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Bill Gates On Energy

Sam the Nemesis submitted an interview in Wired with Bill Gates on the future of energy. Gates sees nuclear as the only feasible option for base load generation. His views on the current direction of energy funding are particularly distressing: "But the economics are so, so far from making sense. And yet that's where subsidies are going now. We're putting 90 percent of the subsidies in deployment — this is true in Europe and the United States — not in R&D. And so unfortunately you get technologies that, no matter how much of them you buy, there's no path to being economical. You need fundamental breakthroughs, which come more out of basic research."

31 of 474 comments (clear)

  1. Say waht you will about MS by Bob+the+Super+Hamste · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Say waht you will about MS but to me it appears old Bill is mostly right on this one. Things like solar and will will eventually become economical, but not in the immediate future. This is mostly due to the rising cost of fossil fuels, but there are some economies of scale. More basic research is needed but renewables will become economical on their own eventually.

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    Time to offend someone
    1. Re:Say waht you will about MS by sharkey · · Score: 5, Funny

      As long as no Microsoft products are used in nuclear energy generation.

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      --
      "Outlook not so good." That magic 8-ball knows everything! I'll ask about Exchange Server next.
    2. Re:Say waht you will about MS by Sinthet · · Score: 5, Informative

      Wind power is already pretty good depending on the environment. A local ski-resort around here (BerkShire East), already runs entirely on power generated from a single windmill they put up. Not only do they manage to run the entire place on it, they make enough to sell to the local electric company. Not only are they saving money by getting rid of what I'm sure is a huge electric bill, they're making extra money they otherwise wouldn't have. So, in some situations, these alternate forms of energy are already economically feasible.

    3. Re:Say waht you will about MS by Stargoat · · Score: 4, Insightful

      There is not enough energy potential in solar power nor in wind / hydro-electric to match the energy potential from nuclear power and fossil fuels. As fossil fuels become more expensive, nuclear power will be the world's only option. Gates is right on this issue because physics dictates his correctness. No matter how much people may wish it, you cannot legislate past physical laws.

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      Hoist Number One and Number Six.
    4. Re:Say waht you will about MS by whovian · · Score: 4, Funny

      It looks like you're having a nuclear meltdown. Would you like help?

      o Get help with shutting down the reactor
      o Just shut down the reactor without help
      o Don't show me this tip again

      --
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    5. Re:Say waht you will about MS by Tx · · Score: 5, Informative

      That may be the case where you live, but in the UK, wind power depends on subsidies to exist at all. In fact on top of the subsidies, we've been paying wind farms to NOT produce electricity. The trouble is our peak demand for energy is in winter, when we have a large stable high pressure zone over the UK, leading to very cold clear conditions, and that same high pressure zone means no wind. Hence wind farms are almost useless when they're needed most, but producing power when it's not needed. Until economically viable ways of storing energy from wind farms is found, they'll never be economically viable in the UK, and such storage appears to be a long way off at the moment.

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      Oh no... it's the future.
    6. Re:Say waht you will about MS by Rakishi · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You think fossil plants don't have this problem? They are a perpetual accident, we're just used to it and the cost (health problems, environmental damage, pollution, etc, etc.) are implicitly externalized onto society by now.

    7. Re:Say waht you will about MS by caluml · · Score: 4, Funny

      molten salt vats are kinda cool

      You're doing it wrong.

    8. Re:Say waht you will about MS by LWATCDR · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It doesn't work at night.
      Battery technology is limited by physics and chemistry.
      Very little of it is in many places where you need it. The North East US for instance and all of Canada.
      Transmission lines are not a total solution. You will loose a lot of power shipping it from Texas to New York for example. Plus you have the NIMBY and the issues with massive centralization. If lots of power is sent over a few very good power lines from Texas to the North East those lines become a single point of failure. Since you will not build only one Nuclear plant to power the North East you have at least some redundancies compared to a thousand mile long power line.
      Solar cells will not follow Moore's law. Moore's law is based on things getting smaller. The amount of power a solar cell can produce is going to be tied directly the size of the cell.
      Economies of scale is also a mixed bag. Economies of scale fights with supply and demand for production to go up you must have the demand, high demand drives up prices which gets more people to start producing which should drive down prices in the long run the problem is that we are not there yet so demand goes up more than supply prices will first rise that will create a barrier to since it must compete with mature energy sources like natural gas.
      I am not anti solar or anti nuclear. I think that nuclear has a very bright future as a base load provider. I am also all for Solar as well. In the south every home should have a solar roof to help out with peak AC loads. However the pro solar and wind spout off buzz words like "Smart grid" and "Economies of Scale" without really understanding the problems or the meanings of the terms.
      Today I would have to agree with Mr. Gates that Nuclear is the way to replace Coal fired plants and to reduce CO2 emissions. I would love to see more research into Thorium cycle plants as well. I also want to see more funding for the Polywell reactor. In the county I live in we have two nuclear reactors and they are looking into building a wind farm as well. I am good with both. The fact is that Solar and Wind can not today or in the foreseeable future replace Coal, Nuclear, and or Hydro. It can and should be part of our current energy plans and future but so should nuclear.

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    9. Re:Say waht you will about MS by Digital+Vomit · · Score: 4, Interesting

      If you're referring to the cost in human lives, at deaths/TWH, nuclear power is *still* the safest power source, even when you include Fukushima.

      --
      Modern copyright is theft of culture from everyone and it retards the progress of the useful arts and sciences.
    10. Re:Say waht you will about MS by Shatrat · · Score: 4, Insightful

      There are plenty of people terrified of nuclear power, and there are plenty of people terrified of ghosts, for the same basic reasons.

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    11. Re:Say waht you will about MS by jawtheshark · · Score: 5, Informative

      Also try selling your power to your neighbors, they eat cheese and live a short swim away.

      Those neighbours you talk about are entirely on nuclear and sell their excess power to their neighbouring countries. Selling electricity to the French is like selling snow to the Inuit.

      --
      Ahhh...the great dumpster continuum. Many a free computer will be found there. -- sowth (748135)
    12. Re:Say waht you will about MS by hellkyng · · Score: 4, Funny

      No worries nuclear companies only use the best! Siemens gear!

    13. Re:Say waht you will about MS by AmiMoJo · · Score: 5, Informative

      Educate thyself: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Concentrated_solar_power

      About 3% of the Sahara will power all of western Europe easily. Storage is built in, works 24 hours a day 365 days a year. You guys in the US have it even better because you have space in your own country you can use. DC long distance transmission is more efficient than moving coal or gas about and safer than transporting with nuclear material. Worried about being reliant on Africa for power, well it is no worse than being reliant on the middle east (less so in fact).

      The technical problems are largely solved with existing concentrated solar plants, we just need to sort the political situation out so we can get on with building the things.

      --
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    14. Re:Say waht you will about MS by Rockoon · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Please name the solar cell manufacturer that powers its factories with solar power. These people get the solar cells at cost, and if THEY wont use it.. then what the fuck?

      --
      "His name was James Damore."
    15. Re:Say waht you will about MS by jeffmeden · · Score: 4, Interesting

      It looks like you're having a nuclear meltdown. Would you like help?

      o Get help with shutting down the reactor
      o Just shut down the reactor without help
      o Don't show me this tip again

      If that's the pop-up tip for someone starting off a broadcast email with the words "Nobody panic, everything is under control" then maybe it would have actually helped in a few nuclear events in recent history. Human error (or moreover, lack of timely intervention) is almost always the culprit, and not any sort of insurmountable hardware or software malfunction.

  2. Bill Gates on climate change: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    "640 kwh should be enough for anyone"

  3. Re:The down side to nuclear is the waste by compro01 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The down side to nuclear is the waste where does it go?

    Into another reactor, then into storage for 100-ish years.

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  4. Re:er, why? by kervin · · Score: 4, Insightful

    1. You should into look at how Bill Gates has spent the last decade and then ask yourself your own question.
    2. Even if you felt that way before the article, did he actually come off as a man who didn't know what he was talking about?

  5. Cool! A plug for Sadoway: by Hartree · · Score: 4, Informative

    One of the links is to Donald Sadoway's research group at MIT. His group works on the very topics that will make or break the shift to better energy sources and greater efficiency.

    He's also a wonderful teacher who's put up a course at MIT open course ware. It's Solid State Chemistry 3.091 and it utterly rocks. If you want to understand how chemistry impacts energy efficiency and the properties of materials, this is the course for you. And, it's in a format that is great for self teaching.

    3.091 course link

    I know it's a shameless plug, but give me a break. I work in a chemistry department that does a lot of work on improved energy related materials and methods.

  6. Re:er, why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Because he's one of the world's premier professional philanthropists with lobbyists and a research staff who's been involved with political and humanitarian advocacy full-time for ten years now?

    Internet Explorer sucks and all, but Bill Gates is a very accomplished and intelligent man with a lot of influence. His opinions matter a great deal.

  7. Re:er, why? by cbeaudry · · Score: 4, Insightful

    He's a technology geek, with lots of money. Has a charity foundation that's trying to find ways to help the other 80% of this earths population.

    The #1 thing to help those people is to get them ENERGY.

    So he invests in groups, companies, people to find solutions. That's what foundations do.

    And as someone else mentioned, did you read the interview? I has very good points and insights even if some of them have been obvious to the geek /. crowd.

  8. Re:The down side to nuclear is the waste by NevarMore · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You also need to recognize that there are wastes and negative impacts from all forms of energy:
      - copper windings for any rotational generator have to be mined
      - rare earths for solar arrays are also mined
      - heavy metals (\m/\m/) and acids for batteries are not exactly harmless
      - coal ash, great big mountains of it
      - smoke and other pollutants from burning fuels
      - alteration of waterways for hydro or cooling plus runoff

    The reality is we don't get energy for free and no current form of energy production is entirely without environmental consequences.To attack the challenges and consequences of nuclear power without honestly acknowledging the same from other forms of energy will lead to poor decisions.

  9. Re:I simply have to agree by ColdWetDog · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Here is the base problem: It's not that everything else is too expensive, it's that fossil fuels are too cheap. Too cheap in the long run. We've had a something like 100 year run on FF and we're going to run out of cheap versions of it (the Peak Oil concept). We're too stupid and spoiled as a culture to really put the money down for the next base power technology so we're going to run up the credit card now and really have to change our minds on how we live in the not so distant future.

    There is plenty of power around. We waste a perfectly enormous amounts of it and we know how not to, but it's not easy changing the way that billions of people do things.

    So the invisible hand will slap the ever living crap out of us in about 50-60 years. Our grandkids will wake up with one hella hangover.

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    Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
  10. Re:The down side to nuclear is the waste by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    No it is not you *stupid fool*. Nuclear is the ONLY technology that actually manages its waste. The only one. If you care one bit about the environment, you would support nuclear precisely because of its waste management practices.

    If fossil fuel energy managed all its waste, we would not be in the shit we are today. There wouldn't be catastrophic global warming. There would not be forest destroying acid rains. There would not be 1,000,000+ million people dying per year directly attributed to fossil fuel pollution and the diseases it produces. The ocean would not be polluted with mercury. Almost ALL lakes in the US are now so contaminated with mercury, it is not safe to eat fish from them! And the list goes on and on and on...

    Nuclear waste is so *little* that even if you had to guard and monitor the dump and renew its containers for a billion years, it would still be very cheap. We are talking a few tons a year per reactor, if we don't do any r processing. Reprocessing could reduce this waste by 98% and provide more usable fuel) Simply a fund with $1-2 billion in it would be able to fund all the personnel in perpetuity simply from interest.

    A coal plant burns *thousands of tons* of coal *per day*, producing hundreds of tons of toxic, carcinogenic waste *every day*, most of it going "puff" into the air you breath.

  11. Not enough energy potential in solar? by TWX · · Score: 5, Insightful

    What's the total life-cycle cost comparison though?

    With solar I see the following:

    up front:
    Mining raw material for the panels, batteries, and electrical converters
    manufacturing the components in a low-security factory
    transporting the components on standard truck
    installing the panels and conversion equipment to an existing structure or building frames to install on bare earth

    down the road:
    cleaning the panels
    maintaining the circuitry
    replacing batteries
    having an electrician or homeowner possibly replace individual components over time if things fail

    end of life:
    remove panels from frames
    remove frames from structure or earth
    remove switching equipment and batteries
    send panels, frames, and switching equipment to recycler
    send batteries to mild hazardous waste disposal for disassembly or recycling

    Potential problems:
    solar panels smashed en masse in a hail storm - solar is offline until panels are replaced and structure is back on grid power. If owner has insurance, that is used to pay for the replacement.
    Batteries leak, owner stops storing power for overnight use and goes back on to the grid, and replaces batteries and cleans up acid spill
    Absolute Worst Case- solar system causes a fire and the small structure burns.

    Contrast to nuclear:

    Startup:
    Spend billions to build obtain land, fight local opposition, and build the plant.
    spend millions to obtain ROW to install power transmission lines
    Refine nuclear fuel in a high security factory
    transport fuel in an expensive manner via truck convoy
    employ dozens, if not hundreds of engineers and technicians to fuel, power up, and baby sit the reactor

    down the road:
    continue to employ dozens, if not hundreds of engineers and technicians to baby sit the reactor
    spend millions to refuel reactor as necessary
    spend millions to store spent nuclear fuel in the proper fashion, forcing it to stay cool until it's no longer generating its own heat
    maintain security at the facility

    end of life:
    spend billions to decommission and clean up plant site
    find solution for storage of spent fuel?

    possible problems:
    contaminated water spills posing an environmental hazard requiring expensive cleanup
    mismanagement of the reactor leading to core meltdown and environmental contamination (worst case similar to Chernobyl, but without the graphite moderator)
    natural disaster leading to core meltdown and environmental contamination (Fukushima)
    attractive target for terrorism

    I'm for solar subsidy, especially once solar panel efficiency exceeds 40%, which they're almost to on the newest panel designs, especially for structures that can receive solar panels without spoiling the appearance of the structure. Commercial and residential structures with flat roofs, retrofitting houses with the backyard side on the south (as to no put the panels on the roof on the front of the house, for appearance), and building new structures with solar in mind from the planning stages all appeal to me. Give subsidy for Photovoltaics with battery storage, grid-tie-in, and intentional islanding (leaving the structure powered by the PV or batteries but separating from the grid when the grid itself loses power) and suddenly every home becomes a mini power plant. It might even cost more per unit of energy than bulk production like at large power facilities, but it also reduces or eliminates a need for more wiring infrastructure, adds failover, and in places like the southern portion of the country, provides power when it's needed most, during the sunniest days when the air conditioning is cranked down and when power grids tend to fail due to a lack of capacity. A big enough solar installation at a house can power the whole house and can sell back to the grid easily.

    If people are worried about safety, have cities implement an inspection regimen at installation, significant modification, and every ten years or so. Nothing really expensive, just something to make sure that everything is hooked up properly and safely.

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    Do not look into laser with remaining eye.
  12. Silicon Valley vs. Washington by Jodka · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If you put Bill Gates, Vinod Khosla, and Sergey Brin & Larry Page in a room together it would be a massive love fest; From statements each has made independently it appears they are in close agreement on the subject energy. Bill Gates states the issue well. Compare to interviews with Khosla on the subject of his investment strategy and the google.org REC initiative.

    People who gained wealth and fame by bringing improved technologies to market instinctively apply the same approach to energy. That is the Silicon Valley approach. In contrast, the energy policy emanating from Washington D.C. is a combination of vote buying using cash handouts to favored constituencies, e.g. corn ethanol subsidies, and using government coercion to extort cash payments from the public directly into the hands of the politicians, e.g. Al Gore's carbon offsets business.

    Genuinely greener technologies do not require government handouts. In fact, it is the opposite, they are cash cows for private investors. That is because efficiency is inherently and simultaneously more green and more profitable than inefficiency. The higher the ratio of outputs the more you get for less. That means spending less money on inputs and impacting the environment less by consuming fewer inputs in production per unit of output.

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  13. Traveling Wave Reactor by Scottingham · · Score: 5, Informative

    How is there not a single post on the actual nuclear technology he is researching and advocating for! C'mon nerds!

    Traveling wave reactors (google them) are projected to run without refueling for 60 years on what is 'waste' now and then become the storage facility for the next ~500 years until it fades into background rad. Oh, and they're made to be put in the ground like missile silos. Think of them as nuclear candles. Without having to refuel by hand and taking people out of the equation as much as possible the chances for error get reduced significantly. They also have large negative energy coefficients so a loss of coolant does not lead to a meltdown.

    After researching as much as possible into TWRs I'd say the current stage of developement is trying to get the exact alloy of uranium, burnable poisons (look these up too, they're sweet), etc just right to create a long lived sustained reaction. I'd imagine that such work is really heavy on the super computer time.

    I hope that these researchers have access to lots of money and super computer time. If only there was some tech billionaire funding them...

  14. Re:Wrong - Again! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It comes down to a couple of simple questions. Firstly do you support a level of civilization that we currently have? That means all the things we use every day which requires energy. If you do, then you need lots of energy. If you don't then feel free to go back to the stone age and die from the next polio outbreak, cholera outbreak or famine. It really is that simple.

    I ask you to do a couple of searches for:

    1) How many people died as a result of Chernobyl?
    2) How many people died as a result of Fukushima?
    3) How many people died as a result of Coal mining?
    4) How much radiation is released as a result of burning Coal?

    Remember Chernobyl and Fukushima were not nearly as well designed as modern reactors. Unfortunately, we are forced to keep running these older designs because:

    A) The public still wants to continue to live in a civilization with a standard of living similar to before while population increases, B) The public didn't want new nuclear plants built. Which would have allowed older plants to be retired.
    C) The fuel rods at Fukushima should have been shipped to a long term storage facility scheduled for the U.S. but it was never built.
    D) Chernobyl is a special case. Read the detailed report. The operators did the equivalent of taking a pressure cooker on a stove and filling it up with loads of water and then shoving it onto the exhaust of a jet engine.

    So it's really that simple. Solar and Wind are all well and good, but they will not support the current level of civilization we enjoy. They may someday, and the use of them is not bad, but they simply wont cut it right now without deploying a huge number of them all over the place.

    So if you want to keep your current standard of living, you need reliable base-load energy, and that energy needs to come from somewhere. Nuclear provides lots of energy and if you do the research you will find has actually - even accidents at Chernobyl and Fukushima included killed and harmed less people than fossil fuels. You may soon find more people die falling from wind turbines than Nuclear has killed.

    So choose what you want. You may decide that you do want to live in a technological civilization that needs energy, but you don't want nuclear. Just don't be surprised if when you take a cold hard look at the numbers, you discover you actually made things worse by building huge wind farms and solar plants, and that your level of civilization collapses somewhat due to the costs.

  15. Everybody's right and so am I. by Helpadingoatemybaby · · Score: 4, Interesting

    So to sum up this thread, and how Slashdot is broken in general. "Bill Gates is right!" "I agree." "You're right and I agree with you." "Everybody above is right and I agree with them." Even though the Bonneville Power administration was running 100% with renewables already (without even using microhydro, solar thermal, or tidal), and is making money at it, it's important to notice that Slashdot's mod system says this can't be done.

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  16. Re:The down side to nuclear is the waste by Andy+Dodd · · Score: 4, Informative

    Let's not forget that in the United States, our nuclear waste management practices are WAY behind the times.

    France generates 75-80% of their power from nuclear, and they don't have a waste problem because they not only reprocess their own fuel, they have enough reprocessing capacity to reprocess fuel from their neighbors too.

    And that's just for thermal neutron based fuel cycles... Fast reactors have fuel cycles with even less waste. For example the IFR had the potential 100% of this country's electrical needs for a century using only existing nuclear waste as fuel - and the remaining waste would only be dangerous for 200-300 years as opposed to the thousands of years for current waste.

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