in^2 steam). A PLW reactor produces as much plutonium 239 as it consumes uranium 235. We erroneously call Pu-239 nuclear waste, and the governments since the Clinton Administration have been looking to find a place to bury it for a quarter of a million years.

      However, until the Clinton administration, your government was busy designing a better reactor. The program was called integral fast reactor, or IFR. IFR was a metal-moderated reactor. The coolant was liquid metal, sodium or lead. These elements don't moderate the neutrons, they fly unhindered through the pile. That means they can fission Pu-239. In fact, they can fission anything higher than uranium on the periodic table. That's not all a fast reactor can do, though. It can also turn anything on the other (left) half of the bottom row of the periodic table into fissionable material. That's what "fast" means in the name. The reactor produces its own fuel from thorium or uranium in its natural state! Just the uranium that has been mined to date, which we use for cannon shells once we've taken the U-235 out of it, is sufficient for 300-400 years of the US energy needs. The known reserves are good for 50,000 years or so. Uranium is more plentiful in the earth's crust than gold or tin, and there is three times as much thorium as uranium. Energy forever.

      What does "integral" mean? It means that the fuel is recycled on-site. The fuel in the IFR is in metallic, rather than ceramic form. It is simply re-smelted periodically (not the whole load, just a few rods' worth), and the slag is the only waste. The balance of the fuel plus a tiny bit of uranium or thorium in its natural state, is recast into pellets and returned to the reactor. The volume of the nuclear waste is reduced by several orders of magnitude. The nature of the waste is only the light elements that are the products of the fission reaction. They have either extremely short half lives, measured in seconds to months, or such long half lives that they are essentially stable. They are also mainly low-energy beta emitters, instead of neutron and gamma emitters. While this waste is hellishly radioactive at first, it will be less radioactive than uranium ore in less than 300 years, and reactors might produce a couple hundredweight in a fifty year lifespan, instead of thousands of tons of spent fuel rods as a PLW reactor would.

      Additional benefits of the IFR design? The fuel is in metallic form, suspended in liquid metal. It gets no hotter than the coolant, and thus cannot have a catastrophic loss of coolant, or "blow down", which is what happens if there is a leak in the primary circuit of a LWR. The fuel in a LWR is in ceramic form, and gets much hotter than the coolant (which is in turn much hotter than liquid sodium). If it were not continuously cooled, it would destroy its container and melt, hence the term "melt down." If that happens to enough fuel elements in a reactor, the fuel gathers at the bottom of the vessel and continues to react, until it melts through the bottom of vessel, or the "china syndrome." None of these is possible with the IFR design. As it gets warmer, the fuel assemblies expand and move away from each other, slowing or stopping the reaction. The IFR, in fact, was tested for this. They turned off the control system. The reactor heated slightly, and stopped working. The cut off the heat exchanger (simulating what happens if the heat exchanger or a turbine goes bad at a LWR plant)--same thing. The reactor heated slightly and shut itself down,

      --
      "Ayn Rand is a bloody socialist compared to me." - Robert A. Heinlein
    7. Re:This is good. by interkin3tic · · Score: 1

      I don't know why the government doesn't just fund the development of a bunch of nuclear power plants and put them on the coast or on the ocean somewhere.

      Yes you do: mostly a perception issue with the voters, a lot of politics, and some actual reasons. There's the stigma of nuclear power that we have yet to shake, any elected official who votes for nuclear is going to lose the green vote, and the green vote is the big one that really cares about ending fossil fuels. Few elected officials if any could say "sure, bury that radioactive waste in my district, my constituents are aware that they're facing bigger environmental hazards from various superfund sites, not to mention realizing that radioactive waste in a bunker is less of a threat than climate change."

      As far as the specific off the coast idea, I myself would be a lot more skeptical of that given recent events. Seems to me if we can't handle pulling oil out of the ground in the gulf, regulating it, and stopping it if there's a problem, we might not be competent to operate a nuclear reactor out there.

    8. Re:This is good. by chichilalescu · · Score: 1

      mod parent up. the whole "nuclear is evil" trend has to stop.

      --
      new sig
    9. Re:This is good. by Surt · · Score: 1

      A classic story.

      But of course, in reality human civilization is probably only going to last another hundred years or so, so nuclear will last plenty long.

      --
      "Who is the Journal of Quantum Physics going to believe?" --Stephen Hawking
    10. Re:This is good. by rudy_wayne · · Score: 0

      Nuclear energy is probably the best chance we have are breaking our addiction to oil. Nuclear energy is also relatively clean.

      Sorry, but neither of these is true. I'm no environmentalist, but I see several problems with nuclear power.

      First, the nuclear power industry has a terrible track record with regard to things like performing proper maintenance and basic honesty (ie, lying and covering up problems).

      Second, nuclear power is neither cheap nor clean. Every nuclear plant ever built has been extremely expensive and this cost is passed on to consumers as higher electricity rates. Although nuclear power may not generate air pollution like a conventional (coal) power plant, it generates something just as bad or worse -- radioactive waste that we still don't know how to deal with. We can't even built containers that will last more than a few decades without falling apart. France, long a world leader in nuclear power, is now getting first hand experience with this problem as buried nuclear waste is beginning to leak out, and in at least one case, threatening a famous vineyard.

      Third, only 1% of the electricity is the U.S. is generated using. Nuclear power will have absolutely no effect on our consumption of oil.

      Fourth, and maybe most telling of all, is the Obama administration's recently proposal of $8 Billion in loan guarantees for the nuclear power industry. Translation -- nuclear power is such a bad investment that nobody wants to give them any money.

      The biggest problem with coal is air pollution. There is technology available to reduce pollution to negligible levels, but nobody wants to use it because it's "too expensive". Instead of flushing a few Billion down the toilet with nuclear power, we could put that money into clean coal technology.

    11. Re:This is good. by h4rr4r · · Score: 2, Insightful

      We have been hearing that claim for thousands of years. Human society will last a lot longer than that.

    12. Re:This is good. by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

      We could not possibly use anything else for cooling, no way. It would be impossible to use the ground as a heatsync or air. Expensive maybe, but surely not impossible.

    13. Re:This is good. by h4rr4r · · Score: 3, Informative

      Clean coal cannot exist. What are you going to do with all the waste? What will you do with the CO2?

      It is a freaking PR job by the dirtiest industry in the USA. They top off mountains and dump the remains into peoples drinking water. Then they store hazardous waste in open ponds and let that run onto people's property. These folks make the nuclear industry look like saints.

    14. Re:This is good. by rossdee · · Score: 1

      "Nuclear energy is probably the best chance we have are breaking our addiction to oil."

      I think you mean "addiction to coal"

      There isnt a lot of oil fired electric power plants.

      Nuclear powered cars and trucks (and aircraft) are not gonna happen.

    15. Re:This is good. by shemyazaz · · Score: 1

      Placing them near the ocean would be an effective way to facilitate a move to hydrogen for portable power. I've always thought we should do this. Nuclear and Hydrogen......the future.

    16. Re:This is good. by JackCroww · · Score: 3, Informative

      Your rebuttal is an ad hominem attack? Normally I'd ignore you, but instead, I'll let you try looking at the first bullet point under the "Global Significance" section: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Integral_Fast_Reactor to see if you might change your mind. As for Libertarianism, do you have a better suggestion? At this point, almost anything has to be better than the two parties currently spending our children into oblivion: http://pajamasmedia.com/richardfernandez/files/2008/11/fed-rev-spend-2008-boc-s1-federal-spending-has-increased.gif

      --
      "Ayn Rand is a bloody socialist compared to me." - Robert A. Heinlein
    17. Re:This is good. by timmarhy · · Score: 0, Insightful
      there is no such thing as peak nuclear power because you can use breeder reactors to create new fissionable material (plutonium 239). http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/Hbase/NucEne/fasbre.html

      there is this farsical disscuion that always gets recycled about uranium, that there is only 50 years supply left. yes, there is 50 years of KNOWN AND DEFINED ore body. there has been almost zero exploration done in the last 40 years due to hard campgaining against uranium mining and nuclear power. it's dishonest of the green lobby to succeed in banning uranium mining in most countries then claim short supply as a problem for nuclear power. In australia alone we have massive deposits that aren't properly explored, and there's no doubt there are more deposits we don't even know about.

      --
      If you mod me down, I will become more powerful than you can imagine....
    18. Re:This is good. by Surt · · Score: 3, Insightful

      No one had the technology to kill everyone on earth until the mid 70s, so that was a pretty implausible claim for all but the last 40ish of those thousands of years.

      --
      "Who is the Journal of Quantum Physics going to believe?" --Stephen Hawking
    19. Re:This is good. by Cyclloid · · Score: 1

      I'm all for a stable energy source but there are several issues with nuclear facilities:
      1. People tend to live on the coasts, & people tend to disapprove of any nuclear plants near their homes.(note I lived near( 2. Various security agencies see nuclear facilities as potential targets. (plane + nuclear plant = Chernobyl)
      3. You need to store the spent fuel somewhere; no one wants to live near a nuclear dump. Even if it is out in the middle of nowhere you still have to transport the fuel there (through citys? on major highways?)

    20. Re:This is good. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Guilt by assocation and an ad hominem attack without addressing one of the arguments offered. Nice.

    21. Re:This is good. by Muros · · Score: 1

      It's not a good solution though. We should use renewable energy sources on earth whenever we can. The non-renewables, especially high energy/mass sources like fissionable materials, should be kept for space exploration.

    22. Re:This is good. by Urza9814 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Saying nuclear won't fulfill our needs because of "peak Uranium" is at best stupid, at worst a lie to try to stop development of nuclear power. We likely have enough fuel (Uranium, Thorium, Plutonium, etc) for _thousands of years_ at our current energy consumption. That's the electrical grid, cars, everything. If we can just make everything run on electricity and build the best reactors our scientists can design, we would be fine for hundreds of years at a _minimum_. And I think it's safe to assume we'd be switched over to fusion by then :)

      The problem is not the technology, it's not the resources, it's the regulations and the industry. We aren't building new plants because power companies aren't willing to invest large sums of money. Because regulations make it hard for them to _acquire_ large amounts of money (limits on how much profit utilities can take in.) We can't build breeder reactors because, for an extremely short period of time, they produce enriched uranium. Without breeder reactors, we can't take care of the waste problem because it lasts freakin' forever (without breeder reactors) and nobody wants it stored or transported anywhere within a thousand miles of them.

      If you got a bunch of engineers and said "figure out how to solve our energy problem", they could throw together a nuclear power system that could power the world into the next millennium - and it would be cheap, it would be clean, and it would be safe. It's only restrictions like "you can't create highly radioactive products, even for a few seconds, you can't build anything big, you can't build anywhere near populated areas, and you can't use the word 'radioactive' or 'nuclear'" that causes problems.

    23. Re:This is good. by h4rr4r · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Sure if we could, but the reality is no one wants to think that far ahead. If they did many of our deserts would already be covered with solar thermal plants.

    24. Re:This is good. by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

      We still don't have said technology. Even if you use all our nukes someone will still make it. Sure that could end modern society, but even that would not wipe us out. We are resilient little buggers.

    25. Re:This is good. by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

      Sure they are, they will just store that power either in a battery, as hydrogen or as a man made hydrocarbon.

    26. Re:This is good. by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

      1. people can get over it.

      2.Plane + nuclear plant != chernobyl.
      http://www.nei.org/newsandevents/aircraftcrashbreach/

      3.Most of that spent fuel can be used as fuel. We need modern designs not old style fear.

    27. Re:This is good. by Gizzmonic · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Fourth, and maybe most telling of all, is the Obama administration's recently proposal of $8 Billion in loan guarantees for the nuclear power industry. Translation -- nuclear power is such a bad investment that nobody wants to give them any money.

      Of course it's 'bad investment' from the perspective of people looking to make money. Building infrastructure is always a 'bad investment.' Yet we all benefit from it. Nuclear power is still the safest and cleanest energy out there. Clean coal has been shown again and again to be a lie. Nuclear power is used in Japan and throughout Europe. Let's take the plunge!

      --
      (-1, Raw and Uncut is the only way to read)
    28. Re:This is good. by RsG · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Even if you use all our nukes someone will still make it.

      Depends on how you use them.

      If the cold war had gone hot, most of those nukes would have been aimed at targets in the northern hemisphere, with several warheads per target (as insurance, in case some didn't launch, didn't work, or got shot down). Contrary to popular belief, most of the targets were military, rather than civilian - cities were a low priority, missile silos were a high priority, for reasons that should be obvious. Post nuclear losses due to radiation poisoning, starvation and infrastructure collapse would probably have been higher than the actually death toll inflicted by the bombs, and as you correctly say, people would survive. Contrary to some predictions, nuclear winter would not have been likely, but we didn't know that at the time.

      Now, if you actually wanted to achieve total human genocide using the worlds current nuclear arsenal, I'm not at all sure you couldn't. Don't bother with the cities, just hit all the arable land, and let starvation take its course. Of course that is a very morbid thing to consider, and is sufficiently horrible, not to mention suicidal, that we'd never actually do it, but you were discussing whether it was possible, rather than whether it was likely.

      --
      Erotic is when you use a feather. Exotic is when you use the whole chicken.
    29. Re:This is good. by beamin · · Score: 1

      We could give Santa Claus or the Easter Bunny the job of building clean coal tech. All three are equally real.

    30. Re:This is good. by gbutler69 · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Third, only 1% of the electricity is the U.S. is generated using. Nuclear power will have absolutely no effect on our consumption of oil.

      LIAR! YOU ARE A LIAR! Get your facts straight. It is more like 20%. This alone calls into question everything else you have to say. You have done no basic fact checking so you don't know what you are talking about, or, you know and choose to LIE! Which is it?

      Fourth, and maybe most telling of all, is the Obama administration's recently proposal of $8 Billion in loan guarantees for the nuclear power industry. Translation -- nuclear power is such a bad investment that nobody wants to give them any money.

      No, this is needed because it cost so much to get a new power-plant through all the political hurdles put up by LIARS like you who don't know WHAT THE F--K YOU ARE TALKING ABOUT! Please STFU and the let the grown-ups fix the problems.

      --
      Over-the-top Response Guy! Giving "Over-the-Top Responses" since 1970.
    31. Re:This is good. by GuruBuckaroo · · Score: 1

      Nuclear powered cars and trucks (and aircraft) are not gonna happen.

      Yeah, 'cause battery-powered cars that are charged by the power grid are really never gonna happen.

      Oh.. wait, that's right, you can buy them now, and companies are working on more.

      --
      Poor means hoping the toothache goes away.
    32. Re:This is good. by GuruBuckaroo · · Score: 1

      Please look up. Or just click here. All of your concerns are answered... well, except the NIMBY problem, but honestly, that can be solved by good PR.

      --
      Poor means hoping the toothache goes away.
    33. Re:This is good. by flaming+error · · Score: 2, Interesting

      > As for Libertarianism, do you have a better suggestion?

      Gladiator fights. I'll give three:one odds on the teabagger in the SUV over the treehugger with the polar bear.

    34. Re:This is good. by elucido · · Score: 1

      Exactly what I was thinking.I was actually thinking about building huge ships or floating nuclear islands in the ocean to lower the fear of radiation exposure but thats close enough.

    35. Re:This is good. by cheesybagel · · Score: 1

      Atlantic, Pacific ocean, Mississippi river. I know the Japanese have some nuclear reactors cooled using salt water. Then you add a huge power grid and hey presto! Done.

    36. Re:This is good. by fuscus2010 · · Score: 1

      Somehow I don't think the campaign slogan "VOTE FOR ME - And I'll stick a nuclear power plant in your area" will catch on

    37. Re:This is good. by Delarth799 · · Score: 0

      Fallout 3 says your a liar with pants on fire

    38. Re:This is good. by mrops · · Score: 1

      That won't work. In a energy related article, I had read that solar cells occupying area the size of mexico can power the entire world. One of the hurdles besides cost of solar cells was getting that power to the rest of the world. Apparently there is a huge loss in transmitting the power.

      In yet another article when I was back in India, I had read, India looses 50% of energy in transmission. Of coarse, in case of India, this also reflects lot of energy stolen.

    39. Re:This is good. by hackus · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Part of this energy problem is socieconomic. Virtually no one is discussing the obvious problem of cenralizing power.

      It is not going to work.

      What should be happening is every home should have its own power system, and should be self sufficient, connected to a grid which can resell excess energy per household back to the grid for use.

      The idea of central authorities controlling all the power of whole regions is economically as well as politically dangerous.

      For example, lets talk about Obama's terrorist boogieman. What is easier to pick off, central power plants owned by a wealthy few? Or everyone's home self sufficient which provides its own energy with no one point to attack?

      Our own socieconomic models are designed for the military industrial complex to provide a reason for its existence.

      Technology could be developed to provide homes that generate all the energy they require, but it is being denied due to these and other facts which would destroy the wealthy's power structure so it cannot be permitted.

      Combinations of natural gas turbines, solar power, gas, oil, solar and wind and geothermal, nuclear and space could easily be distributed by regions household based on what energy sources are cheapest or practical.

      Change isn't hard. It is hard though when 14 families control all of the worlds energy supplies and do not look kindly upon ideas that threaten the status quo.

      -Hack

      --
      Got Geometrodynamics? Awe, too hard to figure out? Too bad.
    40. Re:This is good. by DerekLyons · · Score: 4, Interesting

      If you got a bunch of engineers and said "figure out how to solve our energy problem", they could throw together a nuclear power system that could power the world into the next millennium - and it would be cheap, it would be clean, and it would be safe.

      ADM Rickover thinks differently:

      • An academic reactor or reactor plant almost always has the following basic characteristics: (1) It is simple. (2) It is small. (3) It is cheap. (4) It is light. (5) It can be built very quickly. (6) It is very flexible in purpose. (7) Very little development will be required. It will use off-the-shelf components. (8) The reactor is in the study phase. It is not being built now.
         
      • On the other hand a practical reactor can be distinguished by the following characteristics: (1) It is being built now. (2) It is behind schedule. (3) It requires an immense amount of development on apparently trivial items. (4) It is very expensive. (5) It takes a long time to build because of its engineering development problems. (6) It is large. (7) It is heavy. (8) It is complicated.
         
    41. Re:This is good. by cheesybagel · · Score: 4, Informative

      Nuclear power is cheap and clean. It is cheap enough that France exports large amounts of electricity to Italy, Germany, and the UK. The importing countries closed or scaled down their nuclear power investments to placate local enviro-weenies but are OK importing it, even if the reactors are right next to the border. France has some of the cheapest electricity costs in Europe. So I do not get where you are coming from.

      Check the DOE energy reports. In the US nuclear power generates more electricity than wind, solar, hydro and other renewables combined. If CO2 is considered a pollutant there is no clean coal.

    42. Re:This is good. by Yez70 · · Score: 1

      Actually, those 'unreliable' wind generators are being improved upon. In northern Michigan they are developing hybrid wind/natural gas plants - both which are available in great supply. When the wind dies down, the gas plant turns on to supplement the supply. I think the first setup will be about a 10 Megawatt plant with 10-20 wind turbines towering 250 feet above the farms. It also happens to be at a natural gas pipeline junction for the area.

    43. Re:This is good. by guppysap13 · · Score: 1

      Posting to undo accidental moderation.

    44. Re:This is good. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Relaxing regulations and restrictions certainly worked for the oil industry! Or the financial sector!

      I agree with you that a bunch of engineers could probably solve the problem and make nuclear safe and reliable. However, engineers don't run power companies. I also think nuclear is going to be a major player in our energy future, but frankly, imagining some modern power companies building and operating plants freaks me out a little bit.

      It's probably also worthwhile noting that regulation is not a good thing or bad thing. It's only detrimental when it's operated incompetently by people who don't have society's best interests in mind. Knee-jerk "regulation bad" type responses are just as bad as ineffective regulation.

    45. Re:This is good. by amh131 · · Score: 1

      Oh, I don't know if I'd go that far. 2:1 or even less I think. I once saw a polar bear rocking one of those rollagon bus things they use for bear watching expeditions in Churchill, Manitoba, trying to get at the morsels inside. If the treehugger could get the SUV stopped (maybe he could jam his head into the wheels?) I think the bear would have an excellent chance!

    46. Re:This is good. by uncqual · · Score: 0, Troll

      Nice troll.

      You think we are stupid enough to buy this BS? If there was an option with this many upsides and so few downsides, we would be using it - it would just make engineering sense and political sense to get rid of coal plants (in particular) and replace them with (alleged) IFRs. And, to top it off, you expect us to believe that the US would waste resources growing corn for fuel instead of growing food crops if growing corn for fuel wasn't the most efficient use of resources -- balderdash I say - so inconceivable to be unbelievable.

      Your claims are not unlike absurd claims that we should stop using paper tape for data storage and transport because fantastical concepts like "networks", "hard drives", and "flash memory" could be built and would work better. If it was true, we would be using "networks", "hard drives", and "flash memory" instead of paper tape for our data storage and transport needs. Oh... wait... never mind... now I'm very confused...

      --
      Why is there an "insightful" mod and why isn't it "-1"? If I wanted insight, I wouldn't be reading /.
    47. Re:This is good. by victorhooi · · Score: 2, Insightful

      heya,

      Your first point, I'm not going to argue on, because I don't know of the cases you're referring to. I assume here you mean recent ones? Perhaps you could cite examples.

      Your second point - it is actually quite cheap, if you look at the whole picture, both the initial outlay and the ongoing cost. And it is relatively clean - the public likes to drum up the fears about nuclear waste, but the actual amount of waste is considerably less than that from the coal industry. A few pounds of nuclear material is enough to power a small city for a year. You compare that to the amount of coal you have to burn, and hundreds of metric tonnes of resulting pollution.

      http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/reaction/readings/french.html

      And assuming you find safe ways of getting it out of the way, it doesn't pollute the air and contribute to lung cancer. France themselves are leading pioneering research in recycling/reprocessing their nuclear waste. In the US, I believe there's a moratorium on reprocessing dating from the Carter Era, over fears that widespread proliferation of such technology might make it easy for terrorists to get nuclear weapons.

      Your third point - that's the current situation. Isn't the whole point of this article to try and look as possibly increasing that percentage?

      Fourth - as mentioned above, there's a massive outlay, obviously. It's not like you're just digging up rocks from the ground and burning them in a giant pit. And also, I think you're being a bit disingenious and selective with the facts here - the government also funds the coal industry...lol....and to a much larger amount. E.g. see this earlier story, when they were up in arms, when the Congress-funded U.S. Export-Import Bank denied them several hundred million dollars in loan guarantees:

      http://hotair.com/archives/2010/06/27/obamas-promise-to-bankrupt-coal-industry-to-cost-1000-jobs-in-upper-midwest/
      http://blogsforvictory.com/2010/06/27/obamunism-coal-industry-jobs-lost-because-of-obama-policy/

      (Yes, I've noticed both of those blogs seem to be pro-coal, or pro-global warming, if that makes sense...haha).

      Cheers,
      Victor

    48. Re:This is good. by SETIGuy · · Score: 1

      Human society ended in 1987, when the machines rounded us up and put us in here.

    49. Re:This is good. by Sneetches · · Score: 1

      This is by far the most informative argument for or against nuclear power I've ever heard. That sad part is you won't see anything like this in the media for that very reason.

    50. Re:This is good. by bucky0 · · Score: 1

      One correction -- coal generates a TON of radioactive waste, and pumps it straight up into the air. If you managed to scrub it out, you have coal sludge, which is also radioactive. You end right back up to where you are with nuclear power, except it's a bit more diluted than nuclear waste.

      I don't understand how people can, in one breath complain about nuclear waste from nuclear plants, and then suggest coal power in the next breath.

      --

      -Bucky
    51. Re:This is good. by Firethorn · · Score: 5, Informative

      I'd recommend looking at this post.

      First, the nuclear power industry pretty much has the best safety record going. Per dollar of product produced, it kills the least amount of people. Let's see, in the past decade it's killed, what, 3 people (the 3 Japanese workers in a reprocessing plant that got stupid by using a steel bucket instead of the multi-million machine intended for the purpose). Just this year, in the USA, for oil and natural gas we have the Deepwater horizon, which killed 11. China regularly loses hundreds each year, we lost 25 in the explosion at Massey this year. 34 miners lost their lives the year before in various incidents.

      Second - Let's look at Yankee Rowe - third commerical nuclear reactor. Shut down early due to concerns that the reactor vessel might be becoming brittle.
      Cost: $36M in 1960, $209M in 2k dollars
      Decommission: $450M($567M), worst case. $320M($403M) is the 'basis average'.
      During it's life, Yankee Rowe produced 34 Billion kwh, achieving a sub-performing 74% capacity factor - most of the newer reactors still in service are well over 90%.
      So, going by an average 3 cents a kwh, that's $1.02B in electricity produced. That leaves $244M for operations and profit during it's time. So not very expensive, though not as good as would be hoped. If you go by the worst case decommission costs. Basis average would be a lot better, as would it have been if the reactor had lasted it's expected lifetime.

      Third - You have got to be kidding me. 19.4% in 2007

      Fourth - So nuclear power needs loan guarantees to proceed. Wind and Solar power need cash subsidies, often in excess of half their cost! Heck, your 'clean coal' got more subsidies than nuclear - $29.81/MWh for 'clean coal', Solar $24.34 and wind around $23.37, nuclear got only $1.59/MWh

      In total dollars:
      Refined Coal: $2,156M
      Solar: $14M
      Wind: $724M
      Nuclear: $1,267M

      The biggest problem with coal is air pollution. There is technology available to reduce pollution to negligible levels, but nobody wants to use it because it's "too expensive". Instead of flushing a few Billion down the toilet with nuclear power, we could put that money into clean coal technology.

      Still have the problems with fly ash and such, so it's still not 'clean', and at that point your 'clean coal' is more expensive to install than nuclear, as well as more expensive to operate.

      --
      I don't read AC A human right
    52. Re:This is good. by Bigjeff5 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Ya know, you had me there for a while--right up to your sig. Now I just figure you're another Libertarian nutcase, "the autistics of politics."

      In other words "You know, your ideas about energy are wonderful, but I must assume they are terrible because you have a different political ideology than me."

      Thanks for pointing out for the world to see just how big a fucking moron you are.

      --
      Security is mostly a superstition... Avoiding danger is no safer in the long run than outright exposure. - Helen Keller
    53. Re:This is good. by Bigjeff5 · · Score: 1

      And the original post had absolutely nothing to do with libertarianism. Not in any way, shape, or form.

      So why the hell is anybody arguing about it?

      --
      Security is mostly a superstition... Avoiding danger is no safer in the long run than outright exposure. - Helen Keller
    54. Re:This is good. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are not right.
      First off, I was living in a country that had 1 nuclear power plant ( 4800 MW in 6 reactors) and about 12 coal (3 of which were co-generation from central heating) and 6 water power plants, the total generation capacity for the coal and the water was 4000 MW, so 8800 MW of generation in total. The country was exporting quite a lot of MW/h to it's neighbors. The price of a KW/h was just about 3 cents delivered to your home. Being independent and being able to export became a major issue US and EU and because of various "experts" we shut down 2800 MW in the nuclear plant (4 out of 6 reactors). Out of the remaining 2 1 MW nuclear blocks, one would go into 3 month maintenance stop once in 2-3 years. The coal plants running previously only 2 or 3 blocks of their 6 block design now need to run all the 6 blocks at once. And that does not cover for the decrease in the nuclear generation. Some vast wind plantation were build (into protected bird habitats) that have a minuscule generation total of about 60 KW, are subsidized and their energy is practically wasted since the winds are coastal - meaning morning/evening. So now we have to import electricity (that was the plan of US and EU) and the price of KW/h to the people is about 15 cents. So tell me.. how coal is not 5 times as expensive as nuclear?
      There were concerns with the oldest reactor shell so they demanded and carried out destructive sampling of the shell (basically drilling 30 cm deep into the shell and taking a sample of 10cm in diameter). That reactor was about 35 years old, and guess what - they found no reason not to not use it. None of the material fatigue they said would be there , was actually there. Except that you cannot use it, because you have drilled though almost the entire thickness of the shell.
      Both my parents work in the energy sector. My mother designs particle filters for coal plants. My father does slightly different job, but I know - coal is expensive, is radioactive as well - having huge piles of low radioactive coal stored on the input of the power plant is not that safe, even the most effective filters do miss some of the carbon, and other stuff, and what do you do in the end with that huge amount of hard particles - you bury them, exactly the same way that you bury nuclear waste, but you need to use magnitudes more space and volume to bury them.

      So don't tell me oil and coal is cheaper. Yes, building a plant initially is cheaper, operating the plant in 50 year period is not. GO build nuclear, not coal, and certainly not oil. Using oil to produce electricity is one of the least effective ways to use the oil.

    55. Re:This is good. by dbIII · · Score: 1

      There is talk of a Peak Uranium which may already have passed

      That's what was worried about in 1968 and the misguided attempt to get around it was plutonium fast breeders. Since then reactor designs that are less fussy about fuel have been developed in places that actually do R&D. Thus if we were to build thousands of Westinghouse reactors we would hit peak Uranium quickly and go bankrupt for very little power produced, but if a more modern design is developed, prototyped, tested AND THEN many constructed we wouldn't.

    56. Re:This is good. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And I would still be here, in the Southern Hemisphere, drinking a Martini on the deck?

    57. Re:This is good. by Nadaka · · Score: 1

      It would probably be cheaper to build hundreds of thousands of fusion energy collectors in the desert.

    58. Re:This is good. by Nadaka · · Score: 1

      I wouldn't say there is no such thing as peak nuclear power, we will eventually run out of uranium in easilly accessable areas. And we will eventually run out of "nuclear waste" to fuel feeder reactors, but that is likely to take hundreds or even thousands of years.

    59. Re:This is good. by dbIII · · Score: 1

      Peak Uranium is really just an argument against the crap Westinghouse 1970s dinosaurs painted green which are the only sort of plants that would have a problem with peak uranium. The old nuclear lobby wants the taxpayer to keep cashing them up them forever to build and run such things which is why the peak uranium argument came up again a few years ago. Meanwhile the rest of the world have moved on.
      That "bunch of engineers" you talk about are either in India working on accelerated thorium (don't simplify if to "breeder" since that gets lumped in with dead ends like the plutonium breeder Superpheonix), or Germany and China on pebble bed. Possibly even in Los Alamos with small reactor technology.

    60. Re:This is good. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

      "The coolant was liquid metal, sodium or lead. These elements don't moderate the neutrons, they fly unhindered through the pile."

      It's not all roses. For one thing these metallic coolants will all become highly radioactive themselves due to neutron activation, sodium is extremely chemically reactive (spontaneous ignition in air or H2 generation in water that then burns -- choosing non-reactive materials to go in the reactor primary coolant loop is a challenge too), and starting up/shutting down these things is tricky (solidified metal in the pipes is kind of inconvenient). Lead is trickier to work with because of its relatively high melting temperature. Lead-bismuth alloys with much lower melting temperatures are more typical, although unfortunately bismuth gets highly radioactive too.

      The ability to use natural (i.e. non-isotopically enriched) uranium is not unique. The heavy-water-moderated CANDU reactors also have this ability. The main problem there is the cost of the heavy water.

      IFR is an interesting reactor design but there are plenty of other options.

      I also don't know why you consider the Clinton Administration the turning point for finding "a place to bury it for a quarter of a million years". That's been underway since 1982 at least (the Nuclear Waste Policy Act). Certainly there are options for using the "waste" as fuel rather than discarding it outright, but those options were discouraged by multiple administrations since the 1970s.

    61. Re:This is good. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Small nuclear power reactors, small enough so they can't go 'china syndrome', are one of mind-shifts which needs to occur if nuclear power is to become safe. Call it Homer proofing. A a concept that anyone can understand; even an engineers. Bolt enough of these together and you have a the same amount of steam as a single large reactor. Thus the same amount of power generation. Properly designed a single small reactor module can be take off-line and serviced without shutting down the entire reactor cluster.

      Another important item to attend to is a separation of who writes the fines from those who write the laws (i.e. NRC). This is a fatal flaw in the current US system. If memory serves Three Mile Island's owner/operator were fined three times for a faulty emergency gas release valve. It's was rare for the NRC to write fines let alone write three of them. Back then the fines were treated as part of the operation costs and so trimly repair of the valve was not attended to. Safety was compromised as acceptable risk. NOTE: if this valve was functional the meltdown would NOT have occurred. My solution would be to draft (as in act of congress) the Sierra Club, Green Peace or some other environmental group with a mandate that they keep 2% part of the fines. Call it an adversarial system.

      Lastly we have to 'grow a set' and open Yucca Mountain. There is no better place in the US. If salt domes can hold Dinosaur juice it will work just fine for spent fuel rods. Especially if the Sea Shepard's are writing the fines ;)

    62. Re:This is good. by NemoinSpace · · Score: 1

      Even at $130/1b. Your not going to make a lot of money getting uranium from the sea - not to mention the thermodynamic break-even point. It would be nice to have a little energy left over to use on something else besides a perpetual motion machine. Almost any alternative energy source - including oil shale will be fine for another 200 years. And if we haven't figured out fusion by then, it's going to get very very cold...

    63. Re:This is good. by Animaether · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Although I agree in general that nuclear is the way to go for the short and mid-term (and switched electricity providers to one that offers 'red' electricity (as opposed to 'green'), your statement..

      Peak Uranium? So then we move to thorium, or get uranium out of the sea, or burn our spent fuel. This is a solvable issue.

      ..could be applied to people's stance on oil as well:
      "Peak Oil? So then we move to natural gas, or get the oil out of shale, or recover oil from plastics. This is a solvable issue."

    64. Re:This is good. by Thing+1 · · Score: 2

      Okay, so the post ends with "go to bed hungry every night." The period is there. Then there's the "Read the rest of this comment" link, and guess what more there is to the post? FUCKING NOTHING! Just the signature. Yay, Slashdot; this isn't the first time the ridiculous "rest of this comment" algorithm has been mentioned, and I'll even give the solution: "if (size > limit && limit > size * 1.1) { chop the damned thing } else { show the whole fucking thing }" There should be no instance where zero extra bytes (other than signature) are shown in the "show the rest of the comment" link. In fact, there should be no instance where less than 5 additional lines are shown, and again that's a really easy algorithm to code. Yeah, I like complaining when I'm drunk. Oh, and I think the parent's brother is really cool, knows his shit, thanks for posting. It makes me really sad to report that I am still, for now, an American.

      --
      I feel fantastic, and I'm still alive.
    65. Re:This is good. by Thing+1 · · Score: 1

      Oh, I dunno; polar bears don't fare too well against ranged weapons powered by exploding powder, but gladiators generally only had swords. (Lost pilot FTW!)

      --
      I feel fantastic, and I'm still alive.
    66. Re:This is good. by Thing+1 · · Score: 1

      (3) It requires an immense amount of development on apparently trivial items.

      You just described my current software development shop. Fuck I wish I was kidding.

      --
      I feel fantastic, and I'm still alive.
    67. Re:This is good. by Szechuan+Vanilla · · Score: 1

      Hot Dry Rock geothermal is just as good, cheaper, cleaner, and virtually unlimited. MIT says it's viable, look at http://web.mit.edu/newsoffice/2007/geothermal.html.

      Online faster (simpler to build, simpler to get permits for), too.

      And no nuclear waste, obviating the need for to pro-nuclear people to keep trying convince us that radioactive waste is no problem (while saying "Don't put it in my backyard, please").

      --
      This space intentionally left blank.
    68. Re:This is good. by Szechuan+Vanilla · · Score: 1

      nuclear isn't evil, but the stupid way we've done it in the US certainly was.

      --
      This space intentionally left blank.
    69. Re:This is good. by Thing+1 · · Score: 1

      Human society ended in 1987, when the machines rounded us up and put us in here.

      LOL the Apple //e's rounded us up? Or the IBM PCjr's?

      --
      I feel fantastic, and I'm still alive.
    70. Re:This is good. by aliquis · · Score: 1

      Nuclear energy is probably the best chance we have are breaking our addiction to oil.

      Yes, that doesn't mean it's the best alternative though.

      Nuclear energy is also relatively clean.

      Compared to coal...

    71. Re:This is good. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But we'd be even more overtly hypocritical when we don't allow civilian use of nuclear power in the 3rd world due to 'security' concerns.

    72. Re:This is good. by aliquis · · Score: 1

      Personally I've always wondered if geothermal is such a good idea. What happen long term if it's used on a large scale?

    73. Re:This is good. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And there wouldn't be any need for nationalistic parties within Europe.

    74. Re:This is good. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Although gbutler69's remarks were tagged as flamebait, he is fundamentally correct.

      Nuclear power plants do generate about 20% of the electricity in the US, which does bring into question rudy_wayne's facts and conclusions.

      Second, the Obama administration's $8 Billion loan guarantee is just a guarantee for a specific project, not a loan. That is, the US government pays nothing unless the owner, Southern Co. defaults on the loan.

    75. Re:This is good. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You know, we could build new containers and move the waste into it every few decades. We're talking about a few cubic meters of waste per plant, maximum.

      Also, nuclear power generates about 20% of the electricity in the US.

      You're just wrong.

    76. Re:This is good. by murpup · · Score: 1

      Not sure why people continue to believe that building a boat load of new nuke plants is going to break our addiction to oil. Newsflash - oil is predominantly used to produce gasoline, not generate electricity. To break our addiction to oil, we first need electric frickin' vehicles. That problem needs to be solved first. Now granted, all those electric vehicles are probably going to require new power capacity (although not as much as one might think if most vehicles are charged overnight - which is when many baseload plants decrease power level), and nuclear can fill that bill nicely, but there is no direct correlation such that "more nuke plants = less oil dependency", which is what was implied.

    77. Re:This is good. by sycodon · · Score: 2, Funny

      The EnviroWackos would never allow that. Think of the Turtles!

      --
      When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
    78. Re:This is good. by sycodon · · Score: 1

      I suggest that we take all the people who whine and bitch and moan about nuclear power and chain them to stationary bikes hooked to generators.

      --
      When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
    79. Re:This is good. by sycodon · · Score: 1

      the stupid way we've done it

      Thank the envirowackos for that.

      --
      When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
    80. Re:This is good. by lennier · · Score: 1

      What does "integral" mean? It means that the fuel is recycled on-site. The fuel in the IFR is in metallic, rather than ceramic form. It is simply re-smelted periodically (not the whole load, just a few rods' worth), and the slag is the only waste. The balance of the fuel plus a tiny bit of uranium or thorium in its natural state, is recast into pellets and returned to the reactor.

      Let me get this straight. You're saying that in the IFR design, in the process of normal operation, globs of fissionable fuel are regularly melted down and recast?

      And during this process, there's absolutely no chance of a criticality incident occurring?

      --
      You are not a brain: http://books.google.com/books?id=2oV61CeDx-YC
    81. Re:This is good. by Falconhell · · Score: 1

      Slashdot, where the truth about libertarianism
      is an instant down mod.

      What is it that makes otherwise sensible people think Henlein's books could be applied in real life?

    82. Re:This is good. by confused+one · · Score: 1

      I live near something like a dozen nuclear reactors. And I live on the coast. Two happen to be commercial power reactors (Surry, Va). A bunch of them happen to be small reactors... in aircraft carriers and submarines (Norfolk Naval Base). Oh, and Newport News Shipbuilding, where they build, refuel and test nuclear powered ships, is like 4 to 5 miles up the road from where I'm sitting now. I'm fine with it.

    83. Re:This is good. by confused+one · · Score: 1

      That's all fine and good unless you live on the east coast. We can build out solar and wind power but the energy requirements, due to the population density, are going to require some other type of power plant; and, nuclear fits that bill well.

    84. Re:This is good. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "farsical disscuion"

      Apparently not only does Timmy become less powerful when starting at -1, he also loses his ability to write coherently.

    85. Re:This is good. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We have already learned from Mr Rickover's efforts. The same way SpaceShipOne leveraged the X-15 data and accomplished the same mission for 1/20th the cost and 1/4 the development time.

    86. Re:This is good. by Verteiron · · Score: 2, Funny

      Of course that is a very morbid thing to consider, and is sufficiently horrible, not to mention suicidal, that we'd never actually do it...

      Don't underestimate the perversity of our species. There are people right now, on this earth, at this very moment, who would answer the question "Should all human life on this planet be destroyed?" with a resounding "YES!".

      To paraphrase Terry Pratchett... if you put a button deep in a cave somewhere and put up a painted sign next to it saying "End of world button, do not touch!" the paint wouldn't even have time to dry.

      --
      End of lesson. You may press the button.
    87. Re:This is good. by zx-15 · · Score: 3, Informative

      Actually, it's even easier, add cobalt to several nukes on site, blow them up on site and let winds and currents take care of the rest. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cobalt_bomb

    88. Re:This is good. by Falconhell · · Score: 1

      The problem of NIMBY will NEVER go away.

      3 mile Island and Chernobyl will not be forgoten in a hurry. The only people I have come across that support Nuclear are Nuclear scientists, and deluded Slashdot posters, indulging in wishfull
      thinking.

      Personally I don't want one in my backyard, and no ammount of claims of safety (Which were made about the reactors involved in the mentioned events)are going to convince people that the risk is acceptable.

      Learn to live with it and try and come up with a solution that has a chance of happening instead of
      impossible dreams.

    89. Re:This is good. by uncqual · · Score: 1

      Whoosh?

      (Okay, so my humor is sometimes a bit dry.)

      (Yep, I'm very much old enough to vote!)

      --
      Why is there an "insightful" mod and why isn't it "-1"? If I wanted insight, I wouldn't be reading /.
    90. Re:This is good. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      lolWUT?

      there's a reason to make big power plants, and that's for efficiency, and since you don't seem to know thermodynamics, get the fuck out.

      seriously. i'm sick of idiots coming to slashdot and wasting space. wasn't that long ago that this was a community of engineers.

    91. Re:This is good. by LifesABeach · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      There are some persistent issues with Radio active waste that no one has brought up. Lets ask the residents of Chernobyl what they think?

    92. Re:This is good. by doctorpangloss · · Score: 0

      "Our own socieconomic models are designed for the military industrial complex to provide a reason for its existence."

      Japan has one of the lowest military expenditures as a percentage of GDP in the world [1], yet is the third largest nuclear power user in the world [2]. Granted, most energy is imported as fuel. But your argument that the military industrial complex demands centralized power is flawed: industrialization in general demands centralization.

      Who's going to build the "natural gas turbines, solar power, gas, oil, solar and wind and geothermal, nuclear and space [sic]" plants? I suppose those parts will be built in factories. Where will those factories get power? Well, it would be most cost effective, due to economies of scale, to build one large power plant to power the factories. And now you've ended up with a single, large power plant in order to build your hypothetical small ones.

      Costs of transmission versus costs of production and fixed capital costs favor centralized power. Indeed, as Freeman Dyson will tell you, cheap, centralized power enables Western prosperity.

      Decentralized energy production is what humanity had for most of its history, and relative to today humanity was for most of its history utterly destitute. Cheap energy means less poverty. That's why we love oil; that's why the Chinese burn so much coal; that is what makes us so advanced today.

      Thus, though you're concerned with socioeconomic problems, I consider "14 families [controlling] all of the worlds energy supplies" (a gross exaggeration) a small price to pay for bringing billions of people out of poverty.

      [1] https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/rankorder/2034rank.html?countryName=Japan&countryCode=ja&regionCode=eas&rank=149#ja
      [2] http://www.world-nuclear.org/info/inf79.html, more at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nuclear_power_in_Japan

    93. Re:This is good. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Even if they wouldn't put the waste in a breeder reactor that doesn't mean it has to be buried in the ground, it could still be used as fuel in Radioisotope Thermoelectric Generators. There is no such thing as nuclear waste, there is only nuclear fuel people choose to waste.

    94. Re:This is good. by DerekLyons · · Score: 1

      It's pretty much the nature of doing anything serious. Even out in my wood shop often it's the smallest things that require the most thought and work.

    95. Re:This is good. by doctorpangloss · · Score: 0

      "... because power companies aren't willing to invest large sums of money. Because regulations make it hard for them to _acquire_ large amounts of money (limits on how much profit utilities can take in.) We can't build breeder reactors because, for an extremely short period of time, they produce enriched uranium. Without breeder reactors, we can't take care of the waste problem because it lasts freakin' forever (without breeder reactors) and nobody wants it stored or transported anywhere within a thousand miles of them."

      The primary obstacle of course is the 9 or so states that ban new nuclear power plants. After bans are lifted, the problem becomes economic, not regulatory. Power plants have enormous initial capital costs (relatively speaking, fuel costs nothing). The greatest financial risk to a nuclear power plant is not meltdown but spending money on construction only to have the municipality nearby shut the plant down later. Local politics presents the biggest risk to nuclear power today [1]. Thus, insurance against political risks is expensive (on the order of 20% of the capital costs, or about $1 billion to insure $5 billion in expenses).

      The best policy to promote nuclear power plant generation, according to pragmatists and regulators, is to give nuclear power plant construction federally-backed insurance on the cheap.

      This is partly why TFA talks about financing as a beneficiary of smaller scale, since by having overall smaller capital costs insurance costs go down.

      [1] The best example is the history of nuclear power in Germany, where locals would speak frankly and at length about their irrational, unfounded fears of nuclear power.

    96. Re:This is good. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      You're saying that in the IFR design, in the process of normal operation, globs of fissionable fuel are regularly melted down and recast?

      And during this process, there's absolutely no chance of a criticality incident occurring?

      What, who said smelting had to be done in giant vats? Control the size of the glob (pellet) being smelted, and no, there really is no chance of a criticality incident.

      Fireworks manufacturers do this sort of calculation (albeit with chemical reactions, not nuclear) all the time, but the underlying principle is the same: if you want to ensure that the building remains intact even in a worst-case scenario, you work with no more than $XYZ grams of $MATERIAL in the building at a time.

      To get back to the point, if you can get a 10-gram pellet of anything to go critical using nothing more than a crucible and a heat source, contact the DOE (before the DOE contacts you! :) It may not be cheap to smelt in 10 g increments, but if you're getting $1000 worth of electricity out of every such pellet, it may still be more profitable to set up the required production line than to buy the energy-equivalent amount of coal.

    97. Re:This is good. by mcrbids · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      So many statements, so little truth!

      1) Nuclear energy, as it's been sold so far, is ANYTHING but clean. 98% of the "fuel" that goes into a classic-style nuclear plant comes back out as highly toxic nuclear waste that isn't fit to live next to for 100,000 years. It can be reprocessed, but that comes with its own suite of problems.

      2) There isn't an infinite amount of Uranium, either. Many would argue that we're already past "peak Uranium" so it's out of the pan and into the fire...

      3) You can't just stick power plants wherever you like. High capacity transmission lines are *expensive* - it's usually much cheaper to stick your power plants closer to supply. Closer to supply means people are nearby, and people still freak out when they find out a Nuke plant might open up 10 miles away...

      4) Why would we put nuke plants in the desert when they are so ripe for solar power? Solar power has now become cheap enough to compete with traditional power sources dollar for dollar in many areas, and the price is continuing to drop as new techologies continue to push the envelope Solar Energy does very well in sunny areas where the solar energy available closely matches the peak demand for Air Conditioning.

      Nuke *can* be done right. But the (mostly legal/political) hurdles to do so are tall, and the benefits of a successful nuclear program are less compelling every year.

      --
      I have no problem with your religion until you decide it's reason to deprive others of the truth.
    98. Re:This is good. by Hazelfield · · Score: 2, Funny

      Haven't you seen the way most humans are remote controlled via small pocket devices and white cords jacked into their ears?

    99. Re:This is good. by Chris+Burke · · Score: 1

      Contrary to popular belief, most of the targets were military, rather than civilian - cities were a low priority, missile silos were a high priority, for reasons that should be obvious.

      Yes most targets were pure military like missile silos, but "most" has a different meaning when you're talking about this number of missiles. At the height of the cold war, we had so many individual ICBMs pointed at each other that you could hit all the bases, all the large cities, and then start working your way down the list.

      My home city of ~30k had an ICBM designated solely to wiping it off the map. A whole ICBM! Okay it was almost certainly nothing fancy, just one of the smaller fission weapons the Russians had so many of. They had so many that just the fact that my city had large automotive factories and was at the midpoint of the interstate leg linking two major cities -- cities that would have already been destroyed by much fancier thermonuclear devices -- made it enough of a military target to spare a missile.

      I agree though that with most of the targets being in the northern hemisphere (and only a few countries at that), this wouldn't have spelled the extinction of the human race. That's why the everyone-dies laugh-fest that is On the Beach featured a war with China who used (still unrealistically) dirty cobalt bombs. Or you could probably do it on purpose.

      --

      The enemies of Democracy are
    100. Re:This is good. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not in the long term.

    101. Re:This is good. by Ascylon · · Score: 1

      No, simply no. While even further decentralization of energy production sounds like an interesting pipe dream, it is not practical. Centralized power generation is far more efficient and cost-effective. You're also glossing over the fact that industry requires a whole lot more power than homes so at least that part requires centralized power generation.

      The only reasons you provide for why centralized power generation "is not going to work" is distrust of government, Big Everything(corporations) and fear of terrorism(although you do classify it as a boogieman). While in principle I agree that concentration of wealth to the extent that has happened so far is not a good thing for society, going for even worse "solutions" just so that the bad status quo can be avoided is stupid. Distrust and fear of A does not validate B as a viable alternative.

      Perhaps in the bright, distant future when everyone lives in prosperity, new technology is discovered for the joy of discovery and betterment of mankind instead of profit and money will not be the most important thing in the world, will technology be advanced enough to make decentralized power production a reality. Until then centralized is the way to go, and in any case nothing prevents your household from becoming self-sufficient in terms of energy if you really want to(and have the money). I'd rather stick with cheap nuke power.

    102. Re:This is good. by Vectormatic · · Score: 1

      That is really rather interesting, did the russians release all ICBM targetting info post-soviet-era?

      I'd be very curious what type of ICBM/warhead(s, yours probably wasnt MIRVed) was designated to wipe out my town.

      Do you have any specifics? is there a list somewhere? (curious about western europe)

      --
      People, what a bunch of bastards
    103. Re:This is good. by TheTurtlesMoves · · Score: 1

      2000-5000 years worth of Uranium (with reprocessing but not including ocean extraction) should be long enough to get DD fusion working. DD fusion should last more than several billion years with our ocean supply.

      Of course by then perhaps renewables are cheaper....

      --
      The Grey Goo disaster happened 3 billion years ago. This rock is covered in self replicating machines!
    104. Re:This is good. by TheTurtlesMoves · · Score: 1

      That same tech also makes living underground feasible (not that we would need to). Also even at the height of the cold war.. Big Eurptions still have more power than all the nukes put together. people seem to forget that nukes are big, but this rock we live on is *huge*.

      All out nuclear war will be "life as we know it" changing (bye bye cites and about 99% of modern infrastructure). But not Human extinguishing.

      Also, historically speaking we suck at killing each other. More people are killed falling down stairs in the US than from shootings. More people died of the Spanish flu than died in WWI. If you look at the population of earth over time, its hard to even see the blips that are the wars.

      But hay, just about every generation that has ever lived seems to believe we are on the brink. Its a popular thing to believe, regardless of the historical, or scientific facts.

      --
      The Grey Goo disaster happened 3 billion years ago. This rock is covered in self replicating machines!
    105. Re:This is good. by TheTurtlesMoves · · Score: 1

      We worse than cockroaches.

      --
      The Grey Goo disaster happened 3 billion years ago. This rock is covered in self replicating machines!
    106. Re:This is good. by DerekLyons · · Score: 0

      So what you have is a reactor that produces its own fuel

      No it doesn't. You put fuel in at the start, and unless you put in more it eventually burns it all up (even if you remove the poisons) and stops working. (If it produced it's own fuel, it would be a perpetual motion machine.)
       

      In fifty years, a 1 GW IFR type reactor would produce about a cubic yard of waste.

      A cubic yard of metal - and several boxcars worth of other wastes.
       
      Your brother has bought into the hype, but fails to understand the difference between hype and actual working nuclear technology.

    107. Re:This is good. by TheTurtlesMoves · · Score: 1

      ...and it would be cheap, it would be clean, and it would be safe.

      You can't back that up with data. Why, because the data says pick 2.

      Right now we are 40 years behind on reactor design. It would take several *expensive* pilot plants to prove that the idea works (I like molten salt reactors, with a Th or U fuel cycle and a unity breading ratio and in situ reprocessing).

      Materials for fission reactors are expensive to developed and difficult to predict creep and corrosion performance because of the low neutron absorption cross section needed (restricting material choice) and radiation environment. Corrosion reactions can be quite different in a reactor compared to not in a reactor.

      Once a pilot plant has been run for a while we can then produce cheaper plants. In that a proven design (so it worked well for 20+years) can then be built without having to revalidate the design. However the bulk of the cost for nuclear is still the containment building. That cost will not go away and does push the economics towards larger reactors.

      As for the over time and budget mud that is often flung around, thats the case with any big project such as hydro, coal, gas and even renewables.

      --
      The Grey Goo disaster happened 3 billion years ago. This rock is covered in self replicating machines!
    108. Re:This is good. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You fail to understand the difference between a perpetual motion machine and a machine which can continue to function for a *finite* period of time by utilising a by-product of its initial fuel stock as a secondary fuel source.

    109. Re:This is good. by imakemusic · · Score: 1

      Mavis Beacon Teaches Typing says you're confusing your and you're.

      --
      Brain surgery - it's not rocket science!
    110. Re:This is good. by master_p · · Score: 1

      Thinking small also is interesting. For example, if a tiny fan can produce 0.001 Watts of electricity from air, then you need 1000 fans for 1 W, 1K fans for 1 KW, 1M fans for 1 MW. 1 million small fans can cover a field of 100 x 100 m, assuming a grid of 1000 x 1000 fans and each fan covering 10 cm). A large place like a desert can have many millions of small fans. For example, an area of 100 x 100 km can have 100 million fans, producing 100 MW of power (optimally)!

    111. Re:This is good. by Nadaka · · Score: 1

      That is all fine and good. Nothing at all wrong with a balanced approach.

      Just because I am pro solar does not mean that I am not also pro nuclear.

    112. Re:This is good. by HungryHobo · · Score: 1

      thermodynamic break even point??

      let me guess, you think they're talking about getting uranium from seawater by boiling off the water?

      if uranium ever costs $150 per pound you think greedy investors won't spend that 130 dollars per pound for the 20 dollars profit?
      the point is that it puts a practical cap on the potential price of uranium for the next few thousand years.

    113. Re:This is good. by HungryHobo · · Score: 1

      Even if you did that the land would still be usable, eating the food off it for the first few decades would probably mean you'd die of cancer by age 40 and the infant mortality rate would be positively medieval but people would still survive.

      no, you'd need more than just nukes to do it.
      a war using large quantities of chemical and biological plus an even spread of nuclear weapons might manage it(or close).
      add in some drone warfare(think a few generations beyond our current drone tech, drones which hunt targets independently) to hunt down the stragglers to be sure.

    114. Re:This is good. by wisdom_brewing · · Score: 1

      I don't know why the government doesn't just fund the development of a bunch of nuclear power plants and put them on the coast or on the ocean somewhere.

      Hippies.

    115. Re:This is good. by Beyond_GoodandEvil · · Score: 1

      Slashdot, where the truth about libertarianism
      is an instant down mod.

      What is it that makes otherwise sensible people think Henlein's books could be applied in real life?

      Dude, you may want to jump in your time machine and go back to the late 90's. Nowadays, this is Kosdot, where any mention of libertarianism is met with one of two replies, a snarky mentioning of Somalia or some sort of Mad Max parallel. It is strange to see all the people who hate MS and Apple fucking them in the ass, somehow believe that the govt technocrats fucking them in the ass is better.

      --
      I laughed at the weak who considered themselves good because they lacked claws.
    116. Re:This is good. by nukenerd · · Score: 2, Insightful

      How do you "hit arable land"? Fold it up and poke it into a black hole? Don't think that you couldn't grow and eat crops around Chernobyl. We are talking about survival, not healthy eating.

      I remember reading a comment in memoirs of a British WWI soldier. He said the rats in the trenches survived everything the Germans could throw at them, even poison gas. Come to think of it, most of the soldiers survived too.

      Killing people is hard.

    117. Re:This is good. by MightyDrunken · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I'm not defending the GP's post but to describe nuclear power as cheap, at least historically, is not true.

      The reason France's electricity is so cheap is because the government sets the price and has subsidised the cost. Recently EDF have been investigated for price fixing because of this.

      The real reason why no nuclear power plants have been constructed for decades in many countries is mostly because gas and coal were cheaper. The fact that some considered it to be unsafe was a secondary issue. Now that gas prices are rising and there is growing concern about the environmental effects of coal, nuclear power starts looking competitive again.

    118. Re:This is good. by hidave · · Score: 1

      Super summary!

      --
      Synchronizing stop lights across the US = one less nuclear power plant
    119. Re:This is good. by GooberToo · · Score: 2, Informative

      Except, given the *current stock* of nuclear fuels, we have enough to power the world for at least the next couple thousand years. That's not to say we currently have the reactors to burn that fuel; nonetheless the fuel supply is plentiful.

      Its one thing to say "peak uranium", its quite another thing to say, "peak nuclear fuel". The first may or may not be true. Many suspect its not. The later is most definitely is not true.

    120. Re:This is good. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Let's see, in the past decade it's killed, what, 3 people (the 3 Japanese workers in a reprocessing plant that got stupid"

      That's the problem with nuclear... some always gets stupid, it's just a matter of time.

    121. Re:This is good. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, but Rickover had ulterior motives in that he wanted nuclear material to be used for weapons, so he pushed for uranium based reactors that produced waste where others were arguing for approaches based on materials like thorium salts.

    122. Re:This is good. by cheesybagel · · Score: 1

      Coal is cheaper than nuclear when you have coal deposits nearby. Coal fuel is very low density compared to uranium fuel, so if you are very far away from the extraction point transport costs start to dominate. You also need your coal power plant to be located near a railroad, a canal, or the ocean, so you can more cheaply transport the large amounts of coal required. Uranium fuel is so compact you could carry it in a regular truck every couple of years.

      The US, China, India, Australia, for example, have rather large coal reserves. While France, Japan, South Korea do not. Hence the emphasis on coal vs nuclear in these countries.

      Gas is not cheaper than nuclear, or coal, anywhere in the long term. Gas was used in the 90s because it was mostly being wasted at the time (e.g. flared gas in oil wells to prevent pipeline explosions) and hence readily available. However the density is terrible, and the pipelines are expensive compared to oil pipelines. Gas power plants were used to replace the oil burning peaking power plants of the 1970s nearly everywhere to reduce dependency on foreign petroleum imports. Gas power plants have basically two advantages: since they can spool up quickly you can use them as peaking power plants to cover up consumption peaks and stabilize the grid (useful if you have a lot of intermittent generation capacity), the initial starting capital and construction time are low compared to a larger coal or nuclear power plant.

      Nothing in that news report indicates to me that EDF is pricing their product below their costs. What it did say was that EDF is considered to be applying undue transit fees, from power plant to consumer, for new competing electricity generators in France (EDF owns the grid and the existing nuclear generators).

      To me EDF is a national treasure of France. The day they privatize it fully France's industry will start to collapse. The private energy generation enterprises are only interested in short term profits, so they prefer to build gas power plants and windmills, since they are cheap to erect and have lower initial capital costs, regardless of the final energy price to the consumer (or regardless of the source of the imported gas). This will likely be followed by disinvestment in the power grid and brownouts similar to other highly deregulated markets like California.

    123. Re:This is good. by GooberToo · · Score: 1

      No it doesn't. You put fuel in at the start, and unless you put in more it eventually burns it all up (even if you remove the poisons) and stops working. (If it produced it's own fuel, it would be a perpetual motion machine.)

      No one other than you made such a claim. It does make its own fuel. That's not the same as claiming it does so perpetually.

    124. Re:This is good. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have a great picture of a bear ripping through a SUV looking for food that was left in there. You don't want to bet against a hungry bear.

    125. Re:This is good. by GooberToo · · Score: 1

      You can't back that up with data. Why, because the data says pick 2.

      Actually, the data says an over abundance of regulation and irrational fear is what causes drastically increased costs on nuclear power. Its also the largest reason why the government must contribute so many funds to nuclear plants. You can have all three so long as needless over regulation and fear mongering is removed from the equation. I doubt that is a realistic expectation but that's hardly the technology's fault.

    126. Re:This is good. by GooberToo · · Score: 1

      That's what was worried about in 1968 and the misguided attempt to get around it was plutonium fast breeders. Since then reactor designs that are less fussy about fuel have been developed in places that actually do R&D.

      The problem with this line of thought is that it ignores the fact that 95%-98% of all "used uranium" can in fact, be used again. Thus we have hundreds, if not thousands of years of uranium fuel (based on types of reactor fuel is in used in) just sitting and decaying. Its only because of bonehead politicians, and then primarily only in the US, that this fuel is not reprocessed and reused. Many countries in Europe do reprocess their fuel and as such, don't have huge stock piles of viable fuel waiting to be wasted and disposed.

      Just imagine pouring billions of gallons of oil into huge tanks, claiming the oil is useless because it has sulfur in it. In reality, it add extra processing steps (filter) to make the oil safely usable. People would riot for the heads of these people if we didn't. Yet, that's exactly what we do with much of the world's nuclear fuel.

    127. Re:This is good. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm so confused; I thought the recycling ban (which all US execs since then have rubber-stamped) started some time around Ford or Carter. You make it sound like the government has only been anti-nuclear for a decade or so, but I know it has been longer than that.

      Seriously, I'm probably wrong about some detail. But damn I'm sure that it was the 1970s when the government got all screwy about modern reactors.

    128. Re:This is good. by wisdom_brewing · · Score: 2, Informative

      The only people I have come across that support Nuclear are Nuclear scientists, and deluded Slashdot posters, indulging in wishfull thinking.

      And the French. Don'f forget the French. - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nuclear_power_in_France

      Or the Japanese... - http://www.world-nuclear.org/info/inf79.html

      Or the British even... - http://www.guardian.co.uk/global/2009/apr/15/nuclearpower-edf

      How about the rest of europe... - http://news.bbc.co.uk/nol/ukfs_news/hi/newsid_4710000/newsid_4713300/4713398.stm

    129. Re:This is good. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're in a desert, walking along in the sand when all of a sudden you look down... and see a tortoise, sycodon.
      It's crawling toward you... You reach down and you flip the tortoise over on its back.
      The tortoise lays on its back, its belly baking in the hot sun, beating its legs trying to turn itself over, but it can't. Not without your help. But you're not helping.
      Why is that, sycodon ?

    130. Re:This is good. by SleazyRidr · · Score: 1

      I'd just like to mention that in 1900, we had access to thousands of years of oil.

    131. Re:This is good. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Also consider the huge amount of energy you need to invest in mining for Uranium (you usually burn lots of fuel for powering the machines), the amount of nature you have to destroy because of the mining operations.
      And where do you safely store the nuclear waste for the next 100,000 years (approx 4 half lifes, meaning that still 6% Plutonium is active)? Face it: all in all fision reactors are a dirty business which is not as energy efficient as some lobbyists want us to believe.

    132. Re:This is good. by sycodon · · Score: 1

      ooookayyyy.

      You got that italics tag down pretty good. Now you just have to work on writing something intelligible.

      --
      When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
    133. Re:This is good. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They're just questions, sycodon. In answer to your query, they're written down for me. It's a test, designed to provoke an emotional response... Shall we continue?

    134. Re:This is good. by sycodon · · Score: 1

      See my previous response.

      --
      When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
    135. Re:This is good. by careysub · · Score: 1

      Actually, the data says an over abundance of regulation and irrational fear is what causes drastically increased costs on nuclear power...

      Umm, no, the data does not say that to me.

      First off - note that nuclear power advocates (which includes me) are quick to point out the admirable safety record of nuclear power plants, and how even a worst-case disaster like TMI had negligible practical consequences (beyond destroying an expensive reactor and incurring a complex and costly clean-up effort).

      The safety of these plants and the capital cost of construction are not unrelated - it sounds like you are up for stripping out lots of costly safety measures (like the containment dome that kept TMI safely bottled up despite hydrogen gas explosions in the building). If you do this, then the plants aren't nearly as safe as they were.

      Nuclear power advocates can't have it both ways. Appropriate safety standards cost money. New designs can trim this, but not at the cost of getting rid of that 'irrational' safety stuff.

      Second, reactor cost data do not back you up at all. Nuclear power plants have been built all over the world, with many different regulatory environments and cost structures. In a "nuclear-power friendly" but high-cost nation like France the capital cost of a new reactor (the EPR) is $3860/kW, MORE than the $3382/kW projected cost for the Gen III+, or the $2970/kW EPRI in the (presumably) "nuclear hostile" USA. See: http://www.world-nuclear.org/info/inf02.html .

      You have to go to Asia (China) to get nuke capital costs below $2000/kw.

      But the kicker here is that the capital cost of a gas-fired power plant is only $635-1747/kW. This is the real reason nuclear power plants seem so difficult to get built. They are INHERENTLY much more expensive to build than the competition, and for a variety of reasons (the drive for short-term financial performance among them) utilities are reluctant to take a big hit up front, which will take them much longer to turn a profit.

      --
      Starships were meant to fly, Hands up and touch the sky - Nicky Minaj
    136. Re:This is good. by DerekLyons · · Score: 1

      That no one else noticed the incorrect statement is meaningless.

    137. Re:This is good. by Surt · · Score: 1

      It might or might not end humanity. It would almost certainly end our civilization, rendering irrelevant questions of peak oil. Whether or not humanity ends depends on whether you expect that all of the digging equipment and technology and expertise to build an underground city and grow all of our food supply there will survive a nuclear war. Given our current state of unpreparedness, I would be surprised. But you never know.

      And the danger of nukes to humanity primarily comes not from direct damage, but from two of the side effects: residual radiation and particulate matter in the atmosphere. The end comes down to whether or not our technology drops below the level where we can combat and survive the negative effects on our environment.

      --
      "Who is the Journal of Quantum Physics going to believe?" --Stephen Hawking
    138. Re:This is good. by MachineShedFred · · Score: 1

      Peak Uranium... Oh Noes!

      Seriously, stop with the FUD already. The reason why no one is doing Uranium exploration right now is because we have massive amounts available in the reserves we know about. There's no reason to look for more.

      Combine those reserves with the almost-billion metric tons of depleted U238 that the US alone has (which can be bred into fuel), and you're talking about a problem that won't actually be a problem for thousands of years.

      --
      Slashdot still doesnâ(TM)t support Unicode after it was added to the HTML standard in 1997.
    139. Re:This is good. by delt0r · · Score: 1

      Perhaps in the bright, distant future when everyone lives in prosperity...

      If you told someone a 100 years ago about about the life style of the average western person today, they would say we live in that future right now.

      --
      If information wants to be free, why does my internet connection cost so much?
    140. Re:This is good. by delt0r · · Score: 1

      The physics of power generation is against you. Quite simply its cheaper--a lot cheaper to have a minimum size generation plant which is well into the MW range, around 100MW or more IIRC. Its the reason power generation is centralized. Its cheaper. It really is that simple.

      --
      If information wants to be free, why does my internet connection cost so much?
    141. Re:This is good. by MrNiceguy_KS · · Score: 1

      Solar plants in the desert aren't as perfect as you might think. Solar thermal needs a lot of really good mirrors, and blowing sand would have them scratched to unusability in days. Not to mention sand's tendency to become statically charged and stick to everything.

      --
      Redundancy is good And also good.
    142. Re:This is good. by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      Wow, flamebait eh? This folks, is the kind of government the RonPaultards would deliver you.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    143. Re:This is good. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...get DD fusion working...

      I prefer very large breasts to remain separate, thank you very much.

    144. Re:This is good. by Muad'Dave · · Score: 1

      If it takes more energy to obtain the uranium than the uranium contains, you're not part of the solution (no uranium-in-seawater pun intended).

      --
      Tiller's Rule: Never use a word in written form that you've only heard and never read. You will end up looking foolish.
    145. Re:This is good. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem is not the technology, it's not the resources, it's the regulations and the industry

      I'm sure the reason France is doing so well with nuclear is because they don't regulate it. You know how much they hate government involvment in that country.

    146. Re:This is good. by WinPimp2K · · Score: 1

      Back in th e90's Japan developed a process to extract uranium from seawater at a cost of around $90 a pound. The market price for uranium at that time was around $40-$50 a pound.

      Fuel costs are a minor component of the total cost per kwh from a nuke plant.

      Even if uranium from seawater costs twice as much as uranium from a hole in the ground, it could still be used without requiring either massive subsidies or massive rate hikes as happens if a coal or gas fired plant finds its fuel costs doubled.

      --

      You either believe in rational thought or you don't
    147. Re:This is good. by DrFalkyn · · Score: 1

      Rickover made those comments in 1953. I think a bit has changed since then.

    148. Re:This is good. by Muad'Dave · · Score: 1

      Just so you know, this was originally published here, and very recently re-published here without proper attribution.

      --
      Tiller's Rule: Never use a word in written form that you've only heard and never read. You will end up looking foolish.
    149. Re:This is good. by GooberToo · · Score: 1

      Umm, no, the data does not say that to me.

      Based on your reply, where you focus solely on "safety", you ignore the fact that regulations go well beyond simple safety concerns. Or do so in the name of safety but accomplish no such thing. The regulations address many, many factors which make it all but impossible to build new reactors on new sites. Furthermore, if and when a new site is finally qualified, the expense of doing so adds to considerable costs, often in interest alone, affecting potential return on investments. There are also insurance factors which can not be ignored and which are also driven by regulations. So on and so on.

      While your post can't be ignored, I don't see that it addresses the areas to which I originally referred. Most of the problems with the regulations to which I refer are not technology or basic construction constraints. Rather, they are social and political constraints which often serve no purpose other than to attempt to make nuclear non-cost competitive, difficult to fund and/or insure, or impossible to build in "my" backyard. Like I said, not really issues with the technology.

      Don't get me wrong, I have no desire to counter the safe construction of safe reactors.

    150. Re:This is good. by HungryHobo · · Score: 1

      Whatever makes you think it takes more energy than the uranium contains?
      It'd have to take a startling amount of energy to reach that point.

      And the method people are generally referring to in such cases does not involve boiling any seawater or big pumps.
      You use a mesh of specially treated polyethylene fiber which binds to uranium.
      It's is hung bellow a platform in seawater.
      The mesh is reusable and after sitting in the water for quite some time it's lifted out and uranium and a few other metals are extracted from it.

    151. Re:This is good. by Urza9814 · · Score: 1

      Right now we are 40 years behind on reactor design. It would take several *expensive* pilot plants to prove that the idea works (I like molten salt reactors, with a Th or U fuel cycle and a unity breading ratio and in situ reprocessing).

      True, but those 40 year old reactors are still working fine. While we will eventually need to improve reactor design, the old designs would work for the immediate future at least. We've got a couple decades to get those sorted out. Not that we shouldn't start trying immediately, but I think improved efficiency would make improved designs worth researching anyway.

      Once a pilot plant has been run for a while we can then produce cheaper plants. In that a proven design (so it worked well for 20+years) can then be built without having to revalidate the design. However the bulk of the cost for nuclear is still the containment building. That cost will not go away and does push the economics towards larger reactors.

      Yes, the economics push it to larger reactors. Which is fine. Large reactors have a lot of advantages. And sure, the reactor is expensive, but the fuel is relatively cheap. When you add it all up, unless you live somewhere where coal is extremely cheap, the cost per watt over the entire life of the reactor is lower for nuclear than pretty much any other kind of power generation. That's what I mean when I say cheap. High initial cost, but once it's running the power is cheap enough to offset that.

    152. Re:This is good. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fourth, and maybe most telling of all, is the Obama administration's recently proposal of $8 Billion in loan guarantees for the nuclear power industry. Translation -- nuclear power is such a bad investment that nobody wants to give them any money.

      Perhaps nuclear power is such a bad investment because a bunch of NIMBY/BANANA/Watermelon* activists use legal action to increase the regulatory costs of building new plants. At the end of the day, however, a loan guarantee doesn't cost anything unless/until the debtor actually defaults.

      *I'm not going to bother to define NIMBY, but "BANANA" is Build Absolutely Nothing Anywhere Near Anything and "Watermelon" is
      someone who hides their socialist agenda by showing ecological concerns.

    153. Re:This is good. by Mike+Van+Pelt · · Score: 1

      Not just that, but making a blanket assumption that he knows with complete accuracy everything there is to know about someone's political ideology based on a nine-word signature quote.

      Going from there to the conviction that the very well-reasoned posting must be entirely false just because of his irrational reaction to one of Robert Heinlein's snarkier quotes is just the icing on the turd cake.

      I have a large quotes file that I rotate through on Usenet, though I don't use them on Slashdot. There are various reasons that each of the quotes tickled my fancy enough to include them in my quotes file. Complete agreement with every possible implication that anyone might possibly construe onto the quotes was never one of those reasons.

    154. Re:This is good. by Sarius64 · · Score: 1

      So much bullshit. There's plenty of oil. The problem is that oil pollutes. I've heard jerks tell how they know so much about supplies only to have new supplies found monthly for at least a couple of decades.

      Those efficient plants are nuclear fission plants. Good luck on that distributed wind farms shit. You and Jane Fonda should have lunch.

    155. Re:This is good. by Beezlebub33 · · Score: 1

      Sycodon, get thee to google, and search for what the AC wrote. It's well known in geek circles. And his response to your response as well. And, it's pretty damn funny.

      --
      The more people I meet, the better I like my dog.
    156. Re:This is good. by Jedi+Alec · · Score: 1

      What is it that makes otherwise sensible people think Henlein's books could be applied in real life?

      Oh, I don't know, the form of government used in Starship Troopers actually makes *some* sense, I'd be curious how it would turn out in reality(the equivalent of an old boys' club I expect).

      Having read "The moon is a harsh mistress" only earlier this week and seeing otherwise intelligent people actually pointing at it as an example of libertarianism makes me want to punch my head into a concrete wall however...

      --

      People replying to my sig annoy me. That's why I change it all the time.
    157. Re:This is good. by sycodon · · Score: 1

      Hmmm.

      That's one circle of geeks I'm glad not to participate in I guess.

      --
      When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
    158. Re:This is good. by JackCroww · · Score: 1

      Was it that long ago that I posted that to Volokh? Wow, time flies. I could have sworn it was just a month or so ago. I didn't post it to bitsandbrews though.

      --
      "Ayn Rand is a bloody socialist compared to me." - Robert A. Heinlein
    159. Re:This is good. by RsG · · Score: 1

      We're not talking about irradiating the arable land with dirty bombs here. We're talking about glassing it. Chernobyl didn't accomplish that.

      --
      Erotic is when you use a feather. Exotic is when you use the whole chicken.
    160. Re:This is good. by gyrogeerloose · · Score: 1

      Your rebuttal is an ad hominem attack?

      It wasn't a rebuttal, it was a comment on your sig line.

      As for Libertarianism, do you have a better suggestion? At this point, almost anything has to be better than the two parties currently spending our children into oblivion

      You want my view of Libertarianism? Check thisout.

      --
      This ain't rocket surgery.
    161. Re:This is good. by Chowderbags · · Score: 1

      Hell, peak uranium is unlikely unless we dramatically increase our use of it. Humans are mining just over 50,000 tons of uranium a year globally. There's 5.5 million tons that are economical to mine, and another 35 million tons classed as "mineral resources", and yes, there's quite a bit in sea water (4.6 billion tons, though there's no good way to get it out right now). It's also nice that many of the reserves are in friendly countries. Australia has a quarter of the world's known reserves and Canada has plenty too.

    162. Re:This is good. by Beezlebub33 · · Score: 1
      You're glad to be ignorant of one of the top movies ever made (#111 in IMDB's top 250)? You're glad to be ignorant of a movie exploring what it means to be human, and hence an important question in technology (and also starring Harrison Ford and Rutger Hauer, and a then-hot Daryl Hannah?)

      You're glad that you can't be bothered to spend 30 seconds to figure out an odd quote, but can be bothered to respond multiple times to others regarding the quote? Part of the strength of /. is the diversity of people, interests, and opinions even though most of us are nerds, and that you dismiss an important part of nerdom offhand like that is really sad. You clearly live in a small, closed world, and it makes me wonder what on earth you are doing here.

      --
      The more people I meet, the better I like my dog.
    163. Re:This is good. by FirstOne · · Score: 1

      "First off - note that nuclear power advocates (which includes me) are quick to point out the admirable safety record of nuclear power plants, and how even a worst-case disaster like TMI had negligible practical consequences (beyond destroying an expensive reactor and incurring a complex and costly clean-up effort)."

      There were significant releases of radioactive materials from TMI-2, both during and after the incident.

      Still born rates in the cities downstream/downwind of TMI-2 almost tripled for a period several years afterwords before returning to normal (at least ~500 extra young deaths).

      Overall at least 20,000 people died early deaths from the TMI incident.

      Note: It's usually the brand new reactors that melt down or explode.

      TMI-2 had started operations just 4 months prior to it's meldown.

      Chernobyl unit 4, (500,000+ early deaths and counting) just two years of operation before meltdown & explosion. (B.T.W. Which was the second meltdown @ Chernobyl site, unit-1 had a partial melt down incident a few years earlier.)

      Fermi-1.. read the book.. "The day we almost lost Detroit". ~3 years of operation before partial meltdown.

      Six days after Chernobyl unit-4 blew up, a second reactor (a so called safe PBR) in West Germany had an incident and released highly radioactive core material into the local environment. Plant authorities tried to hide the facts from the public using the Chernobyl incident as cover. But scientists from a local university blew the cover story after it analyzed the isotopic composition of the local fallout.

    164. Re:This is good. by sycodon · · Score: 1

      I'm sure there are many small world here on Slashdot that you too wouldn't want to be a part off.

      I shudder to think.

      --
      When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
    165. Re:This is good. by Urban+Garlic · · Score: 1

      > Clean coal cannot exist. What are you going to do with all the waste? What will you do with the CO2?

      The thing is, there's a lot of coal, and we already know how to use it for energy. You're right that it's a poor choice, maybe even the poorest, but it is by far the most viable non-oil-based energy source out there. All of the alternatives -- *all* of them -- require kick-starting by some non-economic actor (government, philanthropists, whoever) to get them over the infrastructural hump and to the point where they provide enough ROI for those fabled market forces to begin working. And non-economic actors are always accountable to donors, who will hang up the process in political score-making to favor their constituencies. This isn't necessarily bad, their constituencies are often important and/or vulnerable, and probably deserve protection. But while it's not necessarily bad, it is necessarily slow.

      Meanwhile, the oil is running out.

      When the oil runs out, and the alternatives are not yet economical, the Second Coal Age will begin, because there is a lot of coal, and we know how to use it.

      --
      2*3*3*3*3*11*251
    166. Re:This is good. by sycodon · · Score: 1

      BTW, I did look it up.

      --
      When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
    167. Re:This is good. by DerekLyons · · Score: 1

      You'd think wrongly then. Because while he was referring specifically to reactors, those comments apply to all large engineering projects - then and now.

    168. Re:This is good. by TheTurtlesMoves · · Score: 1

      There were significant releases of radioactive materials from TMI-2, both during and after the incident.

      Citation required. Having read the reports, your making stuff up. The rest of your reply is the same.

      --
      The Grey Goo disaster happened 3 billion years ago. This rock is covered in self replicating machines!
    169. Re:This is good. by FirstOne · · Score: 1

      Pretty much all the gas or liquids that vented from TMI unit-2 were dumped into either the local atmosphere and/or river. None or very little of it was trucked away for safe disposal. http://www.dailykos.com/storyonly/2009/4/3/716139/-Startling-revelations-on-Three-Mile-Islandnuclear-power "Startling revelations on Three Mile Island & nuclear power"

    170. Re:This is good. by GooberToo · · Score: 1

      The link provided in your second post of this threat is very interesting thanks.

      Just keep in mind, anyone who posts about Chernobyl instantly loses a lot of credibility because of its surrounding facts. It is in now way a valid argument for an anti-nuclear stance. It is, however, an excellent argument that stupid people should not be allowed to run nuclear plants and re-enforces that oversight by rational people, outside of normal plant operations, is required. Most (all?) Western countries have such oversight. Most (all) European countries with nuke plants have such over sight.

      Mentioning Chernobyl is like argument the world should not have pointed objects because small children may run with them. So for future sake, if you want to be viewed with credibility, don't mention Chernobyl.

    171. Re:This is good. by rbrander · · Score: 1

      Dude, did you READ your own link? It clearly says that EDF is on the EU carpet because they were charging artificially HIGH prices for electricity to downstream providers, in an anti-competitive effort to RAISE the competitor prices.

      When I looked into EDF prices, the one I came across was the recent agreement to sell Italy power in bulk for $50/MWh - 5 per kWh.

      Are you seriously suggesting that after 30 years of nukes, the French government is using French taxpayer euros to subsidize Italian power companies, all to hide how expensive the power actually still is? That's just hard to believe.

    172. Re:This is good. by Muad'Dave · · Score: 1

      If it takes more energy to obtain the uranium than the uranium contains, you're not part of the solution ...

      I didn't say it did, I said if it did it wouldn't be worth the trouble.

      --
      Tiller's Rule: Never use a word in written form that you've only heard and never read. You will end up looking foolish.
    173. Re:This is good. by gyrogeerloose · · Score: 1

      And here's a somewhat more reasoned critique of Libertarianism:

      [...] libertarianism is basically the Marxism of the Right. If Marxism is the delusion that one can run society purely on altruism and collectivism, then libertarianism is the mirror-image delusion that one can run it purely on selfishness and individualism. Society in fact requires both individualism and collectivism, both selfishness and altruism, to function. Like Marxism, libertarianism offers the fraudulent intellectual security of a complete a priori account of the political good without the effort of empirical investigation. Like Marxism, it aspires, overtly or covertly, to reduce social life to economics. And like Marxism, it has its historical myths and a genius for making its followers feel like an elect unbound by the moral rules of their society.

      You can read the rest of the article here.

      I don't agree with much else the author has to say but the paragraph above does a pretty good job of conveying my opinion of Libertarians and their movement.

      --
      This ain't rocket surgery.
    174. Re:This is good. by TheTurtlesMoves · · Score: 1

      A real citation. Not a BS media OMG all cancer in the area is TMI fault. I read the engineering reports. Here is a more creditable source: http://www.iaea.org/Publications/Magazines/Bulletin/Bull472/htmls/tmi.html. The follow up medical studies that are done half properly (ie not by green peace) don't show anything out of the ordinary. You should also note that the high altitude cities get more radiation that folks next to TMI.

      Heres another hint on how easily it would be to prove "100 times worse than reported" exposer rates. Get a geiger counter. Oh... its only reading normal background levels.......... Which is why these media pieces don't do that.

      --
      The Grey Goo disaster happened 3 billion years ago. This rock is covered in self replicating machines!
    175. Re:This is good. by gyrogeerloose · · Score: 1

      The problem is you just didn't get my point. I wasn't actually rebutting his post, which was actually well-reasoned (and, I might add, not in fact completely his own), I was poking fun at his sig line which is somewhat inflammatory. It's okay, though, he didn't get it either, but if you're going to use a sig line such as his in a public forum, you better prepared to take some shit for it.

      By the way, "big fucking moron," that's quite the erudite reply. I commend you, sir, for your deftness with the English language.

      --
      This ain't rocket surgery.
    176. Re:This is good. by Chris+Burke · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately I'm mentally referencing a newspaper article from a couple years after the end of the Cold War, so I don't recall much in the way of details. It was part of a good will effort on both our parts to reveal some of the previously classified info. Obviously not all info was released, like I doubt they said which of our ICBM silos they had identified and targeted. I was googling earlier and found a map on WP showing "major" targets of Russian ICBMs so I know there was really information released and I'm not recalling a bad acid trip or anything but now I can't even find that. :P

      --

      The enemies of Democracy are
    177. Re:This is good. by vertinox · · Score: 1

      Nuclear energy is probably the best chance we have are breaking our addiction to oil. Nuclear energy is also relatively clean. I don't know why the government doesn't just fund the development of a bunch of nuclear power plants and put them on the coast or on the ocean somewhere.

      I have nothing against nuclear energy, but the key issue is that it is quite a centralized method of providing energy and still requires a company to sell the energy.

      In France this is fine because they have their government quite under the thumb of regulation and expectation of energy prices, but in the US it would not work so well due to the fact the energy companies (as deregulation has shown) usually does not pass the savings to the consumer.

      Not that I should complain too much because I have stocks of a few energy companies in the US, but for an ideal solution for the US way of things you need decentralization.

      That's why, given the choice, I'd prefer everyone own their own solar panels on the rooftop and bypass the power companies all together first.

      Unless they legalize the private owning of reactors in your back yard... Which I'd be all for.

      --
      "I am the king of the Romans, and am superior to rules of grammar!"
      -Sigismund, Holy Roman Emperor (1368-1437)
    178. Re:This is good. by DRAGONWEEZEL · · Score: 1

      Goatse... Carrier Terminated

      --
      How much is your data worth? Back it up now.
    179. Re:This is good. by vertinox · · Score: 1

      there's a reason to make big power plants, and that's for efficiency, and since you don't seem to know thermodynamics, get the fuck out.

      If we were aiming for economic and or technological efficiency, we would be better under Fascism or National Socialism.

      The point he was trying to make is that, American power companies aren't known for their ability to pass the savings along to the consumer. After all, after deregulation, many consumer's power bill went up even if they consumed the same or less before with new power plants also being opened.

      If this were say... France... Where they have good regulation of corporate oversight, then nuclear power is great (which they do have).

      In the US... Not so much. I mean after all. These are public companies that own the power plants. They are to make a profit first and fix the energy problem second.

      Sure it would be great if we had a perfect world with everyone doing good for the sake of humanity with one gigantic commune powerplant where everyone gets their energy according to their needs, but I'd feel much better if the system was decentralized with microgeneration.

      Because people aren't nice by default sometimes.

      --
      "I am the king of the Romans, and am superior to rules of grammar!"
      -Sigismund, Holy Roman Emperor (1368-1437)
    180. Re:This is good. by FirstOne · · Score: 1

      You call a cite from IAEA (promotes nucler power, non-peer reviewed) a properly vetted source.... NOT!!!

    181. Re:This is good. by c6gunner · · Score: 1

      You just said the exact same thing that he did, except you left out the bits which explain why a "practical" reactor is all of those things. And you quoted a guy called hymen. So you lose :)

    182. Re:This is good. by Lucractius · · Score: 1

      It's likely more difficult than you would think to develop an appreciable layer of molten slag sufficient to render a region of arable land useless.

      From a cursory check, it would seem that the amount of energy the ground absorbs when heating to sufficient temperature that it can vitrify, results in an area significantly smaller than the overall blast radius, where this layer would be deep enough to require more than a shovel to get at soil beneath.

      Unfortunately its hard to confirm this with either evidence or math, as the interplay of fluid molten silica, sand/soil, and the blast wave, is rather complex, and most of the evidence/study on this effect would be covered under the veil of nuclear secrecy. still draped over most of the results of the nuclear weapons testing program. Not to mention how few of the tests detonated the weapons at ground level as would be necessary for maximizing the area of vitrification.

      --
      XML - A clever joke would be here if /. didn't mangle tag brackets.
    183. Re:This is good. by confused+one · · Score: 1

      Excellent. Then we're in agreement!

    184. Re:This is good. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nuclear plants typically need a decently sized water source so the desert might not be the best place.

    185. Re:This is good. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sounds good, but just how is that ever going to happen. There might be a few enlightened individuals who realize the benefits of owning their own power source and also have the means to provide it, but that's not 99.9% of people.

      You can't just legislate that from now on everyone has to come up with their own power sources.

    186. Re:This is good. by TheTurtlesMoves · · Score: 1

      Way to ignore the rest of the comments. Whats wrong with a plan old measurement. If the claims in your citation (not a peer review source) are even half true, it would be trivial to show it. But no one does because -- there is no measurement that backs up OMG 100x more radiation BS, because there nothing to measure (or so close to it) at all --less that background levels.

      And where is the cite for the "caused 500 deaths?" from a peer reviewed. Basically you are making stuff up or quoting reports that do.

      And by the way, IAEA reports are peer reviewed. Its the only way to keep all the countries that are part of it happy.

      --
      The Grey Goo disaster happened 3 billion years ago. This rock is covered in self replicating machines!
    187. Re:This is good. by FirstOne · · Score: 1

      I suggest you do some research on the subject of radiation exposure and it's effects.
      What types of radiation was monitored at TMI and why was it flawed?

      Fortunately the metrics of health verses radiation exposure have changed significantly over the decades to reflect something closer to reality.

      http://www8.nationalacademies.org/onpinews/newsitem.aspx?RecordID=11340
      "Low Levels of Ionizing Radiation May Cause Harm"

      I.E. Were no longer looking for a few specific forms of cancer. Besides cancer, still births, birth defects, organ impairments (heart, lungs, kidney, liver, etc)... The list goes on and on..

    188. Re:This is good. by plcurechax · · Score: 1

      An academic reactor or reactor plant almost always has the following basic characteristics: (1) It is simple. (2) It is small. (3) It is cheap. (4) It is light. (5) It can be built very quickly. (6) It is very flexible in purpose. (7) Very little development will be required. It will use off-the-shelf components. (8) The reactor is in the study phase. It is not being built now.

      Too bad the Americans didn't invent the SLOWPOKE, which while small, has never had a recorded incident as far as I am aware of, in its 40+ year history.

      Damn Canadians. Luckily the Canadian Prime Minister and his political party has made efforts to halt Canadian nuclear efforts (all of which was and is non-weapons related) in an effort to preserve the importance of the Alberta tar sands. (the PC name is "oil sands").

    189. Re:This is good. by Sabriel · · Score: 1

      How do you "hit arable land"? Fold it up and poke it into a black hole? Don't think that you couldn't grow and eat crops around Chernobyl. We are talking about survival, not healthy eating.

      How? Instead of concentrating your nuclear arsenal on military targets and big cities where much of the spherical blast is wasted, you disperse them widely across the farmlands and forests of the world, in patterns and with yields designed to maximise rather than minimise the collateral damage and fallout our modern military normally tries so hard to avoid, so that you raze and contaminate as much of the biosphere as possible. If your projections indicate you can also light up a major volcanic ring by triggering fault lines, or even better a super-volcano (google "yellowstone caldera"), go for it. The goal is that by the time the radiation decays to survivable levels, the ecology will be so shot to hell there won't be a food chain worth speaking of, at least not for us.

      I remember reading a comment in memoirs of a British WWI soldier. He said the rats in the trenches survived everything the Germans could throw at them, even poison gas. Come to think of it, most of the soldiers survived too.

      "Most" is... technically true. Rough figures: of the sixty million soldiers mobilised in WW1, eight million were killed and twenty million were wounded (seven million of those maimed for life). So a military casualty rate of almost half. Also eight million civilians died. (source: http://www.worldwar1.com/sfnum.htm). This also isn't counting the twenty to forty million people who died from the 1918 flu pandemic, arguably made far worse by the ravages of the war to economies and infrastructures.

      As for the rats - they flourished because they had a lot of food... "Rats were a constant companion in the trenches in their millions they were everywhere, gorging themselves on human remains" -- http://hubpages.com/hub/World_War_1_Trench_Warfare

      But if the WWI trench battles had been fought with today's biological, chemical, thermobaric, and nuclear weapons, with nothing held back, I think you'd have a hard time finding anything alive in those trenches bigger than lichen.

      Killing people is hard.

      Killing people is horribly easy, and getting easier still. Killing everyone is hard only because we're not really trying to do that. Chernobyl was a meltdown, not a premeditated attempt at genocide.

      Uh... sorry for the depressing commentary. The good news: we're still alive, and it looks like nuclear power might finally see some decent progress for the benefit of us all.

    190. Re:This is good. by DerekLyons · · Score: 1

      Too bad the Americans didn't invent the SLOWPOKE, which while small, has never had a recorded incident as far as I am aware of, in its 40+ year history.

      Which sounds impressive - so long as you are innocent of any actual knowledge of nuclear energy in general and reactors in particular. (Which I'm not.)
       
      SLOWPOKE isn't a power reactor, and thus is utterly irrelevant to the type of reactors the GP was discussing. Nor is it's safety record particularly notable, as it's typical of pool reactor safety history.
       
      Now, it is true that the basic design can be roughly adapted to a very low power power reactor... The output is so small it's irrelevant to the reactors being discussed in this article.

    191. Re:This is good. by TheTurtlesMoves · · Score: 1

      Guess what I did for a job for some years. Nice piece of PR "needs more study give us cash" garbage reporting there too (by the PR guys no less). Notice the wording "may cause"- they say that so they don't get into trouble for BS. Do you even know what a peer review study is? You do know that still births, birth defects, organ blar blar blar are rare and happen *without* TMI. In fact there is *zero* data to support that the rates are higher than normal ie very very low.

      Undetectable levels of radiation don't have an effect over what you are exposed to *right now* from space. High altitude villages and cities have background radiation levels 2-3 times higher than sea level background, yet no increase in *anything*.

      --
      The Grey Goo disaster happened 3 billion years ago. This rock is covered in self replicating machines!
    192. Re:This is good. by LifesABeach · · Score: 1

      Radio Active Waste should be ignored? Cute.

  4. The Navy? by CohibaVancouver · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I would assume the nuclear plants found on submarines and large warships both provide a lot of energy and are not in the category of 'extra large.'

    1. Re:The Navy? by Chris+Burke · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I would assume the nuclear plants found on submarines and large warships both provide a lot of energy and are not in the category of 'extra large.'

      Nor are they in the category of "economical", which is what was meant by "the prevailing wisdom is that nuclear plants must be very large in order to be competitive." Economically competitive, you see. Something the Navy cares about far less than, well, basically every other factor that goes into the design of a naval nuclear power plant.

      --

      The enemies of Democracy are
    2. Re:The Navy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If they are not economical, why does the Navy use them(in the case of carriers) over gas turbines?

    3. Re:The Navy? by Monkeedude1212 · · Score: 1

      I've always wondered, I mean I have a vague idea of how nuclear plants work - do subs and warships use the ocean as their water source for the reactor? Is that why it's essentially so small? Does this mean a nuclear sub dumps heavy water into the ocean? (even though its only a drop in the bathtub, so to speak)

    4. Re:The Navy? by Tubal-Cain · · Score: 1

      Pick up almost any book about nuclear energy and you will find that the prevailing wisdom is that nuclear plants must be very large in order to be competitive.

      They probably mean competitive with other nuclear plants. Commercially. The Navy's doesn't need to make a profit, and its nuclear plants are competing with diesel engines.

    5. Re:The Navy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      To minimize sound possibly?

    6. Re:The Navy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The Navy's plants are "not economical" for a pretty big reason. They have to be able to withstand a shock loads (aka bombs exploding) and resulting impact of the water hammer that hits it, and not fail. Of the US Naval vessels that have sunk, I don't believe any of them have leaked contamination into the seas. They also now make plants that last for 30 years with out being refueled. Oh yea, they're also freakin WARSHIPS, maybe that contributes to the cost as well.

    7. Re:The Navy? by aquila.solo · · Score: 2, Informative

      I think perhaps the GP meant "commercially" competitive. The Navy's reactors are certainly economical for the criteria they have: quiet, high power density, infrequent refueling, no oxygen requirement, reliable, etc.

      Cost still factors in to the equation, but it would seem that gas turbines aren't cheap enough to offset the other benefits nuclear provides.

    8. Re:The Navy? by Buelldozer · · Score: 2, Informative

      Naval reactors are completely contained, they don't dump anything.

    9. Re:The Navy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If they are not economical, why does the Navy use them(in the case of carriers) over gas turbines?

      Unit of energy per unit of fuel.

    10. Re:The Navy? by Tubal-Cain · · Score: 2, Informative

      It doesn't have to be an efficient nuclear plant to beat other forms of propulsion. And the nuke plants can run far longer without refueling.

    11. Re:The Navy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Not implausible. It's often reported that the Hawaiian island of Kauai was plugged into a nuclear sub after a hurricane knocked out the local power. It never happened, but considered until power was restored.

      The Army had a program for about two decades to supply power to remote locations and even powered the Panama Canal Zone.

    12. Re:The Navy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Heavy water exists naturaly in the ocean, it is slighly more likely to find heavy water molecules deeper down since they are slightly heavier than ordinary water.

    13. Re:The Navy? by spun · · Score: 1

      Nuclear reactors do not need to carry extra fuel, and so the endurance of a ship at sea is not limited by the amount of fuel it can carry. Carrying less fuel, the ship can carry more supplies and ammunition.

      --
      - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
    14. Re:The Navy? by TheGreenNuke · · Score: 2, Funny

      Because a huge carrier is so hard to see, I have to listen for it.

    15. Re:The Navy? by CrimsonAvenger · · Score: 2, Informative

      I've always wondered, I mean I have a vague idea of how nuclear plants work - do subs and warships use the ocean as their water source for the reactor? Is that why it's essentially so small?

      No, the primary loop on a Naval reactor does not use seawater.

      Naval reactors are so small because the uranium they use is more highly enriched than the uranium in civilian plants.

      --

      "I do not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"
    16. Re:The Navy? by BlackSnake112 · · Score: 1

      If anything they dump hotter sea water. They may take in sea water to act as cooling and dump that out. That is about it. The Navy does not want any radioactive material leaking.

    17. Re:The Navy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Energy density. You don't need to refuel a nuclear submarine many times, if ever, for the useful lifespan of the sub.

    18. Re:The Navy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Naval reactors use enriched uranium, as opposed to typical power reactors which use refined natural uranium. It isn't weapon grade, but it is very far from natural uranium and requires hellishly expensive processing.

      Naval reactors are about propulsion for the most expensive and important weapons platforms our species has ever created. Cost, efficiency and proliferation issues are all further down the list of priorities.

      No one will be manufacturing mini-reactors that rely on enriched uranium outside of military applications.

      This response is really tangent to your point. Naval reactors are, as is this case with this story, frequently overlooked by the media.

    19. Re:The Navy? by RsG · · Score: 4, Informative

      To minimize sound possibly?

      Not even a little. Nuke plants are noisy. This actually poses a problem aboard nuclear subs. Of course a carrier isn't stealthy to begin with, especially not if deployed in a battle group, so the reactor noise isn't relevant.

      The GP asked why the navy would use a nuke if a gas turbine would do the job. Fuel is the biggest answer, as a nuclear reactor needs refueling infrequently, and removing the need for large fuel tanks leaves more room for other stuff - in the case of a carrier, the "other stuff" would include aviation fuel and munitions, two things needed in quantity. In the case of a sub, the reactor is desirable in that it lets you stay submerged more or less indefinitely, since you can electrolyze water for oxygen.

      Other than those two situations (carriers and subs), naval nuclear reactors are uncommon for exactly the reason given at the beginning of the thread: cost.

      --
      Erotic is when you use a feather. Exotic is when you use the whole chicken.
    20. Re:The Navy? by masterwit · · Score: 1
      • A ship that weighs 88,000 tons and draws the same electricity requirements as a small city.
      • Oil cannot be used as this would require the carrier be dependent on refuel to cross the Atlantic twice.
      • They are the most efficient form of power at that scale when applied to propulsion of that scale. (with minimum speed requirements!)

      Basically I know the lack of efficiency is not the issue - rather it is the fact that nothing else will suffice. Chris Burke nailed it when he stated:

      Something the Navy cares about far less than, well, basically every other factor that goes into the design of a naval nuclear power plant.

      Plus with the newer prototypes being considered, the need for power on these things could double, we'll see.

      --
      We should start a new Slashdot and return control to the geeks. It actually wouldn't be that hard to get some users to
    21. Re:The Navy? by spazdor · · Score: 1

      Nothing else packs even close to the same fuel density (think joules per kilogram).

      I'm sure the lack of need for an oxygen supply for combustion doesn't hurt either.

      --
      DRM: Terminator crops for your mind!
    22. Re:The Navy? by spazdor · · Score: 1

      (er, I missed the 'carriers' bit. I imagine it's only subs which have any oxygen concerns.)

      --
      DRM: Terminator crops for your mind!
    23. Re:The Navy? by codemaster2b · · Score: 1

      Gas Turbines, and Diesel-Electrics both require oxygen and fuel. As for fuel, a nuclear sub needs to be refueled less often. More importantly, it doesn't breathe air. That means it can run deeper and longer than any other design (pending storing your own oxygen).

      --
      And over there we have the labyrinth guards. One always lies, one always tells the truth, and one stabs people who ask t
    24. Re:The Navy? by spazdor · · Score: 1

      since you can electrolyze water for oxygen

      Is doing this likely to compromise stealth in any way? I can't imagine there are that many natural phenomena with elemental hydrogen bubbling up from the sea floor..

      --
      DRM: Terminator crops for your mind!
    25. Re:The Navy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      do subs and warships use the ocean as their water source for the reactor?

      No. Reactor "water" in nuclear engineering is a carefully controlled substance. Sea water would require a lot of refining for use in the primary loop of a reactor. Seawater is used to provide a heat sink (cooling) for the secondary loop and never approaches the reactor core.

      Does this mean a nuclear sub dumps heavy water into the ocean?

      No one intentionally dumps heavy water anywhere. Heavy water is precious and expensive.

    26. Re:The Navy? by Chris+Burke · · Score: 1

      I think perhaps the GP meant "commercially" competitive. The Navy's reactors are certainly economical for the criteria they have: quiet, high power density, infrequent refueling, no oxygen requirement, reliable, etc.

      They are not economical. They are simply the only thing that can provide all the capabilities that a naval nuclear reactor provides. When you have something that is incredibly expensive but with unique capabilities, you use it in spite of it being uneconomical.

      The Saturn V was not an economical rocket at all. But it was the only thing that could launch the Apollo mission, so they used the uneconomical rocket.

      The SR-71 was a stupidly expensive airplane both to build and to run (the fucker leaked jet fuel literally like a sieve until it got up to speed), but nothing else could fly high and fast enough to avoid Russian SAMs, so they used it.

      Cost still factors in to the equation, but it would seem that gas turbines aren't cheap enough to offset the other benefits nuclear provides.

      Nobody cares about cost when it comes to building aircraft carriers or attack/ballistic missile subs. The endeavor is inherently expensive and uneconomical. Gas turbines could cost negative one billion dollars and the Ohio-class submarine would still be sporting its expensive nuclear reactor.

      Long and short of it is: Nuclear power plants are a fantastic choice for certain Naval operations. They are not, nor are they intended to be, economical.

      --

      The enemies of Democracy are
    27. Re:The Navy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So that carriers can deploy and stay deployed. The need to refuel every few days would require them to stay within a reasonable distance of a friendly and secure port with adequate infrastructure to refuel a carrier. Or the need to shuttle fuel to the carrier via another fleet of support ships. So it basically comes down to nuclear power allowing a carrier to operate uninterrupted and focused on its mission.

    28. Re:The Navy? by h4rr4r · · Score: 0

      The SR-71 did not even use regular jetfuel much less leak it. They did however leak a very small amount of what they ended up calling jp7, but not like a sieve at all. Satellites avoided SAMs just fine, this just provided oversite on an on demand basis.

    29. Re:The Navy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's not entirely true. They do need to be refueled "every so often," depending on how hard it's been running (i.e. how fast it's been burning through the fuel). However, they do last MUCH longer than diesel boats, obviously, and there are no requirements to snorkel while charging batteries, etc etc.

    30. Re:The Navy? by RsG · · Score: 4, Informative

      Sure, if you had some way of searching the ocean for faint traces of hydrogen bubbles, and if said bubbles co-operated by not reacting with anything in the meantime. So far as I know we've never developed anything like that. Now, to put on my paranoid hat for a second, "so far as I know" could just mean that attempts to do this were classified, though I think the easier explanation is that nobody has bothered.

      I don't want to say it isn't possible, because that's the sort of sentiment that invites the universe to prove me wrong, but lets just say it's a needle in a haystack sort of problem. You'd be looking for faint chemical trace over a vast area, with the trace in question being chemically reactive enough to virtually guarantee it won't linger. At a minimum, your solution would need to be used over a narrow search region.

      Now, look at the problem from the opposite direction. Stealth under water is relative. A submarine, however well designed, however well commanded, can be found using existing methods, provided you know roughly where to look for it. Think of how many shipwrecks have been found by searching the general area they sunk, often decades or more after the fact. Now, factor in that those wrecks are on the ocean floor, meaning it's harder to spot them on active sonar than a sub, that the wrecks are utterly silent instead of just mostly silent, and that many of those wrecks were found using non-military hardware (meaning a few boats with active sonar pinging the ocean floor, instead of a fleet of warships and air-dropped sonar buoys).

      The key concept here is knowing where to look. If all you know is that a sub is somewhere in the Atlantic, then you aren't going to have much luck finding it. If you know where to look, you don't need anything like a hypothetical hydrogen searching method when more straightforward options exist.

      --
      Erotic is when you use a feather. Exotic is when you use the whole chicken.
    31. Re:The Navy? by Chris+Burke · · Score: 1

      They did however leak a very small amount of what they ended up calling jp7, but not like a sieve at all.

      It was literally like a sieve in that the fuel leaked out of gaps in the fuel tanks continuously while it was on the ground. Thermal expansion would seal the tanks once the plane was at operating temperature, which is why they were designed that way in the first place, but until that point, it was a sieve.

      Sorry if you took issue with the metaphorically implied quantity of the leaked (variety of) jet fuel, but I did say "literally" and meant it, well, literally. :)

      Satellites avoided SAMs just fine, this just provided oversite on an on demand basis.

      Yes. Satellites could not provide on-demand coverage, thus airplanes. Other airplanes could not reach the speeds and altitudes needed, thus the SR-71.

      Unique capabilities.

      --

      The enemies of Democracy are
    32. Re:The Navy? by Chris+Burke · · Score: 1

      The Navy's plants are "not economical" for a pretty big reason.

      I never meant to imply there weren't good reasons for it. I was implying that the Navy doesn't care if their nuke reactors are economical, and instead cares about all the aspects you mention and more. :)

      --

      The enemies of Democracy are
    33. Re:The Navy? by sjbe · · Score: 1

      If they are not economical, why does the Navy use them(in the case of carriers) over gas turbines?

      The Navy's use of them is not strictly an economic question. Nuclear reactors greatly simplify the logistics of refueling and thus is extremely appealing as a power source for certain types of vessels. Furthermore the Navy does not and never has been economically efficient. They don't have to be. Taxpayer dollars pay for those power plants, not a profit seeking entity. The Navy doesn't have to sell the electricity produced and they don't have to choose the most economically efficient technology.

    34. Re:The Navy? by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

      It did not leak like a sieve. A sieve is a device that would leak continuously as it is a filtering apparatus. These leaks were more about the fuel being so slippery it could get through very small spaces. You are perpetuating an urban myth. The sr-71 did not really have fuel tanks the whole plane was the fuel tank and yes the skin did leak at the edges, but the leaks were not the amounts you seem to be indicating.

    35. Re:The Navy? by RicktheBrick · · Score: 4, Informative

      In 1974, I was a member of the commissioning crew of the USS Virgina (CGN-38). It was nuclear powered. They made several more of that class. When they needed to be refueled they were all decommissioned. So why did the Navy want to pay for the fuel for a conventional powered ship rather than paying the expense of refueling a nuclear powered ship? It is strange since when I retired from the Navy, every ship that I had been a member had already been mothballed even those ships that were built after I had first joined. The only nuclear powered ships today are aircraft carriers and submarines. Submarines are nuclear powered since they do not need oxygen to run. Conventional powered submarines need to surface to run their diesels to recharge their batteries and thus were exposed during that time. Aircraft carriers are large enough to save money over conventional power so unless the Navy goes back to nuclear powered ships, they belief in only big nuclear reactors. It would be nice if the Navy could build a ship with nothing but laser weapons powered by a nuclear reactor.

    36. Re:The Navy? by TheGreenNuke · · Score: 1

      VIRGINIA CLASS Submarines have a life of the ship core. 33 years, no refueling.

    37. Re:The Navy? by Chris+Burke · · Score: 1

      It did not leak like a sieve. A sieve is a device that would leak continuously as it is a filtering apparatus.

      It did leak continuously, until heat caused it to cease to be like a sieve.

      The sr-71 did not really have fuel tanks the whole plane was the fuel tank and yes the skin did leak at the edges

      Yes the skin and (other structural components) acted as the fuel tank and was heated by friction. They're still called fuel tanks just like JP7 is still called jet fuel.

      You are perpetuating an urban myth.

      As is every museum, documentary, books written by former pilots and maintenance crew...

      but the leaks were not the amounts you seem to be indicating.

      Sure, I see that I suggested leaking fuel contributed to the operational costs, and that's probably not true at all. I've seen pictures that show plenty of fuel leaking out, though obviously a tiny fraction of what's going through the engines. The plane was plenty expensive to operate without needing to throw in that it leaked fuel like a sieve as a factor. But, well, it did. :)

      --

      The enemies of Democracy are
    38. Re:The Navy? by DerekLyons · · Score: 1

      I would assume the nuclear plants found on submarines and large warships both provide a lot of energy and are not in the category of 'extra large.'

      Compared to the average civilian plant? No, they aren't. They come in somewhere in the low-middle end of the range.
       
      Nor are the particularly suitable for civilian usage as they are designed very differently.

    39. Re:The Navy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, and using active sonar would not get you eradicated by a torpedo?

      The sub will know you are using the active sonar with the same level of detection equipment on the double distance you could spot an object - you know waves loose power, so to have the reflected wave bring some useful information back to you it has to carry the distance twice. If the sub can sense the same minimal power level as you and put that as a homing to a torpedo you are dead before you see the sub. That is why subs do not use active sonar.

    40. Re:The Navy? by RsG · · Score: 1

      And if the active sonar user is a surface ship and part of a fleet (as it was in the example I gave) then that sub is also toast. Torpedo launches give away your location too.

      Why did I use a fleet of surface ships in my example? Because the GP was talking about using a chemical sensor to look for a sub, and to do that would require multiple detectors working together to ensure they make a complete sweep of the area. In the case of a surface fleet hunting a sub, a perfectly workable solution is active sonar, rather than an unproven hydrogen sensor, and your objection (that the sub could take out the detector with a torpedo) would only serve the seal the sub's fate.

      (Note: this presumes anti-submarine capability on the part of the surface fleet. Which is kinda a given, if we're talking about a fleet of ships detailed to find enemy submarines.)

      --
      Erotic is when you use a feather. Exotic is when you use the whole chicken.
    41. Re:The Navy? by drgould · · Score: 1

      It is strange since when I retired from the Navy, every ship that I had been a member had already been mothballed even those ships that were built after I had first joined.

      I read somewhere that Admiral Rickover insisted on welding all the reactor containment vessels shut, for safety reasons.

      I always wondered how difficult that make it to refuel the reactors.

    42. Re:The Navy? by confused+one · · Score: 1

      100-200 MW running on highly enriched fuels.

    43. Re:The Navy? by Sir_Sri · · Score: 1

      no matter how hard you try some exhaust from a diesel engine gets into a submarine, and at the end of a deployment, well, everyone smells like diesel exhaust. It's not a good thing.

      Though your view of reactors is US centric. The Soviets/Russians found uses for nuclear reactors in icebreakers and other generally big surface ships.

      The French/UK future carrier is a good lesson in different perceptions of cost/value. Originally the two were going to use basically the same design, then it was the same design, but the french would use nuclear the british not, and then they split the project completely when it actually came to designing something. The british view, as being applies to their new carriers is that nuclear power basically isn't worth the expense, the french disagree, and would rather the initial investment. I have no idea if either party is 'right'.

    44. Re:The Navy? by WindBourne · · Score: 1

      Well, the reasoning is that destroyers and cruisers are allowed to be more exposed to the enemies. That is that they are on the outer peripery in a pack. Personally, I am amazed that we killed all of them. It makes good sense to have some around to lower our reliance on oil, but ....

      --
      I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
    45. Re:The Navy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bear in mind, though, that modern nuclear submarines still carry a diesel on board whose design dates back to the thirties, as well as a huge amount of diesel fuel stored around the reactor and used as shielding. So, the "less fuel" point is less important than you'd think.

    46. Re:The Navy? by marvinglenn · · Score: 1

      I would assume the nuclear plants found on submarines and large warships both provide a lot of energy and are not in the category of 'extra large.'

      Many of them would also be in the category of running a fuel enriched beyond what is allowed in civilian reactors.

      --
      The whores get mad when the sluts give it away for free.
    47. Re:The Navy? by TheTurtlesMoves · · Score: 1

      You don't have to stop for fuel.

      --
      The Grey Goo disaster happened 3 billion years ago. This rock is covered in self replicating machines!
    48. Re:The Navy? by wisdom_brewing · · Score: 1

      I would say it would be economical given that it's the cheapest solution to the global problem... If there was anything that was better for the job for less outlay...

      Saturn WAS/WAS NOT economical for what it was (what can you compare to?), the Space Shuttle was NOT given it's job could be done much cheaper with other means.

      Economical is a relative measure.

    49. Re:The Navy? by Doctor+Faustus · · Score: 1

      Aircraft carriers are large enough to save money over conventional power so unless the Navy goes back to nuclear powered ships, they belief in only big nuclear reactors.

      That may be a factor, but I've read a couple places that the updrafts from the smokestacks on conventionally powered carriers are a landing hazard.

    50. Re:The Navy? by TheGreenNuke · · Score: 1

      USS NAUTILUS, the first nuke powered naval vessel and Rickover's dream, pulled into port in February 1957 to be refueled. The refueling was complete by Mid-April 1957. Source

    51. Re:The Navy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      USS NAUTILUS, the first nuke powered naval vessel and Rickover's dream,...

      Not just his dream, but his wet dream.

      Har har har

    52. Re:The Navy? by drgould · · Score: 1

      USS NAUTILUS, the first nuke powered naval vessel and Rickover's dream, pulled into port in February 1957 to be refueled. The refueling was complete by Mid-April 1957.

      Thanks for that. Of course almost any amount of refueling effort and expense is worth it for submarines and aircraft carriers.

      I was just musing that perhaps the reason RicktheBrick's USS Virginia and other nuclear powered surface vessels (excepting aircraft carriers) were decommissioned because of the effort and expense to refuel a welded reactor vessel.

      How would they do that anyway? Cut open the reactor, refuel and weld it shut again? Or just replace the entire reactor? Either way perhaps it was just not economical for smaller surface vessels.

    53. Re:The Navy? by TheGreenNuke · · Score: 1

      The thought behind the weld was simple. He asked experts if their sons were on board would they rather have a gasket design function 100% guaranteed or have a weld there to back it. The result was both, the belt and suspenders approach. Yes it makes it more difficult. Yes you have to reweld. But like he said, it's our sons, I'd prefer we had some redundancy. As far as surface vessels go, who knows, we may go back to nuke powered destroyers loaded up with electronic weapons.

    54. Re:The Navy? by drgould · · Score: 1

      I read the same anecdote and I have no argument with safety over convenience in reactor design.

      But it's too bad if an unintended side effect is to make smaller nuclear surface vessels, like the aforementioned USS Virginia, cheaper to scrap than to refuel.

  5. put them all over as the power grid is not setup f by Joe+The+Dragon · · Score: 2, Insightful

    put them all over as the power grid is not setup for having a lot of power in one place.

  6. Not just one back yard anymore. by Tubal-Cain · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Brilliant. Instead of needing to get one "back yard", you now need half a dozen.

    Actually, this could work out... smaller plant means smaller yard, right? We could put them in rougher terrain away from people.

    1. Re:Not just one back yard anymore. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, modern IFR reactors can't meltdown, so although you wouldn't want it right next to a major metropolis you shouldn't have to put it in the middle of nowhere either. Of course, the general public, ie: read morons more interested in Starbucks and Dancing with the Stars, probably couldn't pass a college physics class nor have the brain capacity to understand the science behind this. They just hear nuclear and freak out after watching one too many action movies or bad sci-fi movies.

    2. Re:Not just one back yard anymore. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Actually, this could work out... smaller plant means smaller yard, right? We could put them in rougher terrain away from people.

      Personally, I've always thought military bases would be a good place to site small nuclear plants.

    3. Re:Not just one back yard anymore. by SpeZek · · Score: 1

      I'd love to have a nuclear plant in my backyard. It would make transmission costs nil.

  7. What would Amory Lovins say? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    With some eco-aware folks (like Stewart Brand) converting from anti-nuclear to pro-nuclear in the face of global warming, Amory Lovins of the Rocky Mountain Institute has consistently and rationally debunked their pro-nuclear arguments.

    But much of Lovins' anti-nuclear stance is based on the tremendous cost of nuclear vs. renewables. I wonder if these small plants change that equation significantly.

    1. Re:What would Amory Lovins say? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Amory Lovins of the Rocky Mountain Institute has consistently and rationally debunked their pro-nuclear arguments.

      Actually, I read the PDF, and it just lists one person's arguments for nuclear power, then responds "Wrong!" with very little explanation after each checkpoint. Then it ends with-of all things-an appeal to the free market! Like the free market will solve global warming. Incredibly naive.

    2. Re:What would Amory Lovins say? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This [see boldface (mine) below]:

      TOM ASHBROOK: Amory Lovins, you’ve pushed back fairly hard and quite publicly on Stewart Brand’s embrace here of nuclear power. Why?
      AMORY LOVINS: Although Stewart and I share a great sense of urgency about climate change, I think the more urgent you think that problem is, the more important it is to invest judiciously to get the most solution per dollar and the most solution per year. And nuclear flunks both those tests. It gives about two to twenty times less carbon savings per dollar and about twenty to forty times less carbon savings per year than if you brought instead the things that are walloping it in the market, namely micropower and energy efficiency.
      TOM ASHBROOK: What is micropower?
      AMORY LOVINS: Micropower has two parts. One is renewables other than big hydro. So it’s sun, wind, geothermal, small hydro, and so on. And the other part is co-generating electricity and useful heat together in factories or buildings, which saves at least half of the fuel money in carbon.
      TOM ASHBROOK: So your core argument is not the nuclear waste argument, but a cost-effectiveness argument around nuclear?
      AMORY LOVINS: Correct. Nuclear is about the most expensive and slowest thing you can build. And I don’t think it’s true you need to build everything. You can’t afford to build everything. You need to choose the best buys for your goal, just as in assembling a financial portfolio you don’t stuff it full of one of everything on the market. You figure out the diversified set of assets that will best meet your investment objectives. If you buy something really expensive and risky, that actually makes your portfolio perform worse because you didn’t get to buy stuff that would have performed better.
      TOM ASHBROOK: Stewart Brand, what about the argument? You’re arguing a big push in nuclear. Amory Lovins says it’s not the most cost-effective way forward and it really matters what we pull the trigger on here.
      STEWART BRAND: I was surprised that in Amory’s good and thorough response to the chapter [on nuclear energy], which I’m glad to see is out there, and it’s downloadable from Rocky Mountain Institute. One of the things, Amory, you didn’t address in that was [nuclear] microreactors, and I’m delighted you’re talking about micropower because it looks like the new generation of those small reactors down around 100 to 125 megawatts coming from half a dozen manufacturers are right in there. And [they] could do co-generation and local adaptivity and all the things you’d like to see distributed micropower do.
      AMORY LOVINS: It might have been a good idea to look at 50 years ago, but it’s way too late. Actually, I did describe it I wrote a special paper on this called “New Nuclear Reactor, Same Old Story” last spring, because I got really curious about these arguments and dug into them. There are two basic issues, that again are economic, that I get to before the other attributes. I think the Gen 4 reactor types are broadly comparable to today’s reactors in waste production. They might in some respects be safer. They’re generally as proliferative or more proliferative. But their economics are not sufficiently better to make any difference, for two reasons. One is that of course what makes a reactor work is that you have a very concentrated source of heat and also of radioactivity, and the physical devices you need to harness the heat and manage the heat and radioactivity do not scale down very well. It’s just a matter of physical scaling laws. Secondly
      STEWART BRAND: Wait, wait, wait. Isn’t that the case also with solar thermal? They’re using the same thing. They’re using smaller steam turbines.
      AMORY LOVINS: To some degree, it’s true of the steam turbine, except that there you don’t have a concentrate

    3. Re:What would Amory Lovins say? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Lovins addresses each of Brand's 4 pro-nuclear arguments in a bullet-point style appropriate for the op-ed page (works for Slashdot too), and as that document says, "Supporting details are at www.rmi.org/images/PDFs/Energy/2009-09_FourNuclearMyths.pdf.

      Calling Lovins "incredibly naive" isn't the kind of rational argument I was talking about. If you don't know Amory Lovins' work, you might peruse the rest of the RMI website.

      For the record, here are the four pro-nuclear arguments Brand makes, and the responses that Lovins has to each.

      Nonetheless, Stewart rejects all non-nuclear options, for four fallacious reasons:
      Baseload: Wind and photovoltaics can’t keep the lights on because they can’t run 24/7.
      Footprint: Photovoltaics need about 150–175 times, and windfarms from 600+ to nearly
      900 times, more land than nuclear power to produce the same electricity.
      Portfolio: We need every tool for combating climate change, including nuclear power.
      Government role: The climate imperative trumps economics, so governments everywhere
      must and will do what France did—ensure that nuclear power gets built, regardless of
      economics or dissent.
      I believe each claim is unsupportable:
      Baseload. The electricity system doesn’t rely on any plant’s ability to run continuously;
      rather, all plants together supply the grid, and the grid serves all loads. That’s necessary
      because no kind of power plant can run all the time, as Stewart says they must do to meet
      steady loads. I repeat: there is not and has never been a need for any particular plant or
      kind of plant to run all the time, and none can. All power plants fail, varying only in their
      failures’ size, duration, frequency, predictability, and cause. Solar cells’ and windpower’s
      variation with night and weather is no different from the intermittence of coal and nuclear
      plants, except that it affects less capacity at once, more briefly, far more predictably, and
      3
      is no harder and probably easier and cheaper to manage. In short, the ability to serve
      steady loads is a statistical attribute of all plants on the grid, not an operational
      requirement for one plant. Variability (predictable failure) and intermittence (unpredictable
      failure) must be managed by diversifying type and location, forecasting, and
      integrating with other resources. Utilities do this every day, balancing diverse resources
      to meet fluctuating demand and offset outages. Even with a largely (or probably a
      wholly) renewable grid, this is not a significant problem or cost, either in theory or in
      practice—as illustrated by areas that are already 30–40% windpowered.
      Footprint. Stewart understates nuclear power’s land-use by about 43-fold by omitting all
      land used by exclusion zones and the nuclear fuel chain. Conversely, he includes the
      space between wind or solar equipment—unused land commonly used for farming,
      grazing, wildlife, and recreation. That’s like claiming that the area of the lampposts in a
      parking lot is the area of the parking lot, even though 99% of it is used for parking,
      driving, and walking. Properly measured, per kilowatt-hour produced, the land made
      unavailable for other uses is about the same for ground-mounted photovoltaics as for
      nuclear power, sometimes less—or zero for building-mounted PVs sufficient to power
      the world many times over. Land actually used per kWh is up to thousands of times
      smaller for windpower than for nuclear power. If land-use were an important criterion for
      picking energy systems, which it’s generally not, it would thus reverse Stewart’s footprint
      conclusion.
      Portfolio. The one paper he cites as proof that we need all energy op

    4. Re:What would Amory Lovins say? by Dave+Emami · · Score: 2, Interesting

      With some eco-aware folks ...

      As soon as someone uses the term "eco-aware" or a variant of it, that's generally a sign that the associated opinion needs to be taken with a heavy grain of salt. Right from the start, things are framed not as a disagreement between different sides analyzing the facts, but as those who are "aware" and those who are not. Would you talk about a dispute between, say, C programmers and PHP programmers, and describe the former as "compiler-aware"?

      --

      "The Greens lynched a hacker in Chicago. Last month, but I think the body's still hanging from the old Water Tower."
    5. Re:What would Amory Lovins say? by geekoid · · Score: 1

      I just read that, and it's full of rubbish. The counter arguments are wrong. His statement about baseload in no way undercuts Brand's assertions; which are accurate. Yes baseload is about all plants, but wind a Solar can not provide baseload at this time. Wind never will. Ever.

      The area between SOlar panels is not sued for anythign except travelling to the panel to do maintenance.

      The area in between large wind plants is also rarely used. He also ignores noise. That did, the best wind areas are out of the way and often not usable for farming. You would need to run wires over mountain and other rough terrain, but that's an engineering challenge that is quite doable. Volume or usably wind is still an issue. And small windmills take more to make then they will produce over their lifetime.

      His cost analysis is that of a simpleton. Sadly they are far to complex to take part here. Even if he was correct, he isn't, I would say so what? All it means is that either electricity cost will go up 20%, or my taxes will be subsiding it. Both is fine with me,. It is foolish to think the free market needs to have the last word.

      oh wait, RMI's goal is to make it so only corporation dictate energy policy. I wonder if thats what he basis his non scientific reasoning on?

      Lovins is still stuck in 1978, and ignores all nuclear advances since then.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  8. theres still problems by mjwalshe · · Score: 4, Insightful

    as a small nuclear plant still needs almost as much safety, inspection infrastructure not forgetting the larger number of armed guards (the nuke police had guns way before they where that common in the rest of the uk) as a big one.

    1. Re:theres still problems by Amouth · · Score: 2, Insightful

      it all depends on the fuel and the process.

      --
      '...if only "Jumping to a Conclusion" was an event in the Olympics.'
    2. Re:theres still problems by mjwalshe · · Score: 1

      Well true different processes have different failure modes (I worked on some CFR (Fast Breeder) models (in FORTRAN to boot) back in the day ) but your still going to need a lot of infrastructure and support and its more efficient to have one big plant.

      Also the planning permissions would be just as hard for a small plant as a big one.

    3. Re:theres still problems by ATestR · · Score: 3, Informative

      Not so much. Depending on the design, a nuclear reactor can be self regulating.

      As far as producing small nuclear power plant, check out the ones soon to be marketed by Hyperion

      .

      --
      âoeAny society that would give up a little liberty to gain a little security will deserve neither and lose both.
    4. Re:theres still problems by PitaBred · · Score: 1

      If it's an IFR or other sanely designed reactor... why? The fuel in those isn't going to be converted into weapons easily, it should need no more security than a coal or any other electrical plant

    5. Re:theres still problems by DerekLyons · · Score: 1

      As far as producing small nuclear power plant, check out the ones soon to be marketed by Hyperion

      You do know there is a huge difference between producing a plant and marketing an unbuilt and untested plant don't you?

    6. Re:theres still problems by TheTurtlesMoves · · Score: 1

      The containment building/structure is the money killer. So I tend to agree. Unless both containment cost and regulation cost are drastically slashed, I can't see small getting economical.

      --
      The Grey Goo disaster happened 3 billion years ago. This rock is covered in self replicating machines!
    7. Re:theres still problems by Amouth · · Score: 1

      not going to argue with you on that at all - but the question here i think is.. who big does it have to be?

      does it have to be so large that no one wants it near their home? can it be a little more expensive to run but smaller and there for more acceptable and maybe allow more over all capacity to be built?

      personally i believe one of the reasons the support infrastructure for a lot of things is so expensive is that there isn't a lot of demand for it to be cheep. Start creating a demand and the people filling it will figure out how to make it cheaper to make money - when money can be made competition happens and we hope prices drop to fair amounts.

      --
      '...if only "Jumping to a Conclusion" was an event in the Olympics.'
    8. Re:theres still problems by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Hyperion asks, 'What good is a gun that doesn't shoot where you point it?' Get a gun that's as accurate as you are!" - Marcus Kincaid

      Yes, Hyperion certainly needs to market small nuclear power plants as well. Preferably from vending machines.

  9. un-American by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    Isn't it un-American to have something that is the size you need when you could have something that is 100X the size you need?

    1. Re:un-American by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      That only pertains to asses.

    2. Re:un-American by MrEricSir · · Score: 3, Funny

      Yes. That's why in my bathroom you have to climb up a ladder to get to the toilet seat, then hang on for dear life for fear of falling into the swimming-pool sized bowl.

      It also has a bidet function, which isn't wimpy and French; it's got a firehose pump powered by a small nuclear plant.

      --
      There's no -1 for "I don't get it."
    3. Re:un-American by Chris+Burke · · Score: 4, Funny

      It also has a bidet function, which isn't wimpy and French; it's got a firehose pump powered by a small nuclear plant.

      Ya almost had me up to that point, ya cheese-eating pansy!

      --

      The enemies of Democracy are
  10. The NIMBY effect by petes_PoV · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The amount of objections that citizens raise doesn't appear to be related to the size of a nuclear plant. They just seem to object to its very existence. Therefore it makes sense, that once you've got through the planning process, reviews, delays, hostility and protests you may as well be hung for a sheep as a lamb and make the plant as large as practically possible.

    --
    politicians are like babies' nappies: they should both be changed regularly and for the same reasons
    1. Re:The NIMBY effect by demonbug · · Score: 1

      The amount of objections that citizens raise doesn't appear to be related to the size of a nuclear plant. They just seem to object to its very existence. Therefore it makes sense, that once you've got through the planning process, reviews, delays, hostility and protests you may as well be hung for a sheep as a lamb and make the plant as large as practically possible.

      Making a plant as large as practically possible may be the pertinent point here. Large nuke stations create a hell of a lot of power, but also require a hell of a lot of water to cool. One of the primary constraints on siting a nuke plant is providing sufficient water for cooling. In the western U.S. at least, this is a major constraint on where you can site them, as water is often a very limited resource. If it is economically feasible to build smaller plants, with lower water requirements, then all of a sudden there may be a lot more places that you can put them.

    2. Re:The NIMBY effect by cheesybagel · · Score: 1

      The water cooling towers are required for any high performance thermal power plant. Which is like 3/4 of US electricity generation (coal, gas, and nuclear). It's basic thermodynamics baby. The colder the heat sink the better. Even a solar thermal power plant is more efficient if you use cooling towers.

    3. Re:The NIMBY effect by CoolGopher · · Score: 1

      I'd happily swap the public housing high rise next block over for a nuclear plant...

    4. Re:The NIMBY effect by MachineShedFred · · Score: 1

      If it's like most high rise housing projects, the Nuke plant would be safer, cleaner, and more habitable for the community. You wouldn't be able to score drugs as easily though...

      --
      Slashdot still doesnâ(TM)t support Unicode after it was added to the HTML standard in 1997.
  11. Nuclear waste by Zorpheus · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    The big problem with nuclear power is radioactive waste. There is no way to recycle it, and no matter where you put there is always the risk that it will show up in drinking water or somewhere else in the environment in the long run. I guess that all these small reactors will produce a lot more waste.

    1. Re:Nuclear waste by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Nope! Modern reactor tech takes that waste, and re-uses it. Then, THEIR waste is still processable by OTHER reactors, all down the line...and pretty soon, you wind up with stuff that's only about as dangerous as your average mining slag. (You don't want it in your groundwater, but it's not utter devestation).

    2. Re:Nuclear waste by aquila.solo · · Score: 2, Informative

      There is no way to recycle it...

      Here, let me give you a couple citations to look at.

      The only thing preventing us from recycling nuclear waste is government regulations inspired by hippy FUD. If we could get past those artificial roadblocks we'd find ourselves with a much longer timeline to deal with peak uranium (it's still a finite resource, after all) and we wouldn't have to squabble over Yucca Mountain and other potential repositories.

    3. Re:Nuclear waste by Zorpheus · · Score: 1

      The reactors can reuse Uranium and Plutonium, but not the fission products and all the material that becomes radioactive after being exposed to the neutron radiation.

    4. Re:Nuclear waste by Pinky's+Brain · · Score: 1

      Hippies don't want nuclear power period ... the proliferation sensitivities of reactor designs and reprocessing plants they don't care shit about.

      Pure government paranoia, nothing to do with hippies.

    5. Re:Nuclear waste by Nethemas+the+Great · · Score: 4, Informative

      WRONG. The technology to reprocess nuclear fuel has existed for more than half a century and is currently employed the world over. Just not in the U.S. In fact breeder reactors incorporate reprocessing into the design to use a fraction of the fuel and produce a fraction of the waste of those reactor types permitted in the U.S.

      The problem with nuclear waste is one of politics, not of technology. Following on the heels of Gerald Ford's ban of commercial plutonium reprocessing, Jimmy Carter signed an order to ban the reprocessing of spent commercial nuclear fuel. Regan overturned the ban in 1981 but there was no funding provided to start up reprocessing facilities nor has the DOE provided license for anyone to do it. While they've waffled a bit during the Bush-Obama presidencies the DOE presently doesn't want domestic reprocessing. This has accordingly put a rather big crimp in the success of the GNEP which had closed loop nuclear power as a primary goal.

      --
      Two of my imaginary friends reproduced once ... with negative results.
    6. Re:Nuclear waste by Zorpheus · · Score: 1

      Seems that I have to post the same reply to everyone. Breeding reactors only takes care of the uranium and other very heavy atoms. It does not do anything about the fision products, which are lighter radioactives. And it does not do anything about the material that the reactor is made of. This also becomes radioactive because of the neutron radiation.

    7. Re:Nuclear waste by cheesybagel · · Score: 1

      The reactor becomes lightly radioactive. We are talking about neutron radiation, so not that more radioactive than the mine where the fuel originally came from to begin with. Even a fusion reactor using D-T fusion would irradiate the construction materials with neutrons during its life time. The lighter, non-reusable fissionables in the spent fuel, are mostly low lived radioactive products which decay quickly.

      The reasons reprocessing is not more advanced are two-fold: 1) is that uranium is so plentiful and cheap, it is just more economic to dump the once through fuel by the wayside, 2) if you can separate plutonium, you can more easily make a nuclear weapon. The fact is the major powers are not interested in reprocessing, although there are many possible avenues to doing it, in addition to the currently used processes. I suspect some of the more recent nuclear powers will eventually do it. India is a good candidate since they have low uranium deposits. Japan is another good candidate since they have next to no deposits. Japan also has low coal deposits unlike India.

      The US has pitifully old, not to mention inefficient, enrichment technology. This is the result of decades of non-investment. Recycling and reprocessing is just another face of the problem.

    8. Re:Nuclear waste by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Jimmy Carter signed an order to ban the reprocessing of spent commercial nuclear fuel. Regan overturned the ban in 1981 but there was no funding provided to start up reprocessing facilities nor has the DOE provided license for anyone to do it.

      So which of these presidents' orders do you think was more of an informed decision, the nuclear-engineer-president or the non-technical-actor-president?

    9. Re:Nuclear waste by TheTurtlesMoves · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The reactor parts are "low grade waste" and is generally safe after a few decades to a 100 years (depends of course-but thats about right for 99% of low grade reactor parts). Fast neutrons do get rid of the heavy elements in modern PWR waste. Thats where the "unsafe for 10 000 years" comes from. So already you have massively reduced the lifetime of the waste (other nasties have very long life times- so don't contribute to the radioactivity that much). There are few fission products that are problematic, they too can be dealt with via fast neutrons (Cs being the hardest to deal with). Even without that we are down to centuries of "high activity time" rather than 1000s. Now we add reprocessing. This brings the volume of the waste down by about 60 fold (more or less), and gives use 60 times more plain U + some Pu. We then dilute the waste to make thermal management easier, but its already much smaller and with a shorter lifetime.

      We should be doing research into this now. Sure its not a done deal, and a clear waste management plan is needed. But once though fuel cycle is completely retarded. Its that kind of wastefulness that gets us into these problems in the fist place.

      People seem to think 100 years is a long time. The hotel i stayed in Italy last year was build in 720AD. The wine cellar in Czech has been producing wine since at least ~800AD.

      --
      The Grey Goo disaster happened 3 billion years ago. This rock is covered in self replicating machines!
    10. Re:Nuclear waste by spauldo · · Score: 1

      India mostly uses fuel bought from Russia. They're working on getting thorium based reactors working, since they won't have to import it and the proposed reactor design would use much less fuel for the same energy.

      Japan imports their uranium as well. I'm not sure who they get it from, but I wouldn't be surprised if the buy it from the US.

      According to Wikipedia, Japan is trying to be in position to sell the US reactors once we get over the whole nuclear paranoia and start building them again. Because of this, they collaborate with various US government agencies concerning nuclear power. I'm not sure if that would dissuade them from reprocessing or not.

      --
      Those who can't do, teach. Those who can't teach either, do tech support.
    11. Re:Nuclear waste by Nethemas+the+Great · · Score: 1

      The decision wasn't made on the basis of technological deficiencies but rather on the knee jerk reaction to India becoming a nuclear power a little more than a couple years prior. Like Ford's ban on plutonium reprocessing, Carter's ban on reprocessing spent commercial fuel was based on an irrational political notion. Like Ford he believed that we could motivate the world to keep weapons grade material out of the hands of India and other places that would scare us should they attain nuclear capabilities. Ironically we are now sharing nuclear technology with India so as to counterbalance the growing weight of China.

      --
      Two of my imaginary friends reproduced once ... with negative results.
    12. Re:Nuclear waste by tgibbs · · Score: 1

      The nuclear waste problem is overblown. Absolute safety far into the future cannot be guaranteed, but that is an unreasonable standard. The ore wasn't safe before we dug it up, so a reasonable standard would be to make the waste as safe as the ore was when it was in the ground. This is not horribly difficult.

    13. Re:Nuclear waste by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In addition to what Nethemas the Great (909900) wrote, it would be good to review President Carter's military record - he wasn't a nuclear engineer (indeed, he left the Navy early due to family hardship). It's a commonly held fallacy, so it's not surprising to see it here. The info is readily available; wikipedia shouldn't be trusted, bit it can point you to reliable original sources.

      Also, your post was a poorly disguised ad hominem attack on Reagan. Here's a different worthless ad hominem: So which of these presidents' orders do you think was more of an informed decision, the peanut-farmer-president or the former-governor-president? Regardless of any president's alleged experience in any given area, I'd very much prefer the president to seek input from competent advisors with *current* expertise in relevant fields, and base decisions on that. Instead, Carter's decision was motivated by misguided idealism.

      Posts like yours give ACs a bad reputation.

      - T

    14. Re:Nuclear waste by MachineShedFred · · Score: 1

      The big problem with nuclear power is radioactive waste.
      BZZZZT. What you call "radioactive waste" I call "nuclear fuel which needs to have the neutron poisons removed"

      There is no way to recycle it
      BZZZZT. 100% incorrect. You can reprocess it and use it as fuel again. An average pressurized water reactor only uses 1% of the fuel before you need to swap out the rods due to trans-uranic neutron poisons. There are processes to remove these neutron-capturing elements and load the other 99% back into the reactor.

      and no matter where you put there is always the risk that it will show up in drinking water or somewhere else in the environment in the long run.
      When we're discarding perfectly useable fuel? Yes. It lasts for tens of thousands of years. If we reprocess it? The stuff you have to worry about will only last a couple hundred, or will last a couple million years because it's as stable as iron. You know what ends up "in drinking water or somewhere else in the environment" all the time today? Fly ash containing uranium and thorium, and corrosive sulfur from burning coal. You want your nuclear waste in one small place, or everywhere including your lungs?

        I guess that all these small reactors will produce a lot more waste.
      Whereas I guess that you really have no idea what you're talking about. Let me give you some stuff to read about, so you can stop spreading completely false FUD:

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nuclear_fuel_cycle
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CANDU
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Breeder_reactor
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Travelling_wave_reactor

      --
      Slashdot still doesnâ(TM)t support Unicode after it was added to the HTML standard in 1997.
  12. DIY Nuclear Reactor by arthurpaliden · · Score: 1
    1. Re:DIY Nuclear Reactor by h4rr4r · · Score: 2, Informative

      You can buy heavy water, unlike that story claims. United Nuclear sells it.

    2. Re:DIY Nuclear Reactor by GuruBuckaroo · · Score: 1

      I'm sorry, but I would *not* build a nuclear reactor designed by someone who cannot spell.

      --
      Poor means hoping the toothache goes away.
    3. Re:DIY Nuclear Reactor by careysub · · Score: 1

      You can buy heavy water, unlike that story claims. United Nuclear sells it.

      You can buy several grams, but you need a few tons. There are safeguards in place to prevent anyone from acquiring enough for a reactor without drawing close scrutiny (actually you would be completely unable to come up with a sufficient supply even without the nice G-Men coming around).

      But the "article" is idiotic. No one produces heavy water in a centrifuge for example. Nothing in it should be considered actual information.

      --
      Starships were meant to fly, Hands up and touch the sky - Nicky Minaj
  13. Macondo blowout? by Hatta · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Let's call it what it is. The BP disaster.

    --
    Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    1. Re:Macondo blowout? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      The Macondo blowout is more specific. If you just say the BP Disaster, people aren't sure whether you're talking about the Alaskan Pipeline Incident, the explosion at the Texas City refinery, or the Macondo Blowout.

    2. Re:Macondo blowout? by blair1q · · Score: 1

      Yes they are.

    3. Re:Macondo blowout? by ColdWetDog · · Score: 1

      Let's call it what it is. The BP disaster.

      Yes, but which BP disaster?

      --
      Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
  14. Eats, shoots, and leaves by ipeet · · Score: 0

    Small nuclear plants: glowing foliage coming soon to a garden near you!

    1. Re:Eats, shoots, and leaves by Matt · · Score: 1
  15. Waste of Uranium by thms · · Score: 2, Interesting

    As much as nuclear energy would help reduce CO2 emissons, the the anti-nuclear crowd has to be seen as a "force of nature" making new power plants less likely. The idealist would fight against irrationality, but as a realist I would redirect that energy elsewhere, e.g. against the NIMBYs who think wind turbines ruin the coastlines and kill birds or bats.

    Also, if oil is non-renewable because it takes millions of years to re-form, then nuclear fuels are the ultimate non-renewable with a "when is the next supernova due?" regeneration period. And the energy density and relative ease of use is just too good to waste it powering our washing machines and slashdot browsing. Maybe in a few hundred years outer solar system exploration will be in a serious crunch because the lack of a good power source after all the uranium, thorium, plutonium etc. has been used up.

    1. Re:Waste of Uranium by lazn · · Score: 2, Informative

      the anti-nuclear crowd should be renamed the anti-braincell crowd

    2. Re:Waste of Uranium by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      fine, please give us your address so we can send the nuclear waste to your ground as you dont seem to have any problems with it

      it's not the plants i am against, but the management of the waste which is lunatic, and having thousands of small nuclear plants wont make that problem less

    3. Re:Waste of Uranium by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Considering that with reprocessing, thorium & U238 breeding program, we've got about 100,000 years of nuclear fission based energy at our disposal. I would think a power source that will last several times as long as the whole of recorded history will be sufficient to get us to something longer term, like fusion.

    4. Re:Waste of Uranium by interkin3tic · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Also, if oil is non-renewable because it takes millions of years to re-form, then nuclear fuels are the ultimate non-renewable with a "when is the next supernova due?" regeneration period. And the energy density and relative ease of use is just too good to waste it powering our washing machines and slashdot browsing. Maybe in a few hundred years outer solar system exploration will be in a serious crunch because the lack of a good power source after all the uranium, thorium, plutonium etc. has been used up.

      That's kind of a silly argument, no one is in favor of renewables -just- for the renewable aspect. It's the fact that the widely used non-renewables are mostly dirty.

      You have a point about using up the nuclear power sources, seems we always consume resources faster than we expect and only think about what's next until it's crunch time. I'd say though that we have to get through the current transition we need to do first. I'm no expert, but it seems that the experts are convinced that nuclear is one of the only viable solutions at this point, nothing else would be able to generate most of the power that coal is now. At least, that's what I've heard. And we probably will be facing the same crunch when it's time to get off nuclear power, but at least we'll get to that stage if we use nuclear now.

    5. Re:Waste of Uranium by smellsofbikes · · Score: 3, Insightful

      the anti-nuclear crowd should be renamed the anti-braincell crowd

      I get frustrated by statements like this.

      I'm pro-nuclear: I took classes to become a nuclear power plant operator, once long ago, and if someone were willing to let me put a TRIGA-sized power-producing reactor in my back yard I'd jump at the chance if I got free power out of it.

      With that said: most of the people who oppose nuclear power aren't stupid. They just have a faulty set of data from which they're making judgments.

      If you believe that the potential failure mode of a process is completely unacceptable, then it's perfectly logical to be dead set against that process. Think of a Hindu trying to convince an atheist to jump off a cliff, because, the Hindu says, if it doesn't work you'll just come back as something else, so what's the risk? The atheist, however, considers the failure mode completely unacceptable, and will, rightly, refuse the gamble.

      Same thing with many opponents of nuclear power. They're not dumb, they just think a nuclear accident is an epic catastrophe. Under those circumstances, flat-out opposition is a reasonable position.

      As we've recently read on slashdot, trying to use facts to change their minds *probably* won't work.

      But calling them anti-braincell *certainly* won't.

      --
      Nostalgia's not what it used to be.
    6. Re:Waste of Uranium by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But Creationists already took that group name up.

    7. Re:Waste of Uranium by master0ne · · Score: 1

      *wont make that less of a problem

      There i fixed that for you, grammar issues aside, modern nuclear technology does not have the same waste issues that plants of the 60's and 70's had. If you would like to read more http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thorium is a great resource. Although this fuel is not 100% perfect, no "clean energy" method is. Every method we have of producing energy on this planet (reasonable method, not talking about putting everyone in giant hamster wheels or anything similarly stupid) can be argued to have negative environmental impact on the planet. Out very existence here can be argued to have a negative environmental impact on the planet for that matter. Also when you make such a bold accusation, it would be helpful to cite sources to prove your point (because if you had you would have most likely discovered the advances we have made in the field and probably not opened your mouth/keyboard about it)

      --
      Noone writes jokes in base 13!
    8. Re:Waste of Uranium by lennier · · Score: 1

      They're not dumb, they just think a nuclear accident is an epic catastrophe.

      As do I. Or at least, that the potential for epic fail in nuclear is a lot bigger than in anything else. When you're dealing with material which remains highly toxic for centuries, it seems like a little prudence would be in order.

      I would be more open to your reasoning if you were going to argue that the chance of failure is a lot less than we thought in the 1970s and that the evident corruption in the US commercial nuclear industry of the 1970s has been completely and finally addressed than if you merely argued that the consequences of a nuclear incident are, well, probably livable with and might not kill us all.

      I for one don't think that the corruption has been addressed, or that the culture is likely to be fixed in the near future, as long as commercial nuclear remains in bed with military nuclear and all the DoD / DoE's culture of 'born secret' classification of essential data.

      And intertwined with safety and secrecy is centralisation: both fission and fusion, at present, seem to lend themselves to large centralised plants. That seems counterproductive to a living democracy. Oil may be toxic but at least once extracted, it's distributed; you can be reasonably self-sufficient with a petrol can. A coil/oil/gas station is big and nasty, but current fission is bigger and nastier, so requires more security, more secrecy, and more process just to make it safe. Compared with, say, wind and solar, which can be distributed across the country much more easily.

      Perhaps new, small reactors might change this equation. But I'm not confident, because the same big nuclear military contractors which built the last generation seem to be pushing these new ones (and it would hardly seem possible, given the strategic military implications of fissionables, for it to be otherwise).

      --
      You are not a brain: http://books.google.com/books?id=2oV61CeDx-YC
    9. Re:Waste of Uranium by nmos · · Score: 1

      I'm pretty pro-nuclear but I have 2 major concerns.

      1. Although the odds of a catastrophe is low for any given plant in any particular year it's also true that anything that can happen will happen eventually and the frequency of such events is likely proportional to the number of plants in operation. That's not necessarily a show stopper since all other forms of energy production have their own costs but it does mean that proper engineering, management, and oversight are critical.

      2. Our current corporate culture is too irresponsible and short sighted to be trusted with nuclear power and our government is too corrupt and incompetent to provide meaningful oversight. We really need to come up with a way to manage these types of projects that is based more on solid engineering/management rather than the number of hookers or campaign dollars various interested parties can provide.

    10. Re:Waste of Uranium by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thanks!

      I'm anti-nuclear, mostly because I think that if all costs for fission reactors were taken into account, investors wouldn't dare to invest in one because the net outcome would be a loss.
      And we all know how this works in a capitalistic society: internalize the profits, externalize the losses. The people of the province where the plant is/was located get to live with the clean-up costs for the next 10000-100000 years. Did you know that agriculture was invented about 10000 years ago? Imagine that the pyramid builders in Egypt experimented with nuclear plants, the current Egyptian government would still have a running cost of containing/guarding/cooling the resulting waste.

      As an example, there is a reactor in the Netherlands, in the village of Dodewaard, that has been decommissioned a decade or two ago. Now the government has to wait 40 more years for the building to "cool down" (all the while guarding it!) and then train a new batch of engineers in how to safely deconstruct and store the concrete containment shell somewhere (a process that probably also takes several years). This is not about the fuel rods which have already been moved and stored off-site, in a place that will probably be under seawater in 500 years, but I digress..

      IF THIS WAS A COMMERCIAL PLANT IT WOULD SILENTLY GO BANKRUPT in the next 20 years, when the furor has died down a bit. Or it would be moved to a shell holding company, 1 person would go to jail for fraud, etc. etc. I just don't believe that such decommissioning costs would ever be paid by a commercial energy company without one of its directors in the 50-70 years of operation taking the easy way out. Sorry for yelling...

      So try to convince me that the public wouldn't end up paying the tab, instead of calling me brainless (I'm addressing the GP here, not OP, thanks again :-)).

      Current financing and business models are not appropriate for nuclear reactors. They should be government-owned or not exist. And when they cost more than they deliver, they shouldn't get built at all, because that's just being silly.

      As to the newer reactors discussed here, this IFR and pebble bed reactor, I'm indeed less negative but I'm not convinced. If you have your fuel "rods" dissolved in liquid sodium and containment breaks so it gets wet, the resulting hydrogen fire would probably spew the burning mixture further than even Tsjernobyl did (that was a graphite fire IIRC and CO2 is much heavier than water vapour):

      2 Na + H2O -> Na2O + H2 + really hot

      2H2 + O2 -> 2 H2O + really hot

      The super hot water vapour would take along the dissolved Strontium, Cesium and Iodine fission products easily. Take the cows inside when it rains...

      Well, those are my frothing-at-the-mouth opinions, anyway.. FWIW.

    11. Re:Waste of Uranium by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If they're exploring the outer solar system they can damn well figure out how to start mining other planets, moons, or asteroids for uranium. It's not like oil that only exists on Earth, supernovas aren't exactly picky about which direction the heavy elements fly out, there should be some on pretty much everything.

    12. Re:Waste of Uranium by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm pro-environment & pro-nuclear (with responsible mining practices), but I also see the freedom in being able to produce your own power with renewables.

      I'm anti-oil, anti-gas & anti-coal though because of the air pollution.

    13. Re:Waste of Uranium by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But if they think a nuclear accident is an epic catastrophe, they're WRONG. And if they contribute to crippling the country's ability to be energy independent because they're relying on data that they can't be BOTHERED to check, they're STUPID and DANGEROUS.

    14. Re:Waste of Uranium by BJ_Covert_Action · · Score: 1

      They just have a faulty set of data from which they're making judgments.

      For some of us, that is the very definition of stupid/dumb/anti-braincell. You can make all the excuses you want for the anti-nuclear energy zealots, but their passionate 'belief' that nuclear power plants are epic catastrophes simply waiting to happen do not measure up the cold, hard facts that can be found when researching modern reactor designs AND the present safety record of the entire US nuclear energy industry. As such, they continue to make judgments based on beliefs rather than facts which is the very definition of stupid in my opinion. There is no way to pretty it up. We call people stupid for believing in unicorns and pixies because reality shows that they don't exist. Similarly, we should call anti-nuclear zealots stupid for believing in some hyperbolic boogeyman when both history and science (reality) shows that such fears are unfounded at best, and downright stupid at worst.

    15. Re:Waste of Uranium by jwhitener · · Score: 1

      Well, there are a second set of anti-nuclear folks who are not afraid of a meltdown, but rather, just do not see the need to use nuclear.

      http://www.ted.com/talks/lang/eng/debate_does_the_world_need_nuclear_energy.html

      The pro-nuclear people seem to be 100% convinced that it is impossible (or economically infeasible) to have steady base load electricity using "green/renewable" sources.

      I haven't researched enough to comfortably conclude who's correct, though. Personally, I don't have a problem with nuclear energy. Especially the small, buried, self-contained varieties. However, from what I've read, it doesn't seem like much of a engineering problem to create stable base load from solar and wind (solar thermal liquid salt, and pumped-hydro for wind).

      The major problem with using new forms of energy isn't so much cost or technical feasibility, but rather, deciding who's going to pay for what. Like the recent slashdot post on wind farms in Oregon that overproduced, and the grid couldn't handle it, so they were told to lower production. If there were pumped-hydro storage available (Oregon has a ton of mountains and valleys), problem solved. But who's responsibility is it to build the storage? The grid owner? The wind farm owners?

      This is one of those areas that will require local/national government regulations to get things moving (for instance, if you own a grid, you must be able to store some percent via hyrdo, salt, battery, whatever.), or nationalizing or local public ownership of the grids and production.

  16. Unfortunate Nuke PR Person by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I predict that these plants will promote themselves with slightly misleading commercials like this: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gRc2B9EPuWU

  17. Titles are useless by J4 · · Score: 1

    Peak oil is nonsense. Why are there hydrocarbons in space?

    1. Re:Titles are useless by h4rr4r · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Because there is hydrogen and carbon in space.

      Peak oil is not about running out of oil, it is about running out of oil that is cheap and easy to get. Those hydrocarbons in space are too expensive to bother with, especially when we have all this uranium and thorium laying around.

    2. Re:Titles are useless by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 1

      We don't have that much uranium lying around. In fact peak uranium not far off.

    3. Re:Titles are useless by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because you don't have a clue what the different hydrocarbons are? And tell me, oh smart one, when it takes more than one barrel's worth of energy to extract one barrel of oil from the ground, what are you hoping to achieve?

    4. Re:Titles are useless by h4rr4r · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Read my comment again.

      You should now have seen your mistake and should be calculating when peak thorium will occur.

  18. Re:put them all over as the power grid is not setu by spazdor · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I can't imagine investing in a national nuclear infrastructure without also overhauling the distribution grid.

    --
    DRM: Terminator crops for your mind!
  19. Before we start on nukes.... by gestalt_n_pepper · · Score: 1

    Isn't there room for quite a lot more hydroelectric power in the USA?

    I mean, build a diversion pond, put in a generator, hook to grid. Repeat on a small to medium scale thousands of times wherever it makes sense. Same with solar. Same with wind. Same with geothermal.

    Seems that a distributed heterogeneous solution would make a lot more sense in terms of sustainability over the long run. Not to mention being much more difficult for your average (or even above-average) terrorist to exploit for nefarious purposes.

    --
    Please do not read this sig. Thank you.
    1. Re:Before we start on nukes.... by Krahar · · Score: 1

      It seems to me that a bomb below a dam can be a whole lot more dangerous than the inconvenience a bomb at a nuclear power plant would cause.

    2. Re:Before we start on nukes.... by gestalt_n_pepper · · Score: 1

      A big dam, perhaps. One of a few thousand small dams, no. Moreover, a dam causes its damage and then is no longer dangerous. Not so with a nuclear plant. You've heard of Chernobyl?

      --
      Please do not read this sig. Thank you.
    3. Re:Before we start on nukes.... by CrimsonAvenger · · Score: 1

      Isn't there room for quite a lot more hydroelectric power in the USA?

      No.

      Pretty much anywhere it makes economic sense to build a dam, we've already done so.

      Note also that dam building pretty much ground to a halt when the Greens starting bringing Federal lawsuits on behalf of wee little fishies against dam-makers....

      --

      "I do not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"
    4. Re:Before we start on nukes.... by gestalt_n_pepper · · Score: 1

      Could you tell me how you know that? Links? References? Not trying to be argumentative. If I'm wrong, I'm wrong. Just trying to get the facts.

      --
      Please do not read this sig. Thank you.
    5. Re:Before we start on nukes.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, the torrent of water wouldn't be very nice. But, if your objective is to take out the power it's a problem with both. Heck, transmission lines would probably be a more likely target than the plant itself, you'd need less explosives.

    6. Re:Before we start on nukes.... by CrimsonAvenger · · Score: 1

      Alas, no. I heard it during a discussion with a TVA engineer almost 30 years ago. I took his word for it, since designing and building dams was pretty much what he did for a living.

      --

      "I do not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"
    7. Re:Before we start on nukes.... by gestalt_n_pepper · · Score: 1

      A TVA engineer may have been working under a particular set of assumptions that worked back in the 70s when our oil EROEI ratio was closer to 100 to 1, not the current 12 to 1 (and declining).

      "Economical" is a different concept when electrical prices go up enough because just transporting the coal gets much more expensive.

      He also may not have been thinking of something the size of a municipal reservoir producing just enough power to service scattered small communities. Why would he? Not in his worldview at all, I imagine.

      --
      Please do not read this sig. Thank you.
    8. Re:Before we start on nukes.... by geekoid · · Score: 1

      No, not really. You can only have one damn per x amount of elevation drop in a river. You can't just stack them up.

      Nuclear plants are secure. You watch to many movies. Not that there is anything a terrorist could really do with a modern 4th gen reactor.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    9. Re:Before we start on nukes.... by CrimsonAvenger · · Score: 1

      Quite so. "Economical" changes from place to place and time to time. So no telling where we are now as regards "economically feasible" dam sites.

      But dams are still pretty expensive upfront costs, so I wouldn't think that there could be all that many significant opportunities for that sort of thing in the USA.

      And the problem of the Greens suing over new dams hasn't gone away, and won't. Note their lawsuit to stop a Solar plant in California (?) recently over a turtle....

      --

      "I do not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"
    10. Re:Before we start on nukes.... by Krahar · · Score: 1

      Chernobyl wasn't due to a bomb and a bomb wouldn't have that effect on a modern plant. Radioactive material just isn't the most convenient kind of poison and it kills over the course of tens of years instead of the instant deaths that make for effective terrorism. Now blowing up a giant dam, that is effective terrorism. In any case it is intolerable for terrorists to wield political power in the free world by so directly influencing so many decisions.

    11. Re:Before we start on nukes.... by gestalt_n_pepper · · Score: 1

      I think you missed my point here and are making an unfounded assumption.

      I'm aware that Chernobyl wasn't caused by a bomb. Irrelevant.

      Radioactive poison may indeed kill over the course of years, or days if it's nasty enough. I doubt if that would deter any terrorist group from using a dirty bomb if they could.

      A million slow agonizing radiation deaths would be quite effectively terrorizing, for quite a while. The psychological impact might even be greater due to the greater duration and inevitability.

      A pox on both governments and their malcontents.

      --
      Please do not read this sig. Thank you.
    12. Re:Before we start on nukes.... by Krahar · · Score: 1

      A million slow agonizing radiation deaths would be quite effectively terrorizing, for quite a while.

      I suggest you take a look at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dirty_bomb

  20. PBNR by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    I just have one thing to say, Pebble Bed Nuclear Reactors!

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pebble_bed_reactor

    http://www.pbmr.co.za/

  21. Bald statements mean nothing by AkkarAnadyr · · Score: 1

    Word salad 'Zippy the Pinhead'-style quotes go in the 'fortune' script at the bottom of the page.

    --

    I bought this house and you know I'm boss
    Ain't no h'aint gonna run me off

  22. Not true by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    as a small nuclear plant still needs almost as much safety, inspection infrastructure not forgetting the larger number of armed guards

    There has been talk of very small reactors for developing countries that are basically sealed concrete boxes, several feet thick.

    You need no guards or monitors, because they are self-contained and self regulating.

    Then when they are spent (I seem to remember 20-50 years as a figure) you take them away and put in new ones.

    If you make them small and compact enough you really can do away with a ton of infrastructure (on site infrastructure anyway).

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    1. Re:Not true by Edmund+Blackadder · · Score: 1

      Really? and how would keep anyone from taking the whole thing breaking it apart somewhere else and selling the valuable fuel grade uranium on the black market?

      Or worse yet, using the uranium and all the radioactive parts of the reactor for a dirty bomb?

      Or even worse yet, trying to do one of the above, but fucking up and letting all kinds of radioactive liquids drain in the drinking water underground?

    2. Re:Not true by h4rr4r · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Dirty bombs are not that big a deal. Oh noes we need to clean up some contamination what ever will we do! Leakage would be a far bigger deal.

      What black market is there for fuel grade uranium?
      If you have to go to the black market to get it, you probably don't have the money to do anything with it anyway.

    3. Re:Not true by Graff · · Score: 4, Informative

      Really? and how would keep anyone from taking the whole thing breaking it apart somewhere else and selling the valuable fuel grade uranium on the black market?

      Or worse yet, using the uranium and all the radioactive parts of the reactor for a dirty bomb?

      Or even worse yet, trying to do one of the above, but fucking up and letting all kinds of radioactive liquids drain in the drinking water underground?

      In most of these small reactor designs the fissionable material has nearly no value as a weapon. For example, a Pebble Bed Reactor uses balls of graphite and fissionable material which can be difficult to re-process into something other than fuel. A dirty bomb is of little concern because, again, it's much easier to just mine new material rather than use the fuel for these reactors.

      Lastly, the modern designs for reactors are extremely safe. They have less chance of contaminating groundwater supply than building solar panels (a process that requires tons of heavy metals, organic wastes, and wastewater) or operating a coal-fired power plant. Not to mention that once you are done using the fuel and reprocessing it into new fuel you are left with a small amount of concentrated waste with either extremely short (degrades quickly to harmless elements) or extremely long (emits nearly no radiation) lifetimes.

      The modern nuclear reactor designs are vastly better than the units built 40+ years ago, it's a shame that we haven't been building them. Instead we are maintaining older units because the red tape is too much to bother building new units to replace the aging ones. THAT'S your recipe for disaster!

    4. Re:Not true by camperdave · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Really? and how would keep anyone from taking the whole thing breaking it apart somewhere else and selling the valuable fuel grade uranium on the black market?

      How are you going to dig up a thousand ton block of concrete buried twenty feet down and load it onto a flatbed without a spy satellite picking up your equipment and an assault team being dispatched? Just because they are not guarded, doesn't mean they won't be monitored.

      --
      When our name is on the back of your car, we're behind you all the way!
    5. Re:Not true by Edmund+Blackadder · · Score: 1

      You should explain to the DHS how dirty bombs are not a big deal.

      Regarding fuel grade uranium, it is very expensive, there are thousands of powerplants in the world that need it so I am sure at least a couple of them would be willing to obtain it for half price on the black market.

      There were several cases of people trying to export the stuff when the iron curtain fell, including some cases of people duying in their cars from exposure as they are trying to move a uranium rod.

    6. Re:Not true by Edmund+Blackadder · · Score: 1

      All of these designs use highly radioactive material as fuel and that will always work for a dirty bomb.

      Also they use the same fuel grade uranium as other reactors use, which is very expensive and valuable and it can be stolen. It would be incredibly foolish to leave these reactors unguarded.

      The only difference about pebble beds is that they split up the uranium and put it in small graphite balls, but I don't see how this changes things, someone can still steal the balls.

    7. Re:Not true by Graff · · Score: 1

      All of these designs use highly radioactive material as fuel and that will always work for a dirty bomb.

      Also they use the same fuel grade uranium as other reactors use, which is very expensive and valuable and it can be stolen. It would be incredibly foolish to leave these reactors unguarded.

      The type of fissionable material in these sorts of reactors is not of much use in constructing a dirty bomb, not to mention that the amount of material is relatively sparse and would result in more of a scare rather than an actual threat. The form of the material would generally only be of use for a specific type of reactor and wouldn't be anywhere near as useful as raw uranium, you'd basically have to re-refine it and then why go through all the trouble to steal it? Just steal it from a mine or mine it yourself.

      As someone else pointed out, it would be extremely tough to break into the small reactors in the first place. They are being designed as sealed bunkers that are buried under ground and will most likely have monitoring equipment. Any attempt to break into these reactors would be expensive, take a considerable amount of time and effort, and by the time you succeeded you'd have authorities all over you. They just wouldn't make good targets, robbing bank would probably be a better way of making money!

      If you think the only thing they are doing is mixing uranium with graphite then you haven't done your research and you don't understand exactly why they aren't the same as pure fuel grade uranium. A lot more goes into the construction of the fuel pellets and the entire process makes the fuel much more specialized and less valuable as bombs or fuel for other reactors.

    8. Re:Not true by khallow · · Score: 1

      All of these designs use highly radioactive material as fuel and that will always work for a dirty bomb.

      I'm all for terrorists making dirty bombs from nuclear fuel. It tells us who's going to be trouble without actually causing much harm. It's when they start making working nuclear weapons, that we'll have real trouble.

      The only difference about pebble beds is that they split up the uranium and put it in small graphite balls, but I don't see how this changes things, someone can still steal the balls.

      And someone can steal, mine, or just buy the raw ore. If they're going to do anything truly dangerous with it, they're going to need to be able to refine the uranium (or perhaps plutonium, if they're using used nuclear fuel). The technology to do that with nuclear fuel means they can do that with the far more easily obtained uranium ore as well.

    9. Re:Not true by John+Guilt · · Score: 1

      Or, more simply, instant dirty bomb: just add a jet-liner, or some powerful non-nuclear explosives.

    10. Re:Not true by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

      It is the DHS's interest to say that. They want to get bigger and get more tax dollars. They are a sham, total and utter.

  23. it easyer / cheaper to start local with grid upgra by Joe+The+Dragon · · Score: 1

    it easyer / cheaper to start local with grid upgrades then to load it all in one area then one tree limb / train crash can wipe out most of the power system.

  24. Building big is better by BlueParrot · · Score: 1

    With every single form of energy generation in widespread use today, economies of scale heavily favors building big plants, assuming you're in a country with a well developed electric grid.

    This is not only true for nuclear, but also coal, natural gas, hydro, wind turbines and even solar installations. Even combined heat and power works better when implemented as a district-heating system ( as is done many places in the world ). The effect is even more pronounced for nuclear, however, because capital costs associated with construction is such a big part of its cost. Since power output increases more rapidly than material and construction costs, this heavily favors large installations.

    There is one exception I can think of, and that is if you try to build a nuclear plant to do load following, in which case you want to keep capital costs low, since you will be operating the plant at a low capacity factor. For such an installation it might make sense to make it as small as possible while still being able to deliver adequately during peak hours.

  25. Commas Gone Wild by frosty_tsm · · Score: 1

    This assumption is widely accepted, but, if its roots are understood, it can be effectively challenged. Recently, however, a growing body of plant designers, utility companies, government agencies, and financial players are recognizing that smaller plants can take advantage of greater opportunities to apply lessons learned, take advantage of the engineering and tooling savings possible with higher numbers of units, and better meet customer needs in terms of capacity additions and financing.

    The word-to-comma ratio is a little on the high side. (I'm not an English major)

    1. Re:Commas Gone Wild by night_flyer · · Score: 1

      Maybe, he, is related to, Captain Kirk, of, the Starship, Enterprise

      --


      Thanks to file sharing, I purchase more CDs
      Thanks to the RIAA, I buy them used...
    2. Re:Commas Gone Wild by shermo · · Score: 1

      I'm guessing you're not a maths major either.

      --
      Insanity: voting in the same two parties over and over again and expecting different results
  26. Re:put them all over as the power grid is not setu by toastar · · Score: 3, Informative

    I can't imagine investing in a national nuclear infrastructure without also overhauling the distribution grid.

    did no one RTFA?
    Oh yeah this is slashdot.

    The idea is as Coal Plants get decommissioned you can use most of the same equipment, Which I assume means the same generators. Which make the nuke plants cheaper then overhauling the coal plant.

  27. Nuclear is no cure all by sjbe · · Score: 1

    Nuclear energy is probably the best chance we have are breaking our addiction to oil.

    Think so? I think you are not considering a few facts.

    • Nuclear energy is not going to help replace the oil in plastics, fertilizers, adhesives, coatings, paints, cleaning products (did you know Dawn has oil products in it?), fabrics, lubricants, and countless other products.
    • You are aware as well that oil provides relatively little of our electricity, right? Oil provides about 2% of the electricity we use in the US. We get five times more electricity from hydro than from oil and coal provides about half the electricity used. Most oil is used for transportation and for various products. I like the thought of electric cars but those aren't going to do away with the need for oil anytime soon.
    • Building nuclear plants takes time. Lots of time. Even if we started today we couldn't bring enough nuclear plants online fast enough to service the anticipated need for electricity solely with nuclear during the next 15 years. If these smaller plants were to work (no idea if they would) that might help but then you have a distribution, cleanup and security problem with nuclear fuels.
    • If you think people are opposed to a coal plant in their backyard, try putting a nuclear plant there. People are quite fearful of nuclear. Sometimes with good reason and sometimes not but they are fearful nonetheless.

    I don't know why the government doesn't just fund the development of a bunch of nuclear power plants and put them on the coast or on the ocean somewhere.

    Let's see. First, what coast did you have in mind that is unoccupied yet close to major metropolitan areas? How do you propose to convince the taxpayers that might be fearful of nuclear that it is a good idea? How do you propose to transport the electricity economically to places far from the coast?

    We could generate enough power to power the entire country, not to mention we could probably put hundreds of thousands of nuclear power plants in the desert.

    First the coast and now the desert. Have you really given this any thought at all? No one lives in the desert and it's expensive to get the power out of the desert. Not to mention that cooling becomes a bigger problem there. While there are nuclear plants that don't require water, most use it because it is cheap and abundant. The entire advantage of a small nuclear plant is that you can place it where it is needed but no one wants to live near a nuclear reactor if they can help it.

    1. Re:Nuclear is no cure all by sycodon · · Score: 1

      Fifteen years ago, some idiot said all these same things and they didn't proceed.

      Do we want to be listening to more idiots saying this same thing fifteen years from now?

      --
      When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
  28. The load variation problem by tcgibian · · Score: 2, Informative

    The main problem in implementing small output conventional power plants comes from the difficulty of altering power output swiftly enough to follow rapid changes in load. The traditional steam generator method, regardless of the source of heat, has a large amount of inertia which makes its response sluggish. Making them small to get a more nimble response sacrifices efficiency. The conventional method of dealing with this difficulty is to have a huge grid with a quantity of large baseline generators, supplemented with peaking generators which are started up or shut down as needed. The size of the grid smooths out the fluctuations enough so this method works, usually. As long as nineteenth century methodology, boil the water, use the steam to turn a turbine, dominates the generation of electricity, the use of small generation facilities will be confined to applications such as factories where the load is fairly constant.

    1. Re:The load variation problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As long as nineteenth century methodology, boil the water, use the steam to turn a turbine, dominates the generation of electricity, the use of small generation facilities will be confined to applications such as factories where the load is fairly constant.

      I don't follow this. Small generators aggregate on the grid to meet baseline demand just as easily as large units, no? So long as your statistical uptime * aggregate output >= aggregate demand, it's all good.

    2. Re:The load variation problem by TheTurtlesMoves · · Score: 1

      Nuclear can be load following. Homogeneous reactors can load follow with very rapid response time and can be made very small for example (there are other designs). Can they be made economically? I don't know. The costs of permits and containments make me skeptical of claims that small is economic.

      --
      The Grey Goo disaster happened 3 billion years ago. This rock is covered in self replicating machines!
  29. How about those Nuclear Space Probe batteries... by fionnghal · · Score: 1

    I'll have one for the car, and maybe one for the boat, thank you.

  30. Do we want to go to war or do we want nuclear? by elucido · · Score: 1

    Our options are very limited. We have to solve the energy crisis immediately, by any means necessary, because if we don't it will cost us more lives than if we do.

    If we go nuclear the risk of a nuclear meltdown or radiation being unleashed is a lot less than the risk of another terrorist attack, another middle east war, another oil spill. I don't understand why people would fear something that hasn't happened over something that has.

    We should pass an energy bill to fund nuclear energy. We should spent 100 billion on the energy bill and spend half of that on nuclear energy. We should use the other half on biofuels, on solar, on wind, but we need nuclear energy because it will solve the problem immediately in the short term while we need to fund the other 50 billion on the long term.

    For 100 billion dollars we could solve the energy crisis in the USA. Of course we'd need to invest another 100 billion improving the grid and building the electronet but these investments would pay for themselves and it might be the only solution to get out of the economic crisis.

    So basically we either go nuclear or we are going to die in poverty. There aren't going to be jobs for us if we don't lower the price of energy drastically, and make the energy as clean as possible.

    1. Re:Do we want to go to war or do we want nuclear? by sourcerror · · Score: 1

      I want to go ballistic. I guess that means war.

    2. Re:Do we want to go to war or do we want nuclear? by sourcerror · · Score: 1

      Can't we have both?

  31. Build a flotilla or floating power plant. by elucido · · Score: 1

    I'm all for a stable energy source but there are several issues with nuclear facilities:

    1. People tend to live on the coasts, & people tend to disapprove of any nuclear plants near their homes.(note I lived near(
    2. Various security agencies see nuclear facilities as potential targets. (plane + nuclear plant = Chernobyl)

    3. You need to store the spent fuel somewhere; no one wants to live near a nuclear dump. Even if it is out in the middle of nowhere you still have to transport the fuel there (through citys? on major highways?)

    Put the floating power plant far enough away from the coast that people feel safe. This would cost a bit more but if people are really scared they wont mind higher taxes in exchange.

    1. Re:Build a flotilla or floating power plant. by wisdom_brewing · · Score: 1

      This would cost a bit more but if people are really scared they wont mind higher taxes in exchange.

      People ALWAYS mind higher taxes...

  32. Errors by DerekLyons · · Score: 1

    From TFA:
     

    Though accurate cost data is difficult to obtain, it is safe to say that there was no predictable relationship between the size of a nuclear power plant and its cost.

    Maybe not precisely predictable, but certainly predictable in a broad and useful sense. The USN discovered this back in the 50's and 60's.
     

    It is possible for engineers to make incredibly complex calculations without a single math error that still come up with a wrong answer if they use a model based on incorrect assumptions.

    This is true of bloggers too... Especially bloggers seeking to work backwards towards a conclusion rather than forwards from the data.
     

    Apparently, the ideas that I pointed to fourteen years ago have also occurred to a number of nuclear plant designers and business decision makers who noticed that the estimates for the traditional sized nuclear plants kept expanding at much greater than the rate of inflation as they became more detailed and closer to reality.

    Don't break your arm patting yourself on your back there bud - because the principle you 'pointed out' fourteen years ago is a principle well known in engineering circles at least half a century before that. (And encapsulated in the very old bromide - "no project gets completed on time or under budget".)
     

    All three of the teams - NuScale, B&W and Westinghouse - have designed systems that put the entire primary plant into a single pressure vessel.

    Welcome to the 1950's - when the US Navy first put the entire primary plant into a pressure vessels.

  33. Build it deep underground, build it on the water. by elucido · · Score: 2

    Think so? I think you are not considering a few facts.

    • Nuclear energy is not going to help replace the oil in plastics, fertilizers, adhesives, coatings, paints, cleaning products (did you know Dawn has oil products in it?), fabrics, lubricants, and countless other products.
    • You are aware as well that oil provides relatively little of our electricity, right?

    But it's a good start. If we go nuclear we'd be well on our way. There is no better option to produce the same results for the price.

    Oil provides about 2% of the electricity we use in the US. We get five times more electricity from hydro than from oil and coal provides about half the electricity used. Most oil is used for transportation and for various products. I like the thought of electric cars but those aren't going to do away with the need for oil anytime soon.

    When electricity is cheap enough, we'll be able to plug our cars into our walls, along with our robot maid.

    Building nuclear plants takes time. Lots of time. Even if we started today we couldn't bring enough nuclear plants online fast enough to service the anticipated need for electricity solely with nuclear during the next 15 years.

    Thats not necessarily true. The time it takes to build is relative to the cost it takes to build it and the expertise. It could be built in 5 years if we saw it as an emergency. You see how fast all that surveillance technology got built but they can't built nuclear power plants? Please!

    If these smaller plants were to work (no idea if they would) that might help but then you have a distribution, cleanup and security problem with nuclear fuels.

    If you think people are opposed to a coal plant in their backyard, try putting a nuclear plant there. People are quite fearful of nuclear. Sometimes with good reason and sometimes not but they are fearful nonetheless.

    Not all nuclear plants are bad designs. Some have the cleanup as part of the design. Some are designed to require mininmal cleanup. And they are all more clean than coal.

    Let's see. First, what coast did you have in mind that is unoccupied yet close to major metropolitan areas? How do you propose to convince the taxpayers that might be fearful of nuclear that it is a good idea? How do you propose to transport the electricity economically to places far from the coast?

    New York, Boston, California, Florida, All the coasts. Build a large floating island on the coast, put the nuclear power plant on these islands just like we put our trash on floating islands. Float the islands far enough out so people don't see it and don't think about it.

    First the coast and now the desert. Have you really given this any thought at all? No one lives in the desert and it's expensive to get the power out of the desert. Not to mention that cooling becomes a bigger problem there. While there are nuclear plants that don't require water, most use it because it is cheap and abundant. The entire advantage of a small nuclear plant is that you can place it where it is needed but no one wants to live near a nuclear reactor if they can help it.

    Dig holes deep underground like a sandworm into the desert. Build the nuclear power plants under the desert sand so deep that nobody even notices they are there. This makes it easier to secure from terrorists because it's in the desert and this also puts it out of sight, out of mind.

  34. One step at a time. by elucido · · Score: 1

    I agree with you that we should focus on decentralized power generation. But before we can make solar generators cheap, we have to build nuclear power plants. If we don't build the nuclear power plants we wont get out of the economic recession or depression with 10% unemployment, and if we stay in this state we will never be able to afford to fund anything with tax dollars because the government wont have anybody left to tax.

    Generate power first, and then decentralize it.

  35. Theres no jobs. by elucido · · Score: 1

    Somehow I don't think the campaign slogan "VOTE FOR ME - And I'll stick a nuclear power plant in your area" will catch on

    So it's more like, would you like to live on welfare or would you rather we build a nuclear power plant in your area? There really is no alternative to the economic / jobs problem besides building nuclear power plants.

    1. Re:Theres no jobs. by tomhath · · Score: 1

      would you like to live on welfare or would you rather we build a nuclear power plant in your area?

      You ask this question on the very day the Democrats pass a bill authorizing the government to borrow another $34 Billion so millions of people can continue to be paid to keep not working. Sigh.

  36. It could be neither (could, not should) by interkin3tic · · Score: 1

    You realize that I wasn't ADVOCATING any of those barriers to nuclear power, right? I'm saying why nuclear hasn't taken off not "I think we shouldn't use nuclear power."

    If we go nuclear the risk of a nuclear meltdown or radiation being unleashed is a lot less than the risk of another terrorist attack, another middle east war, another oil spill. I don't understand why people would fear something that hasn't happened over something that has.

    Explain to me how nuclear power solves our oil dependence? You're saying we should build nuclear-powered cars?

    As I understand it, nuclear could feasibly replace coal-fired power plants. While it's true that we could run electric cars off of nuclear power instead of oil, they could also be run off of coal power. With nuclear power, we would still presumably be using oil for our transportation energy.

  37. Replacement for IN-CITY coal plants by WindBourne · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Seriously, the majority of America's power does not come from large plants, but from small plants (50-200 mgwatt) that were built about 70-40 years ago. Many of the coal plants are Ancient and either need to be shut down or re-built. Interestingly, many of these are on a lot of land. Where life gets better is that the water required to run a coal plant is more than many nuke plants. Also, all the power lines have come into these areas. It is possible to put in nuke plants that are 50% or even 100% bigger in the same space, using either the same, or slightly more water, and be a plug-in.

    Of course, nimby will still be an issue, but most ppl will prefer a nuke over a coal.

    --
    I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
  38. I'll just pick on one obvious mistake by dbIII · · Score: 2, Informative

    We erroneously call Pu-239 nuclear waste

    It is correctly called nuclear waste because the potential benefit of having it is a lot less than all the work required to separating it out. Machining very strong, hard, highly radioactive materials is incredibly expensive as the French have shown despite about thirty years of trying to make their reprocessing methods viable.

    1. Re:I'll just pick on one obvious mistake by Nadaka · · Score: 4, Informative

      And that is why you toss it back into a feeder reactor as fuel to and let the neutron radiation break it down for you.

    2. Re:I'll just pick on one obvious mistake by dbIII · · Score: 2, Informative

      The problem (as I tried to say above) is it takes a lot of work to get it out of the spent fuel rods before you can use it to "toss it back into a feeder reactor as fuel".
      That is why it is seen as waste and not fuel.

    3. Re:I'll just pick on one obvious mistake by mdielmann · · Score: 1

      Thanks for reading the post before commenting.
      The reactor described fissions plutonium, since the moderator doesn't absorb neutrons. Since you obviously didn't read this part, here it is again.

      The coolant was liquid metal, sodium or lead. These elements don't moderate the neutrons, they fly unhindered through the pile. That means they can fission Pu-239. In fact, they can fission anything higher than uranium on the periodic table. That's not all a fast reactor can do, though. It can also turn anything on the other (left) half of the bottom row of the periodic table into fissionable material. That's what "fast" means in the name.

      And at that point, it is not nuclear waste, it is nuclear fuel.

      --
      Sure I'm paranoid, but am I paranoid enough?
    4. Re:I'll just pick on one obvious mistake by Sarius64 · · Score: 1

      We erroneously call Pu-239 nuclear waste

      It is correctly called nuclear waste because the potential benefit of having it is a lot less than all the work required to separating it out. Machining very strong, hard, highly radioactive materials is incredibly expensive as the French have shown despite about thirty years of trying to make their reprocessing methods viable.

      Another member of the Jane Fonda nuclear reporting club. Sheesh, RTFM.

    5. Re:I'll just pick on one obvious mistake by dbIII · · Score: 1

      I did read it but you misunderstand entirely. It's only nuclear fuel if it can actually be used as such, which means concentrating what you have in the depleted rods so you have hot fuel instead of lukewarm metal you can't get any energy out of.
      So long as it can't be used it's waste - hence the name.

  39. Re:put them all over as the power grid is not setu by Nadaka · · Score: 2, Insightful

    You can reuse the steam turbines and electric generators with solar thermal power plants as well.

  40. Deepwater Horizon Blowout by chebucto · · Score: 4, Funny

    Why not call it the Deepwater Horizon blowout? That's the phrase everyone else seems to be using.

    It's more specific than 'BP Blowout' (for obvious reasons)

    It's also more specific than 'Macondo Blowout' (The Macondo Prospect, as wikipedia tells me, is the name of the field, which presumably might still have another blowout at some point in the future. Deepwater Horizon, having sunk to the bottom of the ocean, is unlikely to have any future blowouts.)

    --
    The English word fart is one of the oldest words in the English vocabulary.
  41. Re:decomission nuclear subs by dragonbutt · · Score: 0

    Couldn't we park a couple of navy designed reactors off shore and run some jumper cables to the grid? They seem have the most reliable designs.

    --
    it was like that when I got here.. I wasen't here when that happened... second shift musta done that....
  42. Hopeful dreaming and not a done deal by dbIII · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I suggest watching the current Russian efforts at getting a large liquid sodium reactor going before putting all your faith in such a thing. There are major problems to solve that the French and the US were unable to sort out in the 1990s that made such a technology unworkable at a large scale, that's the real story behind the cancelled program. If the Russians can get it to work or some local R&D can solve the problems you'll have something to talk about, but for now what you are selling as a done deal is nothing but hopeful dreaming.

    1. Re:Hopeful dreaming and not a done deal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      French and the US were unable to sort out in the 1990s that made such a technology unworkable at a large scale, that's the real story behind the cancelled program

      The 4th generation reactor program hasn't been cancelled.

    2. Re:Hopeful dreaming and not a done deal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What problems? One reactor has been working for 30 years now and continues working. Another worked for 25 years and was decommissioned only because it ended up in a different country after the USSR breakup. No problems at all. The technology is proven.

  43. Hyperion Power Generation is another company by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hyperion Power Generation is selling their "nuclear battery" which uses technology developed by Los Alamos National Laboratory.

    "Each module will cost $50 million. Initial deliveries, slated to begin in the second half of 2013, are being scheduled."

    Reactor Power 70MW thermal
    Electrical Output 25MW electric
    Lifetime 8 to 10 years
    Size (meters) 1.5w by 2.5h
    Weight (ton) Less than 50

  44. thorium? by robh1 · · Score: 1

    It's a great idea that still needs a lot of work. If LFTR's can be designed properly the economic, safety, and security benefits of thorium can be put to good use.

    1. Re:thorium? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ditto.

      After watching the Google videos, I become a cautious fan of LFTR technology. It solves many of the problems with Uranium-based reactor design.

      Not going to happen though, too much Uranium technology inertia.

      Maybe another country like France or China will pave the way.

  45. Standard Amory Lovins: by Hartree · · Score: 2, Informative

    Lovins isn't just against nuclear for the (IMHO rather simplistic) economic arguments he gives here.

    Back in the 80s he was asked what he would think of a truly cheap, clean and plentiful source of energy. He said it would a great disaster. Why? Because he felt that given any concentrated source of energy, humans would use it to wreak havoc on nature. Thus, it would be better to only have diffuse and limited sources.

    So I'm a bit skeptical of his real motives in putting this out.

    I will give him this, he's at least fairly consistent. I went to see one of his talks in the 80s, and he was basicly on a similar message with respect to the economy of nuclear power.

    He also said that we really didn't need any new sources of power, that conservation and limiting of our growth/what we did meant that we already had enough. At the time, I remarked that he was allowing no chance for less developed populations (India and China) to increase their standard of living, but that wasn't addressed.

    He's got a fairly appealing line of talk but when you start really looking, it doesn't measure up.

    1. Re:Standard Amory Lovins: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He's got a fairly appealing line of talk but when you start really looking, it doesn't measure up.

      Care to make a fact-based challenge to anything Lovins has said about nuclear power being an inferior solution to the problem of global warming? There are links in this thread to plenty of his arguments if you need current references.

    2. Re:Standard Amory Lovins: by Hartree · · Score: 1

      (Completely ignoring the fact that Lovins claimed in the 80s we really wouldn't need more power. A claim that disregarded the modernization of much of the world. His "negawatts" of efficiency never materialized and were likely unachieveable.)

      Ok. Just from the linked paper: Lovins claims that the unreliability of wind is not a real problem. Yet, we see in today's slashdot articles a report that recently turbines had to be shut down due to grid disruption. Yes, it's a soluble problem, but you can't just dismiss it the way Lovins does.

      He's hard to pin down as the paper the original AC (You?) linked to is short on specifics. Chasing his arguments gets to be sort of a whack-a-mole game. He mentions that building mounted PV will be able to supply the worlds energy needs. Thus he says that nuclear has a much greater use of ground space. I find that an unconvincing argument to say the least.

      That's just a couple of instant examples from that one paper. I'm guessing you want highly researched and specific answers to his generalities. We have here the asymmetry of one side being able to link to a prepared PDF from RMI, and I have to chase down chains of articles in order to find out just what he's claiming these days. One could make a career out of that.

    3. Re:Standard Amory Lovins: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      (Completely ignoring the fact that Lovins claimed in the 80s we really wouldn't need more power. A claim that disregarded the modernization of much of the world. His "negawatts" of efficiency never materialized and were likely unachieveable.)

      You haven't provided a cite or quote for that 80's stuff. But if you read about California's efforts at increasing energy efficiency:

      A few years ago, the California Energy Commission calculated that the state’s efficiency efforts had preempted the need for 24 large-scale power plants and saved state consumers $56 billion.

      Rosenfeld says the past generation’s gains indicate the state can improve its energy intensity (the amount of energy required to produce each dollar of GDP) by about 30 percent every decade. “Efficiency,” he says with a twinkle, “seems to be a renewable resource.”

      Efficiency (aka conservation) wiped out 24 new plants.

      You say:
      [...]

      We have here the asymmetry of one side being able to link to a prepared PDF from RMI, and I have to chase down chains of articles in order to find out just what he's claiming these days. One could make a career out of that.

      You can lead a horse to water...

    4. Re:Standard Amory Lovins: by Hartree · · Score: 1

      You haven't provided a cite or quote for that 80's stuff

      Sorry, but much of that particular one was Lovins himself talking at the University of Illinois in the late 80s. I'd love to give you video, but streaming and cellphone cams were a dream at that time. I doubt you'll consider my memory credible, regardless that it is eyewitness testimony.

      As to the quote on a cheap clean source of power : The Mother Earth-Plowboy Interview, Nov/Dec 1977, p.22

      "If you ask me, it'd be a little short of disastrous for us to discover a source of clean, cheap, abundant energy because of what we would do with it. We ought to be looking for energy sources that are adequate for our needs, but that won't give us the excesses of concentrated energy with which we could do mischief to the earth or to each other."

      I did take a bit more time to look at his more detailed paper (from RMI, not published in peer review as it wouldn't bear up under that) Four Nuclear Myths. For starts, the papers he references come to the exact opposite conclusion to what he says about the relative land use. But he uses the numbers selectively comparing a result from one paper to another. The original paers each come to different conclusions than Lovins. That's hardly good scientific procedure there. And this is from just with a quick perusal round the net. Hardly the kind of work that one would expect in a quality study. (Disclaimer: That comes from a pro-nuke site. Unfortunately, unlike Lovins, I don't do this for a living so I'm limited in the depth I can research "on the spot".)

      For one possible comparison: http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0006802
      That's done for the Nature Conservancy, not some pro-nuke group. It comes to the opposite conclusion from Lovins.

      Secondly, the Atlantic article you cite talks about savings from efficiency. That's hardly something to dispute. But Lovins wasn't the main driver for that. Money and the California State Government were. I'm quite happy to exploit effiency for all that's economical, but it's not the panacea that he claims.

      This particular horse is happy to drink the water of real energy efficiency. But claiming that nuclear uses less land than wind or solar comes closer to koolaid, IMHO.

      Given a choice between Lovins and Stewart Brand, I'll go with Brand in a minute.

      One other disclaimer, I'm still kind of boggled that Foresight Institute put Lovins on its board of advisors. I don't consider him to rate up with people like Larry Lessig, Marvin Minsky or Ray Kurzweil, but YMMV. So, it's reasonable to consider me a bit less than neutral source on him.

    5. Re:Standard Amory Lovins: by Hartree · · Score: 1

      But claiming that nuclear uses less land than wind or solar

      That should be "more", obviously.

      Must be getting old. Previewed it twice and still missed that one.

    6. Re:Standard Amory Lovins: by geekoid · · Score: 1

      "Efficiency (aka conservation) wiped out 24 new plants."

      No, it didn't. It made it so they didn't need to be made right away. Efficiency only goes so far. We are picking the last of the low hanging fruit regarding efficiency.

      It's a good thing, but it can only go so far.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  46. A libertarian proposing govt subsidies? by bigtrike · · Score: 1

    Proposing government action through tax breaks and using state owned energy companies as an example to follow hardly seems like a libertarian position.

  47. IFR cancelation: by Hartree · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I thought it was interesting the reason given when the cancellation of the IFR was mentioned in Clinton's first state of the union speech. It was that we would never need it, and thus it was a waste of money.

    To say the least, I disagreed.

  48. The NIMBY effect is trivial by dbIII · · Score: 1

    Public outcry didn't stop the Iraq war for example. Half the time when it looks like protest is effective the reality is "it's too bloody expensive and the investors are nervous".
    People also do stupid things like blame the closure of a French nuclear plant on an RPG attack on it by idiots 13 years previously.

  49. Re:put them all over as the power grid is not setu by Omniscient+Lurker · · Score: 1

    Except solar is more limited in where it can go. A nuclear plant can go just about anywhere.

  50. It's a problem of cost by bigtrike · · Score: 1

    Reprocessing is expensive. The French are only able to do it with massive government subsidies.

    1. Re:It's a problem of cost by delt0r · · Score: 1

      The same can be said about solar and wind energy.

      --
      If information wants to be free, why does my internet connection cost so much?
  51. Only nonsense if it's used as nonsense by dbIII · · Score: 2, Insightful

    With respect, peak oil is about the wet stuff we can get to easily. Once there's less of it coming out of the ground things get more expensive because the alternatives are more expensive.
    You've been misled by manipulative bastards pushing some agenda into misunderstanding a very simple term describing a simple problem.

  52. Nuclear plant life by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    For a moment, I was thinking about nuclear plant life growing near chernobyl.

  53. Predicting Peaks by jmactacular · · Score: 1

    It's worth mentioning the United States already peaked for domestic oil production back in the 70's as Dr. Hubbert predicted. I like the idea of decentralized generation, let's get our power onsite at our homes and destinations. Save about 20% on losses over long line distribution. But all the unreliable renewables can't compare to fossil fuels in terms of energy density. It's not even close. I happen to think our only real hope, especially in light of escalating demand in China and India, is an unprecedented moon-shot type breakthrough in physics with nuclear fusion (hot) technology, if they can get a net positive EROEI. Of course there is that stat that drives me crazy that says "the earth receives more energy in an hour than the world uses in a year", if we could only harness it. Essentially all energy comes from the sun. Sun feeds the plants, that decayed, that got compressed over eons into fossil fuels. Sun feeds the plants that feeds the animals that gives us our energy from food as humans. The sun interacts with the atmosphere to create winds. etc...

  54. Geothermal Power by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 2, Informative

    Geothermal power plants are the best substitute for nuke plants. They're highly efficient, create practically no emissions (especially once they're built), are fast to build and put online, present practically no security or pollution risks, and generate continuous baseloads. They don't depend on finite supplies of dirty fuel mostly produced in dirty ways mostly in foreign countries. All at scales only nuke plants have delivered. With a smart electric grid routing power around the country, even the few places where they can't be built at all (because of faultlines) can still get their power.

    --

    --
    make install -not war

    1. Re:Geothermal Power by benhattman · · Score: 1

      And what about peak-molten-core?

  55. Re:put them all over as the power grid is not setu by aliquis · · Score: 1

    A nuclear plant can go just about anywhere.

    Preferably "somewhere else" ;)

    Much more true for the (especially) mining and (to the extent needed) waste storage though.

  56. Unit size by Animats · · Score: 3, Insightful

    There are a few useful sizes at which to build such things as nuclear reactors. One useful size is what can be transported on a railroad car or a heavy-equipment transporter truck. That's as big as you can get and still build the thing in a factory, which has substantial cost advantages over on-site construction. The upper limit for this seems to be around 135 MWe.

    Wind turbines have a size problem, too. Somewhere around 3MW, they become too big to transport assembled by road or rail, even with the blades shipped separately. Better generator design seems to help with this. Enercon has been able to get up to 10MW or so with a no-gearbox generator design and still ship the parts by road. The very large machines require more on-site assembly.

  57. Not energy efficiency: fear efficiency. by goodmanj · · Score: 2, Insightful

    First: if you're not reading The Oil Drum, you should be.

    But on to my point. The controlling factor for building nuclear power plants is not money or power, but fear. Fear of contamination controls the decade-long permitting process. Fear of terrorist attack or accident controls the number of guards, monitoring personnel, and operators who work at the plant on a daily basis. The majority of the expense of actually building the plant goes into safety and security systems.

    Now, some of these fears are reasonable. But that's not the point: the point is that a small power plant is just as scary as a large one.

    The best power plant is not the most energy efficient one, or even the one that's strictly speaking the safest. It's the one that produces the least amount of fear per gigawatt. And that means building gigantic plants.

  58. Russian and Japanese experience: by Hartree · · Score: 3, Informative

    You mean like the liquid sodium Russian BN600 (600 MW electric fast breeder power plant) that's been running since 1980?

    It's had some problems, but nothing that couldn't be repaired and put back online.

    Or maybe like the Japanese Monju plant? It had a sodium fire, but that was due to a bad design on a temperature sensor rather than anything to do with sodium itself as a coolant. It's back online now. Much of the reason it took so long was due to a scandal with the management covering up and the resulting court cases. It wasn't the technical problems that stopped it for all that time but the legal/political ones.

    Sodium reactors have been around since the 50s at least. Yes, there are problems with embrittlement and the reactivity of the coolant, but it's hardly a show stopper. They're known and manageable problems.

    What led to the shutdown of the program was the opposition of John Kerry and others, not technical problems with the sodium coolant.

    1. Re:Russian and Japanese experience: by lennier · · Score: 1

      It had a sodium fire, but that was due to a bad design on a temperature sensor rather than anything to do with sodium itself as a coolant.

      Other than that liquid sodium explodes on contact with water...

      But fortunately there'll never be another fire in a sodium reactor!

      --
      You are not a brain: http://books.google.com/books?id=2oV61CeDx-YC
    2. Re:Russian and Japanese experience: by Hartree · · Score: 1

      But fortunately there'll never be another fire in a sodium reactor!

      Sure there will. Just like there will be fires and explosions at refineries. You see, we keep this hazardous material called gasoline around all over the place often in completely unsuitable and uncontrolled storages.

      Unlike that, the sodium is in a containment building and subject to a lot of controls. All you're saying is that it's a hazardous material to work with. Given. But it's one that can be managed pretty easily.

      We work with a lot of dangerous stuff in industrial society, even in things we don't think of as hazardous. Try working next to a hydrogenation plant in a cooking oil factory sometime. High temperatures, hot oil, hydrogen, catalysts. Mix those and it'll be happy to go boom. Yum. Yum.

      BN 600 has had minor sodium fires, and it's gone back online quickly. Monju had a bad sodium fire and it was held up going back online due to human problems rather than technical ones.

    3. Re:Russian and Japanese experience: by dbIII · · Score: 2, Interesting

      You mean like the liquid sodium Russian BN600

      There's plans for a larger one but I'm not sure what stage they are up to.

      It's had some problems, but nothing that couldn't be repaired and put back online.

      Very frequent repairs and replacements, which is my entire point about problems that need to be solved with large liquid metal reactors.

      It had a sodium fire, but that was due to a bad design on a temperature sensor

      Did the temperature sensor actually weaken the structure and cause the leak? Obviously not. It simply failed to carry the message that something else was wrong.

      Yes, there are problems with embrittlement and the reactivity of the coolant, but it's hardly a show stopper. They're known and manageable problems.

      They are well known problems but everyone has had a lot of problems managing them. Anywhere that you have a lot of neutron damage is where you get microcracking - and then if a liquid metal gets into the microcracks you rapidly end up with very large cracks which is why all the liquid sodium reactors to date have had problems with leaks in the last places where you want them - close to the radioactive stuff. Solve that and the concept has a future. It's not solved now so you have to give people credit for taking that into consideration a few years ago instead of blaming it on political tribalism.
      This is where R&D is the way to go and prototypes of reactor components instead of the "instant nuclear now with untested crap or well known crap so we can get our hands on that lovely money from the taxpayers". It's almost worth giving up on the entire stuck in the 1960s US nuclear industry and outsourcing the lot to India, or going for a purely government run effort to get around confidence tricksters like Westinghouse.

    4. Re:Russian and Japanese experience: by Hartree · · Score: 1

      Did the temperature sensor actually weaken the structure and cause the leak? Obviously not. It simply failed to carry the message that something else was wrong.

      No. The failure was in a sensor tube extended into the flow of the sodium in a pipe. This wasn't in the primary cooling where you'd get neutron activation. It was in the secondary system. It hadn't been designed properly (and possibly had a defective weld) and broke in the flow. That released the non-radioactive sodium, and some of it caught fire or at least reacted with the water in the air. Most of it ended up on the floor. It was a vibration induced stress failure, not due to embrittlement or overheat.

    5. Re:Russian and Japanese experience: by HungryHobo · · Score: 1

      far safer than living next to a pesticide plant at least....

    6. Re:Russian and Japanese experience: by rufty_tufty · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Never mind hydrogenation - flour is a remarkably explosive substance as is custard powder and people eat those things!
      Bring on the plutonium!!!

      --
      "The weirdest thing about a mind, is that every answer that you find, is the basis of a brand new cliche" -
    7. Re:Russian and Japanese experience: by dbIII · · Score: 1

      OK, so it DID actually weaken the structure and cause the leak. Thanks for pointing that out and it's good to actually find someone taking a nuclear power thread seriously for once.

    8. Re:Russian and Japanese experience: by Hartree · · Score: 1

      Thanks for pointing that out and it's good to actually find someone taking a nuclear power thread seriously for once.

      Ditto. Too often these discussions degenerate pretty quickly.

      And I definitely agree with you that more research needs to be done. IFR was a project I think should have been persued, but wasn't going to be an instant solution to all our problems. Advanced reactor designs don't just spring into being overnight and even continuing the funding for it didn't guarantee that it would fully work out to commercial standards. I think it had a good chance, though.

      Nuclear power is a complex beast not just in the technical areas, but also in the political, risk balancing and economic ones. It looks like we may see another round of nuclear power plant building in the US. But it's not there yet. Some of the advanced reactor designs discussed may be useful in the future, but again, they aren't there yet.

      There are really only two things I'm sure of about our energy future. First, it won't be one source that will be needed. Second, regardless of the sources we choose to develop and use, there will be problems. (How's that for pretty useless generalities? ;)

      Expanding nuclear may be a part of that, but I'm also for using a lot of other things when they make sense economically. Renewables and efficiency improvements will (and already have) play a part, but again, they won't be the full solution. Personally, I'd like to see a lot more passive solar incorporated into building and housing designs.

      Fossil fuel is king right now, but there are big and well known problems with it. I'd like to move away from it where possible.

    9. Re:Russian and Japanese experience: by Hartree · · Score: 1

      Oh, I know about organic dust. I live a couple blocks from a grain elevator that had a dust explosion in the 60s. And that' not the only nearby mishap with fairly ordinary materials that can be hazardous in the right circumstances.

      Over in Decatur, IL they destroyed a rail yard when LPG cars were damaged and blew up: http://www3.gendisasters.com/illinois/13000/decatur-il-tank-cars-explode-july-1974

      My oldest brother had worked for the railroad and they asked him to come back for that one. Among other work, he was helping unload a car full of TNT that had been knocked off the tracks by the explosion while some of the fires were still burning. Probably not all that dangerous, really, but not very reassuring.

      I regularly drive through a town a little north of me, Crescent City, IL, which had the downtown leveled with a BLEVE from LPG cars when I was a kid. Video (Russian language.): http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ic-YJYb7xL8

      We have a weird mix of tolerating some types of risk that probably should be more closely controlled while getting bent out of shape over ones that are far lower risk.

  59. Re:put them all over as the power grid is not setu by LoRdTAW · · Score: 1

    You also have to consider the amount of land the coal plat sits on and the local weather patterns.

  60. Sodium coolant neutron activation: non-issue: by Hartree · · Score: 4, Informative

    Yes, sodium gets activated by the neutrons. Yes, it's highly radioactive then. But, it's quite short lived (15 hours for Na-24, 2.6 years for Na-22) so it's not as big a problem as you imply. Na-22 is a beta decay, so that's not problematic. Na-24 is the one that has dangerous radiation as it emits gammas. But with a 15 hour half life, it decays very quickly.

    The daughter products aren't a problem either (Ne-22 and Mg-24), they're both stable.

    1. Re:Sodium coolant neutron activation: non-issue: by GooberToo · · Score: 1

      Can't they run dehumidifiers to remove a large percentage of humidity from the air to help prevent or at least slow potential sodium fires? Or do they already so that? Or is the area so large its simply not feasible? Or is the level of required humidity reduction to great to be considered practical?

    2. Re:Sodium coolant neutron activation: non-issue: by Hartree · · Score: 1

      That gets beyond my level of knowledge on that as to how tightly controlled the humidity levels in Monju or similar plants are. Even looking at the video from when they sent in workers to inspect the plant after the leak, it wasn't clear how tightly sealed that area was. It looked like it was fairly tight, but whether you could lower it enough to be helpful and still have it be reasonable for humans to work in, I'm not sure. Maybe someone else in the discussion knows.

      In any case, sodium getting loose from the piping is something to avoid in the first place.

    3. Re:Sodium coolant neutron activation: non-issue: by delt0r · · Score: 1

      Its just not practical and you have the problem that you can still leak Na to a area where its not "dry". On top of that hot Na reacts with many more things than just water. It would be cheaper and easier to not use liquid sodium. Its why i like molten salt reactors and homogeneous reactors in general.

      --
      If information wants to be free, why does my internet connection cost so much?
    4. Re:Sodium coolant neutron activation: non-issue: by tgibbs · · Score: 1

      I've worked with Na-22. It definitely puts out plenty of gamma. I could easily read the radioactivity through a lead brick. But I agree that with a half-life of a couple of years, it's not much of a concern in terms of nuclear waste.

    5. Re:Sodium coolant neutron activation: non-issue: by Hartree · · Score: 1

      Thanks for the correction. I misread my source, and you're right, it's not just a beta.

  61. Thorium Power by hydromike2 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The future of energy is in thorium. It a) cant be weaponized, b) is cleaner, c) does not need to be throttled up like uranium. They are developing these plants in other parts of the world such as india.

    1. Re:Thorium Power by iammani · · Score: 2, Informative

      Not to mention, it is abundant!

    2. Re:Thorium Power by hydromike2 · · Score: 1

      I have a prof doing research with it, I have heard his pitch for thorium more times than I can count, it is supposed to be abundant enough to provide energy for 30,000 years for the entire planet, I suppose that number would change with growth and increased energy use but even so it seems to be a big part of thte puzzle to our energy woes.

    3. Re:Thorium Power by TheTurtlesMoves · · Score: 1

      Thorium can and was weaponized. The US tested one U233 bomb. Sure is a valid fuel cycle, but any reactor is a weapon risk even just as a neutron source.

      --
      The Grey Goo disaster happened 3 billion years ago. This rock is covered in self replicating machines!
    4. Re:Thorium Power by geekoid · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but you would be an idiot to build a bomb out of it. It's harder to work with, and easier to detect.

      U233 is not Thorium.Thorium is 232. You can get U233 from thorium, but as I initially mentioned, you would be an idiot to do it.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    5. Re:Thorium Power by hydromike2 · · Score: 1

      In a thorium reactor some Thorium 233 will be produced, but it has half life on the order of minutes. The Thorium 233 decays into Protactinium 233 which decays into Uranium 233 after 27 days. My point is that the actual fuel is not what would be used as a weapon.

    6. Re:Thorium Power by TheTurtlesMoves · · Score: 1

      U233 is the fuel, as its fissile. Th is fertile as in it can be turned into fuel. A Th fuel *cycle* uses U233 as the fuel.

      --
      The Grey Goo disaster happened 3 billion years ago. This rock is covered in self replicating machines!
    7. Re:Thorium Power by TheTurtlesMoves · · Score: 2, Insightful

      So put a U238 blanket around your reactor. Chemically separate the Pu and bobs your uncle. Any strong neutron source is a proliferation risk. Claiming otherwise is false.

      --
      The Grey Goo disaster happened 3 billion years ago. This rock is covered in self replicating machines!
    8. Re:Thorium Power by TheTurtlesMoves · · Score: 1

      Oh and i forgot. Most Th reactors *require* the separation of Protactinium 233 from the breeding environment for neutron economy reasons. Since this is chemical separation it can be done relatively easily, and can be very pure with minimal amounts of Protactinium 234. So now you can just take the X kgs of Protactinium and wait about 200 days and now you have a nice chuck of pure U233 with a very low U234 content (the bit that makes it hard to handle).

      The comment about Th 232 not being U233 makes me think you know nothing about a Th fuel cycle. See my other comment below.

      --
      The Grey Goo disaster happened 3 billion years ago. This rock is covered in self replicating machines!
  62. Re:How about those Nuclear Space Probe batteries.. by Bigjeff5 · · Score: 1

    Yeah, those are extremely low output. It would probably be a lot more descriptive to call them "radiation batteries" instead of "nuclear" (though "nuclear" is not incorrect, it's just not fission or fusion power).

    They last forever, but you'd be lucky if you could start your car with one, let alone drive it on a nuclear battery.

    --
    Security is mostly a superstition... Avoiding danger is no safer in the long run than outright exposure. - Helen Keller
  63. Sigh by WindBourne · · Score: 2

    Doc, you are way off-line here. The reason why America is in trouble is because it became dependent on Fossil Fuel, mostly imported. Now, I am a HUGE fan of geo-thermal, BUT, the last thing that I want is to be fully dependent on it, or any singular form of energy. Instead, we need a matrix of energy. Ideally, each energy stream will provide no more than 1/3 of our total energy.

    Right now, Nukes provide about 18% of our electricity. As such, it provides less than 10% of total energy. Ideally, we would bring it up to at least 20% of our total energy. At the same time, we should bring geo-thermal up to 20% as quickly as possible. Sadly, it will not happen. However, it is the smartest thing that we can do.

    Finally, doc, I would also argue that we should build more energy storage as well as solar thermal addition to current fossil fuel plants. The storage would enable nighttime collection of electricity esp. from geo-thermal, wind, nukes, etc and then add to the matrix during the daytime.

    --
    I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
    1. Re:Sigh by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

      I didn't say that we should become fully dependent on geothermal generation. Though I don't see what the risk is, I'm against any monopoly, whether by people or by a technology, when there are alternatives that better fit some demands.

      But we should replace all our nukes with geothermal. Nukes are dirty, dangerous and expensive. They're dependent on supplies of the rarest elements, the proliferation of which creates even more serious security risks in weapons. They should be phased out.

      By the time you'd built an extra 10% of our capacity in nuke plants, at least 10-12 years and more like 15-20-30, we could have built an extra 40% (2-4 years each) in geothermal, and maybe a lot more. Which would let us phase out the 10% nukes currently contribute. Meanwhile adding all the other energy generation systems - and efficiency systems - wherever we can make or save energy. And yes, we should both build energy storage systems, whether thermal, gravity, electrochemical or otherwise, as well as invest in inventing and perfecting new ones.

      I never said we should pursue only geothermal. But we should shunt all our enthusiasm for nukes into geothermal instead. And do a lot more than that.

      --

      --
      make install -not war

  64. Re:put them all over as the power grid is not setu by toastar · · Score: 2, Funny

    You can reuse the steam turbines and electric generators with solar thermal power plants as well.

    Haven't you ever played sim city? You can't replace a Coal Plant with Just one solar plant.

    A solar plant with the same foot print as the coal plant might get 50 Mwatts, Where the coal plant it's replacing is usually around 500 Mwatts.

    Whereas most nuke plants are like 1000-2500 Mwatts.

  65. Terrible summary opening by noidentity · · Score: 1
    This is not a good way to start a summary about the rise of nuclear power plants:

    The Oil Drum (one of the best sites to discuss the technical details of the Macondo Blowout) is typically focused on ramifications of petroleum use, and in particular the Peak Oil theory. They run short guest articles from time to time on various aspects of energy use and policies.

    Two sentences in, and I'm still wondering what this has to do with nuclear power plants. Sounds like an ad for the site. You could mention these things, but later in the summary.

  66. How did you get modded up? by WindBourne · · Score: 1

    You should have read the main article, or have some knowledge BEFORE speaking. In the article, they will tell you about B&W. They are the ones making the reactors for our subs. Now, they are going to make them for shore. How economical are they? Well, according to the NAVY, it is many times cheaper to have the nuke than a diesel. The reason is that a diesel requires taking fuel to the sub. In addition, more space is taken up by the fuel than by the reactor. Finally, with diesel, you can not go on extend voyages, which is exactly what a boomer needs during crisis times. For example, right now, we have parked at least 1 boomer off of North Korea's coastline. ANd I am sure that we have another in the China sea. Basically, we watch NK and China constantly. But it would be difficult to do this with a diesel, since it would have to come up for air. With a nuke, it goes out and stays out, under the water.

    --
    I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
  67. By making a valid point? by Chris+Burke · · Score: 1

    I did read the article. B&W and Westinghouse, who also makes naval nukes, obviously aren't going to be building the same reactors, so what?

    All the things you say about naval nuclear are real advantages for certain naval vessels, but that's not the same thing as it being economical. Oh sure, it's cheaper to have a nuclear plant on a sub than to run the logistical supply chain to keep it fueled up with diesel while coming up to the surface defeating the whole purpose of a nuclear missile attack sub. That's like saying the Space Shuttle is economical because it's cheaper than a staircase to the ISS especially since you still couldn't actually dock with it. What that's really saying is that the one option, regardless of cost, simply doesn't have the needed capability.

    There are situations where a nuclear reactor has insurmountable advantages. Large carriers or cruisers, long-range attack or ballistic missile subs are places where that's the case. For more plentiful, cheaper vessels they don't use it. Because a Naval nuclear reactor isn't about cost, it's about the raw capabilities it provides.

    Obviously the needs of such a reactor are very different than something that isn't being installed in a warship. I don't suppose that for some reason you thought I was saying small reactors couldn't be economical? That's not my point at all. My point is the Navy doesn't care about economics to a significant degree in the situations where only nukes will do, and there's nothing cheap about the ones they use and for good reason. Thus they are not an example of an economical small reactor.

    --

    The enemies of Democracy are
  68. May Allah grant UBL many mini-NPPs to blow up! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Mini-reactors for power are a stupid idea. Many small nuclear powerstations = many echelons of armed security personnel needed to guard them and exponential paranoia about their security situation. Every nuclear reactor can become a dirty bomb to contaminate a county or shire, if overrun by self-sacrifice jihadists.

    Here in Hungary, our single NPP at Paks City (with 4 x 480MW reactors) has its own dedicated SWAT team, called the Neutron Commando, on-site 7x24x365, even though we are not a significant international terror target. We are a small country, with little international presence to offend anyone, yet it is necessary to maintain costly security measures to comply with UN IAEA regulations and have peace of mind.

    Otherwise, whoever suggests spent nuclear fuel reprocessing is out of his/her mind. Reprocessing facilities are notorious for regularly suffering nasty chemical explosions spewing poisonous and highly radioactive material all around, be it USSR, Japan or the USA. It is an inherently dangerous method, which is both expensive and time-consuming, forcing operators to cut corners for profitability and the result is predictably ka-boom. The world's worst nuclear accident was the 1957 Mayak reprocessing explosion in the USSR.

  69. No water in the desert? by spauldo · · Score: 1

    Deserts tend to have water. They just don't get a lot of rain. People in Arizona still get water when they turn on their tap.

    There are coal plants in the desert, and nuclear plants really don't use any more water than coal plants do. The water in the reactor gets recycled back through, so unless you reactor leaks (which is a major problem which would get fixed quickly) you only really use the water in the turbine, and even that can be reclaimed if you need to. Of course, if your goal is create hydrogen, you'll need a good source of water, but there's plenty of rivers that flow in the middle of nowhere in the southwest (Colorado, Rio Grande, etc.) that could be tapped.

    (You're right that there are reactor designs that don't use water, but steam turbine technology is probably the most mature and reliable way of turning the generators, so you'll still need water.)

    The desert (mostly) fixes the NIMBY problem. The problem the desert doesn't fix is that the grid isn't set up for it. Obama has made noise about modernizing our electric grid, so perhaps large solar farms and nuke plants in the desert will become feasible.

    --
    Those who can't do, teach. Those who can't teach either, do tech support.
  70. You mean the reprocessing that the US banned by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You mean the reprocessing that the US banned North Korea and Iran from doing to make their nuclear power stations because "it is a front for nuclear weapons creation"? So how come this new "one and only way" forward is one where the US can successfully stop countries it doesn't like (and don't like them) from using, whereas solar power, wind power etc are "no replacement" yet aren't prone to the creation of weapons of Mass Destruction?

    1. Re:You mean the reprocessing that the US banned by HungryHobo · · Score: 1

      meh, if they want they'll just say the factorys producing the solvents for making the solar pannels are being used to create chemical weapons.
      If they want a pretext for war they can just claim the renewable bioreactors are being used as a cover for producing bioweapons.
      nothing changes.

    2. Re:You mean the reprocessing that the US banned by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Moron.

      The objection, in of itself, isn't that they want to reprocess fuel. The objection is that they are unstable countries and/or which support militant and terrorist groups alike. The combination makes for an extremely bad combination and understandable so, feared by anyone who isn't an idiot.

      Many other countries reprocess fuel in Europe and you don't see the world making a stink about it. Again, its not the act of reprocessing which is the primary concern. Its the fact that the countries are run by fucking crazy, ignorant, and hateful people which opens a literal Pandora's box if they are permitted to do so.

  71. Re:put them all over as the power grid is not setu by HungryHobo · · Score: 4, Informative

    In the US in situ leaching is used.
    Basicly you pump a mix of water and baking soda into the ground and the uranium disolves in it.
    Then you pump it back up and extract the uranium.
    Baking soda isn't high on my list of things I'm afraid of getting in my water.
    Pretty clean and safe.

    waste storage wouldn't be too hard if it was treated as a technical problem, unfortunatly politicians who consider the words "nuclear" and "satanic" interchangable screwed that one up.

  72. No-One ? by nukenerd · · Score: 1

    You need to store the spent fuel somewhere; no one wants to live near a nuclear dump. Even if it is out in the middle of nowhere you still have to transport the fuel there (through citys? on major highways?)

    No-one? Let's correct that. My handle isn't Nukenerd for nothing. They can put an underground nuclear waste dump vertically under my house for all I care. What is the issue?

    However, I would not want the entrance near me because it is bound to be a traffic nuisance. Not the waste delivery traffic itself (there is not in fact a lot of waste to deal with) but the cars of the zillions of office workers that seem to accompany any operation these days. But that would be the same with any project, nuclear or not. In fact nuclear waste traffic would be insignficant compared with the traffic and activity associated with some of the electricity schemes advocated by the greens.

  73. I think it's great by hesaigo999ca · · Score: 1

    Have more smaller plants so a) if there is an accident, the disaster is not as big...b) they cost less to make, and the more you bring on line at a time the quicker the return on your investment.....c) they would need smaller teams of people to function, and would cost less in personnel to maintain,....d) should at anytime we need such things as nuclear materials for making any sort of quick weapons
    for xxx reason, a few strategically placed plants might make getting materials easier for deployment. This is of course only for national security (that last one)....you terrorists out there, don't read into this, I was not talking to you!

  74. Dare I say it? by s_p_oneil · · Score: 1

    It's the McReactor. While I do agree we need to start heading in a direction like this, security concerns are pretty high surrounding anything involving nuclear material. While the business aspects may point to cheaper nuclear power with McReactors, the costs of securing a bunch of small nuclear reactors would be significant IMO. Maybe we could start a pilot project where the first ones are built on military bases? While each reactor would still need its own security, having it in an already secured area would help.

  75. Your sig by Cro+Magnon · · Score: 3, Funny

    You couldn't have a better sig for that post!

    --
    Slow down, cowboy! It has been 4 hours since you last posted. You must wait another few hours.
  76. 3 good reasons nukes bad by cinnamon+colbert · · Score: 1

    1) today, in the us, nukes are economically unviable without huge gov't subsidys (aka welfare or socialism in other contexts) due to the potentially catastrophic nature of accidents 2) Civilian nukes help the spread of military nukes, because the sophisticated exotic technologys are, to some extent, fungible 3) and best of all we have better options The country that has the courage and foresight to turn away from nukes, and invest hundreds of billions in solar and wind and storage and mundane things like more efficient light bulbs and motors will be the economic powerhouse of hte 21st century. Further,we know that huge decade long gov't investments in RnD pay off: its called aerospace, computers and biotech; each of these industrys, a standout in our economy, became realistic because of long term gov't investment in basic RnD I sort of view nukes as an intelligence test for big picture thinking; since there are better alternatives, onlly someone who can't graps the big picture would bother to argue the technical merits.

    1. Re:3 good reasons nukes bad by geekoid · · Score: 1

      1) Not true. Even id it where, so what? the energy is clean and needed.

      2) Sometime and somteome not. depends on the plant type. However,again so what? we can already make nukes whenever the hell we want.

      3) Fasle. at this moment, using 4th gen reactors, ones the burn are current waste we have, are the best solution. I'll let you in on a little secret:

      Wind is only viable in certain places and certain times. In more places it's not reliable enough. Did you know there is different kinds of wind? and that some are better the others? no? STFU about wind until you learn the basics. I the places where it is actually viable, sure, use it.

      Solar - Panels. Not cheap enough yet. And people have been poring a lot of money into it for years. Right now, it would be considered a break through to gt 1% more out of household panels. and we would need at least 20 of those "breakthroughs" before it becomes wide scale viable.

      Solar - Industrial thermal
      This need to get moving along even faster then ti currently is. Personally I would love to the government build a huge IST plant outside of phoenix and build it to power phoenix. Keep the development open and use it as a research and real world information for private companies to build them. sell the electricity for cost to pheonix. Use ti t work out any issues.

      Even with that, we need 4th gen nukes if we want clean air and a reduction of fossil fuel use.

      Putting money into solar doesn't mean it will happen. It's not like if the had a billion dollars they could change physics. again, if you don't understand the [physic of solar panels, STFU abut it until you get some basic understanding.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    2. Re:3 good reasons nukes bad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      re point 1 - this is silly to argue about. Surely you know that the Fed Gov has huge welfare programs, aka insurance supplements. Without the Fed Gov guaranteeing to pay claims beyond normal commercial insurance limits, every nuke would shut down today. If you have facts to dispute this, please post and i will try to give a logical, reasoned response.
      2) I really don't understand you answer. Do you agree with president Reagan, that the spread of nuclear weapons is a , if not the, most serious threat to our national security ? then anything that helps the spread of nuclear weapons has a big strike against it; any civilian program helps, because it gives the host gov't reason to do all sorts of things that might be hard to disquise otherwise - like training medical personnel in how to do decon/treatment for high level alpha exposure, something that is pretty rare (I think) with medical or industrial isotopes (eg, medical waste is mCi, vs megaCi, sterilizers are e beam or gamma, don't know about industrial x ray equip)

      3) physics is a funny thing. Lots of people make assertions grounded in "fundamental" physics that turn out to be wrong; surely you know that there is a long history here. for instance, about 15 years ago, there was a big panic over Electromagnetic cell phone radiation. A distinguished physicist at Yale published a paper claiming, on "basic physics" that the amount of EM radation could not possibly be important, because it was below some quantum threshold. few years later, someone published a paper showing tht you could, in the lab, detect bio effects, and they explained whty hte yale prof was wrong.
      4) I will stipulate for the sake of argument that we are a few years from good solar, much less storage (pumped water, rotating weights, god knows what) , that there are load match issues etc etc. no reason not to get started. I'm sure you know that if we just replaced incandescent bulbs iwth LEDs we could save huge amounts of electricity.
      what is a lot of money ? Given the scale of hte US economy, I would say a lot of money is 50 billion a year for 10 years; Do you actually know any numbers ? how do they compare to , say the money spent on Fusion, or the money spent on , say milkshakes. YOu say a lot of money is being spent; be quantitative
      Americans say they don't want to limit lifestyle, but they have also shown, quite clearly, that they don't want nuclear waste stored in their town/county/state (sure there are a few exceptions); but in general people say NO; just look at the resistance in NV to Yucca mountain. Of course, the French don't have a problem cause they don't have, yet, a choice.
      We have a choice. you can be a, if you forgive the pejorative, a whiney naysayer saying thie earth is flat, heavier then air flight is impossible and we will never get to the moon.
      Or, you cna dream of a better future. me personally, I go with with solar/wind/LED lightbulbs, etc etc

    3. Re:3 good reasons nukes bad by cinnamon+colbert · · Score: 1

      Dear Geekoid In response to your comment that their are fundamental physical barriers to widespead adoption of solar/wind/etc, by coincidence, there have been two related stories recently this is from /. http://hardware.slashdot.org/story/10/08/02/1826223/Stanfords-New-Solar-Tech-Harnesses-Heat-Light there was also a story in the New York Times in the last week or so about large scale wind in places like Hawaii, and how the need for storage is stimulating entrepreneurial efforts in that area. On a more philisophical note, for many years, rightly or wrongly, conservatives have been calling liberals naysayers, unwilling to unleash market forces to solve problems. Yet in the area of solar/wind, the shoe is reversed. funny that.

  77. Re:How about those Nuclear Space Probe batteries.. by michaelwv · · Score: 1

    I completely agree with your general point. But it is nuclear fission that produces the heat that runs the battery, it's just not a chain reaction.

  78. Strawman by geekoid · · Score: 1

    Pick up almost any book about nuclear energy and you will find that the prevailing wisdom is that nuclear plants must be very large in order to be competitive.

    Not true. clearly a strawman argument. I'm not going to waste my time reading an article thats based around a logical fallacy.

    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  79. Re:put them all over as the power grid is not setu by delt0r · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Uranium *dissolved* in ground water is not the same as "just baking soda".

    --
    If information wants to be free, why does my internet connection cost so much?
  80. Re:put them all over as the power grid is not setu by MrNiceguy_KS · · Score: 2, Insightful

    If I lived next to a coal-burning power plant, I would jump at the chance to have it converted to nuclear.

    --
    Redundancy is good And also good.
  81. Re:put them all over as the power grid is not setu by HungryHobo · · Score: 1

    you mean the groundwater where they'd be mining? where there's already natural deposits of uranium and as such uranium in the groundwater?

  82. Dirty bomb: a big deal by tgibbs · · Score: 1

    Dirty bombs are not that big a deal. Oh noes we need to clean up some contamination what ever will we do! Leakage would be a far bigger deal.

    They are not that big a deal in terms of loss of life, but they are a very big deal in terms of economic cost and disruption. The problem is that radiation is detectable down to very low levels. And people are very afraid of radiation. Every bit will have to be cleaned up, because people won't believe your assurances that the levels are so low that they present negligible risk, even if it is true (and there is an unfortunate history of such assurances having been made when it was not true). The cost will be enormous, not to mention the cost of relocating everybody in the affected area until the cleanup is complete.

  83. Re:put them all over as the power grid is not setu by spazdor · · Score: 1

    Presumably much higher uranium concentrations than what naturally occurs in the area's groundwater - since, apparently, baking soda leaches it.

    --
    DRM: Terminator crops for your mind!
  84. Re:put them all over as the power grid is not setu by spazdor · · Score: 1

    I don't know what is wrong with the mods today. Troll? for a SimCity joke?

    I think I must be lost, can you tell me where I might find a tech nerd forum?

    --
    DRM: Terminator crops for your mind!
  85. You gotta be joking: by Hartree · · Score: 1

    Please tell me you're just trolling. DHS may have their problems, but believe me a dirty bomb being used in the right sort of place would be a major deal.

    It may not be that effective as a weapon of mass destruction, but the response that results would make it a weapon of mass disruption.

    Imagine, if you will, someone steals a medical source from a hospital on Manhattan (thus possibly avoiding radiation monitors set up after 9-11 that they'd encounter trying to move it a longer distance), and manages to reasonably finely spread it around the Wall Street financial district, or the diamond mart, or one of the tunnels to the island, or etc, whatnot before they get stopped. Regardless of the real health threat to anyone, it would shut down that area for days while it was decontaminated, and investigated.

    If you think Manhattan is too well protected, then Chicago and the CBOT, etc, etc. There are large numbers of targets for it, and you can't protect them all. You don't even need to do a good job for it to be effective. Just the perception will be enough.

    If you think that the radiation hazard would be a deterrent, think again. Suicide bombers seem to be rather common round the world these days.

  86. That's an awfully hard way to do it: by Hartree · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Far easier to steal a medical source. There are more of them, they're widely distributed under varying security conditions, the containers they're in aren't as robust and the radioactive materials are more effective when dispersed.

    Stealing even a small nuclear power plant doesn't strike me as particularly easy.

  87. Re:put them all over as the power grid is not setu by delt0r · · Score: 1

    Its not in a soluble form without the acid or carbonates. That's why leaching works in the first place.

    --
    If information wants to be free, why does my internet connection cost so much?
  88. A very misleading oil analogy above by dbIII · · Score: 1

    I don't know where you are getting this imaginary point of view you are pretending that I have - all I was doing is describing where the peak uranium idea came from in the first place.

    Now back to reprocessing - it is very difficult to do for the old designs of reactors which is why very little of it was done. As I said above "Since then reactor designs that are less fussy about fuel have been developed".
    The oil analogy is very cute but reality is metals with very high strength, very high melting points and oxides that are very difficult to reduce. It's likely that we won't see any more than proof of concept reprocessing for a very long time and then you'll see new designs of reactors that can get a bit more out of those spent fuel rods without any reprocessing at all.

    1. Re:A very misleading oil analogy above by GooberToo · · Score: 1

      So much ignorance.

      Reprocessing is not done in the core. It can in fact be done off site, though for security reasons its often done on site. Of course, no civil reprocessing is permitted. Currently, some of our fuel is actually shipped overseas for reprocessing. I believe France receives some of it and then uses it in their own reactor. Wow! Imagine that. Reprocessed fuel is then used as any other vaiable fuel and requires nothing special on the part of the reactor.

      What you don't seem to understand is, a fuel pellet is considered used when 95%-98% is used. That means waste fuel pellets still have 95%-98% viable fuel which is often then set aside in pools to decay. So its entirely accurate to say vast quantities of fuel are wasted and decaying.

    2. Re:A very misleading oil analogy above by dbIII · · Score: 1

      So much ignorance.

      With respect Sir that is my line and why I had to point out the fuel is in the form of metal rods that are very difficult to reprocess, as seen with the French experience.
      As I attempted to point out above it is a very difficult and expensive process to create new fuel rods from spent fuel. I suggest that instead of insulting others you find out some details about how it is done and then you will understand what I'm writing about, and as a bonus you should both find it interesting and it will save you from looking like an idiot with such posts as the one above.
      It's very hard to separate out that 5% of useful stuff from say twenty rods and make a new one out of it - that's why we see no reprocessing apart from the proof of concept examples in France which are mothballed at the moment. It's vastly cheaper to dig new stuff up at this time.
      One other thing you may has misinterpreted is that newer designs are less fussy about the fuel and may potentially be able to use spent rods without any reprocessing at all - but none of them have been constructed yet.

  89. Re:put them all over as the power grid is not setu by HungryHobo · · Score: 1

    actually they prefer to use acids but in most of the US sites the ground already contains too much carbonates so they have to use the less efficient carbonates on the uranium.
    so it's already being dissolved due to the carbonates.
    just less.

  90. Re:put them all over as the power grid is not setu by HungryHobo · · Score: 1

    I wouldn't be too mad on drinking the groundwater where there's a natural uranium deposit with or without mining.

  91. Energy debt by SgtChaireBourne · · Score: 1

    In addition to 'peak uranium', there is also a matter of cost shifting, either to other budgets or to future dates. There was some storage preparation made near where I lived once and storage facilities use not a small amount of energy to place, build, and operate. About fission, I have gone from cautious support for it to wanting it phased out. Not stopped suddenly or arbitrarily but phased out, keeping the cleanest, safest ones longest.

    Again note that I say phased out, not cut out overnight. The newer ones are basically safe and newest ones like pebble bed are very good -- in the short term. It is dangerous and criminally irresponsible to allow the old Soviet reactors to stay in operation. And I object to the stupid practice of shutting down safe reactors in order to increase production in the unsafe reactors.

    I still have hopes for fusion, but after all these decades, am no longer realistically expecting much effort to be made. What changed my mind about fission is the energy costs related to storing fission wastes. It looks like storage and waste management may use more energy than was produced by the fission that produced the waste. It's hard to tell and since the payment of that energy debt is pushed into the future, it is hard to get reliable or truthful assessments. Now if we can safely re-use fission byproducts as fuel, and clearly show a long term gain, then fine.

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    Beta is broken and the link to classic doesn't work. Stop wasting our time or there won't be anybody left here.
  92. Rule #1 of Slashdot. by gbutler69 · · Score: 1

    I don't like what you have to say so whay you have to say is FLAMEBAIT! For the Fuck-tards who modded me so, may your mother, mother's mother, daughters, grand-daughters, and all further femal progeny be gang-raped by psycho-pathic homeless people while your eyes burn in anger and rememberance of me! FUCK-TARD!

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    Over-the-top Response Guy! Giving "Over-the-Top Responses" since 1970.