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US Approves Two New Nuclear Reactors

JoeRobe writes "For the first time in 30 years, the US Nuclear Regulatory Commission has approved licenses to build two new nuclear reactors in Georgia. These are the first licenses to be issued since the Three Mile Island incident in 1979. The pair of facilities will cost $14 billion and produce 2.2 GW of power (able to power ~1 million homes). They will be Westinghouse AP1000 designs, which are the newest reactors approved by the NRC. These models passively cool their fuel rods using condensation and gravity, rather than electricity, preventing the possibility of another Fukushima Daiichi-type meltdown due to loss of power to cooling water pumps." Adds Unknown Lamer: "Expected to begin operation in 2016 or 2017, the pair of new AP1000 reactors will produce around 2GW of power for the southeast. This is the first of the new combined construction and operating licenses ever issued by the NRC; hopefully this bodes well for the many other pending applications."

77 of 596 comments (clear)

  1. About time by tripleevenfall · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It's about time we did something to address our growing energy needs.

    Now if we can get politicians to quit treating building more oil refining capacity as a political football, we might take another meaningful step toward energy independence.

    1. Re:About time by Xupa · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Yeah. That's definitely the most likely outcome of a rapid decline in the only source of cheap, dense, portable fuel.

    2. Re:About time by masternerdguy · · Score: 4, Insightful

      We shouldn't have to use less energy. That defeats the entire point of progress. Using more energy is a good thing because its a sign you are capable of things that require that much power. But we do need to make sure we can provide for our power needs.

      --
      To offset political mods, replace Flamebait with Insightful.
    3. Re:About time by tripleevenfall · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Thank you, President Carter. Rather than address the problem we should just all put on a sweater?

    4. Re:About time by Fned · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Using more energy is a good thing because its a sign you are capable of things that require that much power.

      Or a sign of inefficiency.

    5. Re:About time by icebraining · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Arguing for efficiency is fine, but that's not what GP was doing.

      And we are improving the efficiency. Smartphones that run circles around desktops that used 100x more energy, LED lamps that use way less energy than incandescents, better insolation materials while reducing heat that needs to be produced, etc.

      But that doesn't mean that we won't still need more energy. Hell, developing countries alone will need it to reach anywhere near what we have right now.

    6. Re:About time by Spoke · · Score: 4, Insightful

      When on average about 2/3rds of the energy we use is thrown away as waste heat before we can actually use it (never mind that ultimately ALL energy we use ends up as heat), there's plenty of room for reductions in energy use through efficiency.

    7. Re:About time by cyberchondriac · · Score: 3, Funny

      I remember when I didn't have seven items in the same room needing an outlet - there was a TV, a lamp and maybe a small floor heater.

      Okay, okay, I'm getting off your lawn now ..

      --

      Look back up at my post, now look back down, you're on the Internet. Now look back up. I'm a signature.
    8. Re:About time by msheekhah · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Those issues were brought up in 2009. It was stated in this article (http://www.pittsburghlive.com/x/pittsburghtrib/business/s_738220.html) that they can't get licensed until the safety issues are addressed. And now they're licensed. So a little more transparency would be nice, but according to the letter of the law, they've complied with the USNRC's concerns.

      --
      Mark Anthony Collins
    9. Re:About time by LateArthurDent · · Score: 4, Insightful

      How about if we use less energy? Sound familiar?

      I'm all for more efficient devices that use less energy while still giving me everything the more power hungry devices give me. I'm not willing use less energy if it means that I lose anything by doing so.

      I remember when I didn't have seven items in the same room needing an outlet - there was a TV, a lamp and maybe a small floor heater. Now I have a computer, with a monitor, a sound system and a laser printer, each with its own cord...

      Yeah, yeah, yeah...let's assume every single person on the planet cuts their total energy usage by half (which is an insane and completely unrealistic goal). We had a population of 3 billion people in this planet in 1960. By 2000, we had doubled that to 6 billion. Basically, you've cut the standard of living of everyone and the only thing you've accomplished is gain us a few decades before we're right at the same place again, except now it's even harder to cut down on energy usage because there's less to cut. That's not counting the fact that as the developing countries catch up, their population will be using more energy.

      Do you want to lower your carbon impact on this planet? Have less children. Contributing to negative population growth is the greenest thing you can do.

    10. Re:About time by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting

      You should probably learn about all the things Carter tried to do.

    11. Re:About time by sjames · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I'm guessing you're referring to the flawed analysis? That is nowhere near the same thing as a design flaw. The NRC DID call them on it and delayed approval until the analysis was done to their satisfaction. That sure seems like they care, doesn't it? I am guessing because I don't want to play the guess which scripts you have to allow to make this page work game right now.

      Other than that one, all I can find are vague innuendos complaining that Westinghouse didn't instantly address problems found in other, different designs (not even THEIR designs!) within hours of discovery.

      What (if any) outstanding issues might there be? I'm all for caution (particularly as a resident of Ga.), but some of this is total nonsense and the rest seems to be addressed.

    12. Re:About time by Jim_Maryland · · Score: 3, Funny

      Well obviously they can't reply if they unplugged.

    13. Re:About time by bobbied · · Score: 3, Informative

      >

      " has actually been increasing in volume faster than we've been using it." .....do you have a citation, or are you just remembering from that time where you read nothing?

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oil_reserves

      Check out foot note 3 for a discussion of what I'm talking about. There may be *other* reasons for it, but if you look at the various tables in this article, you will notice that we have a lot more oil reserves claimed in 2009 than we had in 2000.

      --
      "File to fit, pound to insert, paint to match" - Aircraft Maintenance 101
    14. Re:About time by ackthpt · · Score: 3, Insightful

      More people is a good thing too? Everyone in the world coming up to US energy consumption?
      Another way to get more energy per individuals is to have fewer individuals. Now that would be progress!

      Consider - until 1980 most people in China, the world's most populous nation, used very little energy - electrical or petrol.

      They are increasing, per capita and en masse. China as it raises the standard of living of each individual places an increasing burden upon available resources as they approach the level, per capita, of the United States - a nation at least 5 times the population of the United States. Think about where this is going.

      --

      A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
    15. Re:About time by AmiMoJo · · Score: 3, Interesting

      But that doesn't mean that we won't still need more energy. Hell, developing countries alone will need it to reach anywhere near what we have right now.

      And this is their opportunity to become the next big energy suppliers as oil runs out. Many of them are lucky enough to have vast renewable resources. A single North African nation alone could power all of Western Europe easily with solar thermal, and the EU is actively trying to get capacity built there (I knew there was a reason we helped Libya).

      The only problem is that they need help with the technology, which is why they are still building nasty coal powered stations.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    16. Re:About time by SnowZero · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I stopped watching after about 10 minutes. Gundersen does have a master's degree in Nuclear Engineering, but it seems he's always been a consultant rather than directly involved in the industry. Arguments presented in the first 10 minutes below in italics

      We've never tested a large water tank on top of a reactor in a full scale test.

      I don't really understand this; the actual source of heat is irrelevant when you are engineering a gravity-fed water tank, and that's pretty damned well understood.

      It hasn't been approved yet. What's the rush? We should incorporate design changes from Fukushima and restart certification.

      IOW, we're almost done with a design, so lets make a bunch of changes now and restart certification. I'll tell you what the rush is: we need to build new reactors and decommission the old known-to-be-unsafe ones. You know, the ones the people funding you are trying to get shut down. Just because a 1957 Chevy is dangerous to drive doesn't mean we should delay rolling out a Volvo S60 because it isn't "perfect" yet. Yes we should keep changing new designs but at some point you have to say "this is way better than what we currently have, let's build them".

      Pressure at Fukushima raised up to 0.7 lbs within AP1000's design limit. The control rods might not go down when you try to stop it (after a partial meltdown, which falls into the "no shit" category).

      This would be relevant if the reactors were at all similar internally. Hint: Fukushima was an ancient boiling water design, obsolete even when it was built. The AP1000 is much newer non-boiling design, and is much more amenable to passive cooling approaches. Yes, it is true that modern gasoline engines are not built to specifications for safe steam engines, which had quite a problem with boiler explosions.

      Tank on the roof could fail. Seismic analysis indicates weight on roof is always bad (they appear unaware of counterweights used in tall buildings).

      The alternative of course is tanks on the ground and active pumps, which is where we came from previously and are trying to avoid now. In other words, no solution is acceptable, let's not build anything. A corollary of that is that crappy old designs will continue to run. If this ends up a bad design for earthquake zones, it would still make sense to build them in seismically stable locations and replace known-bad power sources.

      Terrorists could try to blow up the water tank!

      This is apparently coordinated with an earlier attack on the primary method, since the water tank is the backup. People need to seriously give up on the airliner hijack thing -- yes our old rules on dealing with hijacking were flawed. They've now been patched, and passengers and the air force know what [not] to do. In fact those rules were already patched *on 9/11* as Flight 93 demonstrated. Terrorists are also opportunistic anyway, and will always seek an easy new attack route, rather than one that has been tried before (leaving responders prepared).

      Shrapnel from an exploding neighboring reactor could peirce the tank!

      Cool let's build the AP1000 and shut down the ones that can explode, ok? The alternative is to find new sites for a nuclear plant, which will take from decades to never given the same groups opposing them.

  2. Typical by Vinegar+Joe · · Score: 3, Interesting

    They'll build them in the South and then send the power up North where the states refuse to allow them.

    --
    "The average reporter we talk to is 27 years old......They literally know nothing." - Ben Rhodes
    1. Re:Typical by Ogi_UnixNut · · Score: 5, Interesting

      The idea being the the South makes money from them by taking on the risk (perceived or otherwise) of running them in their backyard. Either in increased employment (so local growth) or increased tax revenue for the county, or cheaper electricity for the locals.

      Just like France makes good money selling electricity to the UK and Germany (as those two countries have somewhat of a nuclear-phobia, that seems to be increasing). The electricity prices in France are 10% of what I pay in the UK, and I'm on a cheap UK tariff provided by a French electricity company! I'm sure the money goes somewhere...

    2. Re:Typical by K.+S.+Kyosuke · · Score: 4, Funny

      Well, just do what some of my compatriots did to the Austrians when some of the Austrians didn't want to import nuclear-generated electricity from my country: We started selling them wall plug filters for nuclear electricity, allowing only non-nuclear electricity to power their appliances. Some people here got rich on that. :) You can get rich, too, and you'll do a good deed to boot!

      --
      Ezekiel 23:20
    3. Re:Typical by kiwimate · · Score: 4, Informative

      up North where the states refuse to allow them

      Err...

    4. Re:Typical by tripleevenfall · · Score: 5, Insightful

      There is a renaissance of manufacturing going on in the American south. Look at all the foreign auto makers that have built factories there. Wages are affordable for the company, there are no union entanglements like those which have ravaged Detroit, areas where good paying jobs are few and far between receive them - everyone wins.

    5. Re:Typical by Hadlock · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Perhaps also important, you can go outside in a tshirt and jeans November - March, meaning that skilled manufacturing jobs (machining, etc) are less likely to make flight for warmer climates (see also: Los Angeles). Now that we import much of our steel, there's no reason to keep the manufacturing clustered in one of the most miserable parts of the continental United States.
       
      Hey North, NEWSFLASH - we have air conditioning now, it's safe to come down here ;) You can enjoy hobbies like sailing in the winter. It's no wonder that southern cities are seeing double digit growth while great lakes industrial cities are collapsing.

      --
      moox. for a new generation.
    6. Re:Typical by tripleevenfall · · Score: 4, Interesting

      From Minneapolis I sneer at you and say, I wouldn't trade my down comforter and mild summers for all the mosquitos in Mississippi. :)

    7. Re:Typical by Ultra64 · · Score: 4, Funny

      wow, i thought you were joking until I looked it up

      http://blogs.oracle.com/templedf/entry/it_s_the_tachyon_signature

  3. Great news! by emeyer · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If we are going to adopt electric cars in a big way, we need this badly.

    Glad to hear it.

    -Eric

  4. Liquid Floruide Thorium Reactors Please! by Xanny · · Score: 5, Interesting

    We have tons of waste from the traditional uranium plants to use up, might as well start building some reactors that produce almost no leftovers.

    1. Re:Liquid Floruide Thorium Reactors Please! by HomelessInLaJolla · · Score: 4, Funny

      I submitted plans for a flow-through microcapillary array making use of liquefied and diluted fissile fuel to Battelle Memorial Institute while working there (2004-2005). Modern day reactor pebbles are rarely used to more than a quarter of their fissile capacity--primarily because there is so little fissile material in the bulk rock that, at that point, it fails to generate enough heat to be useful. By dissolving and diluting the material the fission reactions could be metered to near atomic identity (one for one, ensuring no unused fuel on the flow out end).

      The primary design problem was operating close to absolute zero. Good luck pushing any liquid through an array of microcapillary tubes and through the fission chamber (filled with gamma radiation to creat the fission events) at that temperature.

      The primary political problem was a ban on combining breeder reactors with actual production reactors. The design for the microcapillary flow-through chamber involved the generation of the liquid fuel (breeder) to be, more or less, on the lab bench adjacent to the electricity producing reaction chamber engine. Due to problems in the past, and concern over record-keeping and stolen fissile material, the generation of the fuel material must be in a seperate facility from the reactor which is attached to the electricity producing turbines.

      All of that aside... nuclear reactors are really a method for human corpse disposal. The trees were much taller until you sinners began dropping out of that tower you were building, and those corposes have lots and lots of water in them. The Egyptians used to press the bodies into bricks--some bricks (eg. Methuseleh), would take hundreds of years to dry out and press together. Stonehenge and Woodhenge are the dregs and the froth from the tun when they began stewing the bodies together en masse. Nuclear reactors were developed in the attempt to dry and press the bodies without clogging up all of the world's real estate. A nuclear reactor is a crematorium array.

      --
      the NPG electrode was replaced with carbon blac
  5. Re:No More Nuclear Waste Siting Problem? by Unknown+Lamer · · Score: 5, Informative

    PRISM / IFR designs in general (and Molten salt breeders, in theory) turn that "waste" into enough fuel to supply the earth ... forever, assuming we build pyroprocessing facilities (PUREX generates a lot of waste ... no good).

    --

    HAL 7000, fewer features than the HAL 9000, but just as homicidal!
  6. Re:No More Nuclear Waste Siting Problem? by Tokolosh · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Sorry, but all the disposal problems have not been solved. There is one remaining issue of "environmentalist" obstructionism. I use quotes, because these people are damaging the environment, not protecting it.

    --
    Prove anything by multiplying Huge Number times Tiny Number
  7. Re:No More Nuclear Waste Siting Problem? by Gordonjcp · · Score: 4, Interesting

    There's no such thing as nuclear waste. There's just stuff you haven't configured your *other* fast breeder reactor to burn, yet.

  8. That's all well and good, but... by wernst · · Score: 3, Funny

    ...as soon as someone forgets to pay the gravity bill, it's Fukushima all over again!

  9. Fairewind comments on AP1000 by Jerry · · Score: 3, Insightful

    "The NRC thinks the probability of three nuclear reactors having a meltdown within 3 days is ZERO. They chose this to minimize the cost of development of the AP1000 reactor."

    That's because the NRC is a sock puppet for the Commercial Nuclear Industry.

    https://plus.google.com/107839599438746451936/posts/gEhU26JjGWV

    --

    Running with Linux for over 20 years!

  10. And three, two, one... by prisoner-of-enigma · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Cue the environmentalists to come running out of the woodwork, filing every lawsuit they can find, protesting the work site, and in general trying to slow down and interfere with the construction of said nuclear power plant.

    The level of public ignorance never ceases to amaze.

    --
    In the end they will lay their freedom at our feet and say to us, Make us your slaves, but feed us. - Fyodor Dostoyevsky
    1. Re:And three, two, one... by Loss_of_Coolant · · Score: 5, Informative

      Since the last reactors were built, the United States has upgraded its licensing procedure. With the Combined Operating License (COL) which just got approved, the time has passed for those who wish to object the construction/operation of the plant. A few months ago the Nuclear Regulatory Commission held an open forum to the public to review the AP1000 reactor for the site in question; that was the time to object. So it looks like Southern is a go for construction of this plant.

  11. Re:No More Nuclear Waste Siting Problem? by K.+S.+Kyosuke · · Score: 3, Funny

    It's been solved, the waste will be transported to Japan where the natives won't notice the increase compared to the status quo. ;)

    --
    Ezekiel 23:20
  12. Re:No More Nuclear Waste Siting Problem? by GameboyRMH · · Score: 5, Insightful

    There is one remaining issue of "environmentalist" obstructionism. I use quotes, because these people are damaging the environment, not protecting it.

    This is true. If you oppose nuclear, a coal plant will be built in its place, which is far, far more dirty and dangerous.

    --
    "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
  13. Re:No More Nuclear Waste Siting Problem? by ColdWetDog · · Score: 4, Insightful

    PRISM / IFR designs in general (and Molten salt breeders, in theory) turn that "waste" into enough fuel to supply the earth ... forever, assuming we build pyroprocessing facilities (PUREX generates a lot of waste ... no good).

    "In theory". Aye, there's the rub.

    We really need more active research in this area instead of relying on experiments conducted in the 1960's.

    --
    Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
  14. Big questions. by Kenja · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Will they be built with standards and interchangeable parts, or by the lowest bidder using totally unique designes that ensure no personal or parts can be used on both?

    --

    "Have you ever thought about just turning off the TV, sitting down with your kids, and hitting them?"
  15. Re:No More Nuclear Waste Siting Problem? by jellomizer · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Like all energy sources nuclear has its share of trade offs. Wind/Solar still don't quite give the same output that Nuclear or Coal can, Hydroelectric can only be used in particular locations and then there are people complaining about the fishes that get shredded. Coal has a lot of pollution.
    Nuclear energy when well maintained is a relativity good energy source. Its pollution for good or for bad is highly concentrated meaning the good means it can be captured and moved to a safer location, the bad is if a little bit leaks out it could be very deadly, and difficult to pick up again. However right now our pollution problem is in extra carbon. Nuclear energy can help reduce our carbon dependence, the combined risk of continued use of Coal even when treated well is worse then nuclear energy being properly respected and governed.

    --
    If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
  16. Re:No More Nuclear Waste Siting Problem? by swillden · · Score: 4, Insightful

    whoosh

    Is that the sound of the GP's post going over your head? Because he's absolutely right. There are many excellent technical solutions to the question of waste disposal, but all of them are rendered infeasible by political considerations.

    --
    Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
  17. $6.36 per Watt by Qwertie · · Score: 5, Insightful

    (14G$ / 2.2GW) doesn't sound like a good price point to me, with the price of solar being at $3/watt and falling (assuming "AC Watts" have the same energy as "DC Watts"). Why so pricey?

    1. Re:$6.36 per Watt by trout007 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Because that is installed capacity (GW) and not actually energy production (GWh). So since your solar only produces power 1/2 of the day and reduces power based on latitude and season your actual costs $/GWh is much higher.

      --
      I love Jesus, except for his foreign policy.
    2. Re:$6.36 per Watt by khallow · · Score: 4, Informative

      You have to keep in mind that solar covers peaking load not base load. To get base load with solar, you need to back it up with storage. There are other significant factors that diminish solar's advantage.

      At best (clear days all the time and solar panels that move to point at the Sun), you can get 50% of the power rating averaged over the day. For fixed direction installations, that drops to a third. So 100 watts of maneuverable solar panel corresponds to 50 watts of average power for perfect weather conditions and 100 watts of fixed direction solar panel under the same conditions corresponds to about 33 waters of average power over the day.

      The remaining big negative factor for solar is land use. It requires a lot of land to set up an installation of 2.2 GW average power. For maneuverable panels, you'd need almost 9 square kilometers of light gathering area (at 500 W per square meter). For fixed panels, that's 13 square kilometers of light gathering area. There's a modest hidden inefficiency here since solar panels intercept some light for panels behind them when the Sun is near the horizon.

      On the nuclear reactor side, the problem is the big liabilities. The reactor design mitigates some of those liabilities, but not by any means all of them. You still need to figure out what to do with the fuel rods, for example. And until the US figures something out, those rods will be stored on site.

      A remaining potential advantage for this particular reactor design is that if they can build a number of these, then they can enjoy economies of scale in construction, regulatory and safety issues, and other matters in which more working reactors can generate experience to make that activity less costly. It appears that there are six such reactors under construction, two in the US and four in China (with another eight reactors planned in China according to Wikipedia).

      Reading through the Wikipedia article (and links), it appears that the four Chinese reactors under construction are going to generate 4.4 GW of power and cost $8 billion dollars to build. That (if true) changes the economics decisively in favor of nuclear power (though perhaps at substantially higher risk of safety and other liability issues).

    3. Re:$6.36 per Watt by Relic+of+the+Future · · Score: 3, Informative

      Good question. This wikipedia entry on electricity cost by source has the US DOE estimates for total cost.

      The main reason is that nuclear plants average 90% of listed ("nameplate") capacity, while solar PV averages just 25%, giving nuclear a 3.6x multiplier on cost-effectiveness, more than making up for the 2.12x shortfall in cost-per-nameplate-watt shortfall.

      --
      Those who fail to understand communication protocols, are doomed to repeat them over port 80.
    4. Re:$6.36 per Watt by loshwomp · · Score: 3, Informative

      Well, your $3/watt and falling solar is useful on average 12 hours a day.

      That's a common misconception--it's actually only about an average of 5 hours per day in an ideal location. Capacity factor for PV is rarely greater than about 0.2.

  18. Better analogy by dkleinsc · · Score: 5, Funny

    That amount of power is sufficient for approximately 1.81 time-travelling DeLoreans.

    --
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  19. Re:because we learned nothing from Fukushima by RazzleFrog · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Yes much better to keep drilling in the gulf - that's never been a problem...

  20. Re:No More Nuclear Waste Siting Problem? by sjames · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Personally, I object to burying 95% perfectly good fuel just to dispose of 5% waste. Run that FUEL through an appropriately designed reactor first, then process out the waste and load the rest back in.

  21. Re:No More Nuclear Waste Siting Problem? by yurtinus · · Score: 4, Informative

    Groundwater seepage and the active geology of the region... There are better places to store it than Yucca Mountain. Of course most of the attention was put on the transport of nuclear waste through the state, rather than issues with the long term storage.

    All that said, as a native Nevadan I am not opposed to the Yucca Mountain project. It's gotta go somewhere and while there are better places, there are a whole lot worse. At some point you just need to make your decision and act on it. I am however opposed to the regulatory environment that has kept newer, more efficient nuclear designs from seeing the light of day in the US. Land of the Risk Averse!

    --
    +1 Disagree
  22. Re:because we learned nothing from Fukushima by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Per kilowatt nuclear is the safest when all things are taken into account. The problem with nuclear power is the worst case scenario: Three Mile Island, Chernobyl, Fukushima. So that is the balancing effect.

    A crude analogy would be comparing cars to airplanes by mile traveled.

  23. Re:because we learned nothing from Fukushima by Andy+Dodd · · Score: 5, Interesting

    What we learned from Fukushima is that this is EXACTLY what we need to do - we need to start building modernized reactors that roll in decades of safety research and engineering into their design, as opposed to repeatedly service-life-extending old clunkers with ancient safety designs.

    And if we don't go with nuclear - what's our other option? Gas, the industry which has contaminated more groundwater in the past five years with drilling activities than almost the entire history of civilian nuclear power?

    The nuclear industry has an excellent track record - it took decades before the first incident of a civilian reactor letting out any measurable contamination, and that incident was triggered by a natural disaster that killed over 25,000 people instantly, hitting a reactor that was so old that it was originally scheduled for permanent shutdown prior to the earthquake.

    (I don't consider Chernobyl to be a civilian reactor - even if the Soviets tried to claim it was "civilian", the only reason one builds graphite-moderated water-cooled reactors is to have the option of using it as a cheap source of weapons plutonium.)

    --
    retrorocket.o not found, launch anyway?
  24. Re:because we learned nothing from Fukushima by Baloroth · · Score: 5, Insightful

    By "we learned nothing" do you mean we didn't learn to stop relying on 40 year-old nuclear power plants built using 50-60 year old designs? Because I'm pretty sure building new designs shows that we did, in fact, learn exactly that.

    --
    "None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license." --John Milton
  25. UK doesn't seem nuclear-phobic to me by Krigl · · Score: 3, Interesting

    It generates about one sixth of electricity from nukes and plans to build a lot more of them within next 20 years, public support dropped after Fukushima, but has already recovered. That's not too special, but it's completely different league than Germany with it's traditional over the top reaction to social wave du jour or Austria's hysteria (sorry, Austrians, there's no better name for it).

    --
    Troll 2.0 Fear my asocial networking!
  26. Not a big deal. by WindBourne · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I am far more interested in seeing GE Prism and the micro thorium reactors be approved.

    Now, we need NRC to push approval for the micro reactors. We have a large number of coal plants that are going to be shut down over the next 10 years. The choice is what to replace them with. Ideally, small thorium reactors are the ideal choice (though I also like the idea of adding thermal storage combined with a small natural gas boiler).

    The other issue that we have, is that many of the nuke plants are old like Japan's. These plants are going to be closed down over the next 20-30 years. Right now, they are LOADED with large quantities of 'waste' fuel. That 'waste' will need to go to WIPP to be buried for 20K years or more. HOWEVER, if we get the GE PRISM reactor going, then we can drop these into place at each of these sites, and fuel them with the 'waste' fuel. The much smaller amount of output from it would then last only 200 years, of which the worst part is over in something like 50 years.

    Seriously, all of the waste fuel that exists in America combined with thorium (which we have plenty of), combined with AE and Natural gas could fuel America for the next couple of centuries.

    --
    I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
  27. No, no it won't. by stomv · · Score: 4, Informative

    Nuclear operating costs are far lower than fossil fuel plants... but they are higher than solar photovoltaic, wind, and hydro in almost all cases.

    As for the "nuclear is always on" claims, that's true for the most part. The thing is, not every hour of electricity is worth the same. The Southeast (and most of tUSA) has surplus capacity even after the GWs of coal retirement hit 2016-2018. What we need in order to keep the price low is inexpensive *peaking* capacity. Guess when load is highest? Yip. When the sun is shining; more precisely, summer months on clear days at around 3pm M-F non-holidays. Guess when the cost of generating electricity with fossil fuel is the highest? Yip, during peak hours [thanks to economic dispatch, a good thing].

    As for me, I'm not opposed to nuclear power, and I do believe that carbon emissions are the most important challenge of our generation. Nuclear waste is a real problem /. tends to gloss over [by either ignoring it in absolute terms or ignoring the foreign policy and transportation implications of reprocessing]. I'm opposed to the cost. Nuclear is far more expensive than renewables, we don't need the nighttime capacity, and if the First Nuclear Age is any indication, cost per MW will go up over time, not down.

  28. Re:No More Nuclear Waste Siting Problem? by Andy+Dodd · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Burning it may be cleaner than coal - but getting it out of the ground in a safe and clean manner is proving to be far less clear-cut.

    I live on top of the Marcellus Shale formation - I'd rather have a nuke plant or two open up a mile from me than to have gas drilling anywhere in this state. The drilling companies have an attitude of "it's safe, we're drilling responsibly, trust us, nothing has ever gone wrong, that spill didn't happen, we don't need to change anything because it's fine the way it is". Compared to the nuclear industry - "Even though we already have the lowest deaths per terawatt-hour count of any form of power generation, we're STILL working to improve our safety designs." - This is the thing that earns the most trust from me, the fact that they are constantly striving to improve safety, instead of constantly denying that there could possibly be any problems and refusing to change anything.

    --
    retrorocket.o not found, launch anyway?
  29. Re:No More Nuclear Waste Siting Problem? by guamisc · · Score: 3, Insightful

    2/3 of those reactors have ALREADY been implemented in the past. It's the anti-nuclearbombmaterial crowd that has killed those designs.

  30. Re:No More Nuclear Waste Siting Problem? by dasunt · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I'm so glad the problems in safely disposing of nuclear waste have been solved!

    Yes, because that's what is holding up nuclear power. After all, the problem with heavy metals and other pollutants used to manufacture "green" energy such as solar cells and wind turbines have already been solved, as well as the problems with mercury, other contaminants, and even radioactive materials that comes from burning coal has also been solved. Oh, and that whole CO2 thing that fossil fuels tend to emit? Also solved.

  31. Re:No More Nuclear Waste Siting Problem? by tripleevenfall · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I believe France is the only country that currently reprocesses spent nuclear fuel. Another environmentalist hangup.

  32. Re:because we learned nothing from Fukushima by mlts · · Score: 5, Insightful

    We can compare the oil spills in the gulf, and not just the BP one, there are others that have been reported to still be spewing out crap. Those are "gifts that keep on giving". There are large swaths of the seabed that are just lifeless now.

    Contrast that to the area around the worst nuclear disaster in world history. Years later, it has become a game preserve. Were it not for the rad meters, it has become an ecological paradise where nature has come back.

    If Chernobyl is the worst nuclear disaster we ever will have, while undersea drilling is still a nascent technology where a blowout can happen at any time, I'm all for nuclear power with only caveat.

    The caveat is that in today's economy, there is no responsibility. Stakeholders have been replaced by shareholders. A reactor head can be made out of pot metal, be installed, and it fails. The company that made it can just shrug, file bankruptcy, the owner of the company take his golden parachute and live in the Bahamas. What would be needed is regulation where if there is malfeasance, there will be people going to prison and fortunes taken away, and not just pawns thrown under the bus to appease the masses, then back to business as usual.

  33. Re:because we learned nothing from Fukushima by GameboyRMH · · Score: 5, Informative

    Oh it's still an environmental problem, but most of it is conveniently out of plain sight:

    http://articles.cnn.com/2010-12-07/opinion/cousteau.gulf.oil.spill_1_oil-spill-deepwater-horizon-ixtoc

    --
    "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
  34. Re:No More Nuclear Waste Siting Problem? by zill · · Score: 4, Informative

    Ironically, coal-burning power plants actually emit more radiation than nuclear plants.

    If these fear mongers really want to protest against nuclear waste they should be picketing coal plants.

  35. Re:because we learned nothing from Fukushima by mlts · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Nail, hit head.

    Nuclear power done right brings a lot to the table:

    1: It is energy dense, so it doesn't take up valued land. Solar and wind farms are great, but energy losses through wires cause those to become not feasible.

    2: A reprocessing, "breeder" reactor can reduce the need for high level waste dumps.

    3: Reactor fuel is relatively cheap and abundant. When uranium becomes an issue, there is always thorium (although that is still a research leap ahead.)

    4: Safety. The deaths per terawatt figures completely show this.

    And it only will get better. The reactors in use today are designs built when disco was in fashion and people wore leisure suits. Modern reactor designs are generations ahead in safety, usability, and economy than the existing reactors that are on life support. Take an implemention of a traveling wave reactor. If done right, there would be zero need to enrich uranium, and the by-products are useful items.

    Had we had nuclear power R&D in the 1970s and 1980s, I'd probably say we would be at least 20-50 years ahead in technological growth than we are now. Even the need for petroleum wouldn't be much, as any oil would be used for polymers, rather than burned. Even used plastics can be "boiled" via a thermal depolymerization reaction and reused.

    I'm happy to see some sort of energy progress in the US other than gas and oil.

  36. Re:No More Nuclear Waste Siting Problem? by S-100 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Which is worse, a few tons of dangerous solid that needs to be permanently sequestered decades from now, or untold millions of tons of CO2 and trace metals being released into the atmosphere continuously?

  37. Nah, Georgia Power Scam! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    Nah, it's all a scam by Southern Company (parent of Georgia Power) to boost profits. I've been a shareholder for 30+ years. I live in Marietta. What they have done is to effectively double the price of electricity across the state to fund building the reactors rather than taking out a loan to build them. It's bait-and-switch. Once they have the money to build the reactors, the prices will never go down. They will have X years to build the reactors and in the mean time will come up with a number of excuses as to why our electricity prices didn't go down. Inflation, cost to operate, environmental regulations, you name it, any "reason" that they can come up with to pad their salaries and options. I'm a little guilty myself; their dividends aren't bad...

    I'm looking for a direct quote from last fall from a Georgia Power rep (Jeff Wilson?) talking about how they have all sorts of hydro power, but I can't find it after a half-hour of scouring the Internets. Link's probably dead anyway. That's what I get for not printing. An article came out where there was a report from Georgia Power or Southern Company, generated by them where the company found itself as a huge polluter. A spokesperson from Georgia Power/Southern Company totally downplayed the report and dismissed it going so far as to say that they have lots of renewable power deployed. There was a quote "from the horse's mouth" IIRC about how there was so much power generated (50MW? installed IIRC) at Lake Sinclair. If you lived around the area and ONLY if you lived around the area and actually paid very close attention talking to workers, you would know that the guy was lying through his teeth. They aren't generating ANY power there because there isn't enough water now to even be run through the turbines. Installed capacity != realized capacity. If anyone can find this article, please post it. It was probably from the AJC or Athens or Milledgeville press.

    Here's one that I dug out of my email on Georgia Power's water usage.

    Another on coal ash pollution.

    We have two of the world's top ten dirtiest power plants in operation RIGHT HERE IN GEORGIA!!! One of these (Cartersville) powers Atlanta, so I can't complain too much. :)
    Source
    Go to Milledgeville and behold the brown afternoon/evening skies. Been like this for longer than I've been around. They may actually be closing that plant because they're too cheap to install scrubbers.

    There is such thing as clean coal or at least "cleaner" coal. And I'm just as much for nuclear as the next guy, but that's not what this is about.

    Just another move by Southern Company to increase profits. Nothing else.

    (See post)

    1. Re:Nah, Georgia Power Scam! by PlatyPaul · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Paying twice as much now and the same later sounds better than normal now and 10x later.

      You are going to be one of the few not screwed when the dinosaurs start running out. And they'll be closing those dirty plants down the way when coal is more expensive than gold. Isn't this still a good outcome long-term, even if it costs now?

      --
      Misery loves company. Online misery loves unsuspecting random strangers.
    2. Re:Nah, Georgia Power Scam! by Nadaka · · Score: 4, Informative

      "clean coal" is about as expensive as nuclear power and it has a lot of problems because it sequesters CO2 by pumping it underground at high pressure. In the event of a fracture event the sudden release of CO2 can prove fatal for anyone living in low areas. A similar effect occurs naturally in certain areas of Africa where CO2 suddenly released from deep lakes occasionally wipes out entire villages. If that happens in a suburban or urban area, 10s or hundreds of thousands could die. The risks are just too great.

  38. Re:because we learned nothing from Fukushima by Andy+Dodd · · Score: 3, Informative

    You're correct here - Many of the safety features in this plant (and even its predecessors) would have allowed Fukushima to have survived the tsunami without any core damage.

    For example, in addition to the diesels, the ABWR design has a gas turbine in the (heavily reinforced) turbine building.

    The ESBWR design (similar in safety features to this AP1000) could have survived the loss of both that gas turbine and all of the diesels thanks to the PCCS - Maintaining PCCS operation only requires you to bring a fire truck onsite within 72 hours.

    --
    retrorocket.o not found, launch anyway?
  39. Re:because we learned nothing from Fukushima by Rei · · Score: 5, Informative

    Per-kilowatt I'm amazed at how expensive this is. $7/W just in construction costs? Yeah, I know nuclear has a higher capacity factor than wind and solar, but still... ouch.

    And the article summary repeats the whole "passively cooled" thing as if that equals "safe". :P First off, it's not even a true passive system. The "passive" system must successfully activate within 30 minutes, and only works for 72 hours. It's only passive in that it doesn't require electricity once started, and assuming that it works properly. Secondly, "passive" does not automatically equal 'safe' anyway. For example, a number of graphite-moderated reactors have been declared "safe" because of a negative void coefficient, so if you lose your working fluid and air gets in, the reaction still slows down. Great, except that hot graphite *burns* or otherwise erodes (burning graphite is what spread the Chernobyl radiation).

    In general, "passive safety" is an excuse to cut down on containment structures, which have saved our collective behinds many times over. And the AP1000 is no exception, with its bargain-basement containment design. I'm amazed that the construction cost on these is still this high despite the corner-cutting.

    --
    Why must all aquatic villains play the organ?
  40. How To Be Modded Down When Discussing Nuclear Pwr by Vegan+Cyclist · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Kind of depressing that none of the postings modded up at this moment reflect an anti-nuclear position. There's something a bit off about that. Here's how i see it on Slashdot with the topic of nuclear energy:

    How to be modded up: create a duality of only nuclear and coal options for energy production; belittle the dangers and significance of nuclear disaster; insist that there isn't any issue with waste from nuclear plants and that we will 'use it all up'.

    How to be modded down: mention that uranium is a finite source and that we WILL eventually deal with a depletion in the same way we're facing oil; inject that the costs of insuring nuclear plants are outrageous and that no private firms will (leaving it to governments [ie: citizens] to cover in the event of an emergency); highlight that it takes DECADES to get a plant to operating status (how is that going to help now, next year, or in the next 10 years?) Fact is: nuclear is *expensive*. Finally, a sure-fired way to be modded down is to insist that we have technology accessible to us NOW that can reduce emissions and is not nearly as expensive (environmentally or economically) as nuclear will be.

    FYI, on my own habits - i rarely mod down a post, unless it's blatantly ignorant of any factual matter, and even then it's rare. As suggested, i try to use my mod points to mod up, not down. Would love to see a bit more of that here for a more balanced display of discussion on this subject...

  41. Re:because we learned nothing from Fukushima by sjames · · Score: 5, Informative

    Three Mile Island was a panic, but nothing actually happened. Chernobyl was an actual disaster and Fukushima was a very real problem. Fukushima is/was NOT as bad as some coal power related incidents, it just happened faster, and had the new N word in it, so it gets attention. Coal fires due to mining have actually created some rather large exclusion zones of their own here in the U.S.

  42. Re:because we learned nothing from Fukushima by gadget+junkie · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Well then do not eat shrimp or fish or clams or mussels that came from the gulf.

    The gulf has seen bad spills before (Ixtoc I). Oil seeps into gulf naturally. The Gulf of Mexico does get oil in it all the time and has been for 1000s of years. It might be one of the best places to have a spill. Which really ticks the environmental people off. Don't get me wrong, spills are bad and should be avoided. They going to happen at some point for some reason. Steps should always be taken to minimize them.

    I recall from memory, and I do not have an online account with them, but on the print edition of Scientific American a few years back there was a report of an experiment on the space shuttle, in which they tried to estimate the natural seepage of hydrocarbons in the gulf of mexico by photo analisys of day views, since the oil slicks had a different reflectivity. The photos were quite amazing, it was really pervasive.

    --
    "If a boss demands loyalty, give him integrity. But if he demands integrity, give him loyalty." (John Boyd, 1927-1997)
  43. Re:because we learned nothing from Fukushima by Electricity+Likes+Me · · Score: 3, Informative

    As to fusion, we need to stop shooting for the "ideal purist" approach of fusion-only energy, and look into subcritical fission reactors using fusion as a neutron source as a stepping stone. Pure fusion is the ideal final goal, but we'll never get there without a more short-term realizable intermediary step of some sort.

    This is silly. There's been enormous progress on fusion over the decades. ITER may be the first time we actually achieve long term self-sustaining reactions.

    But there's practically no cross-over between fusion neutron sources, and fusion energy sources. If you want a neutron source, build a Farnsworth–Hirsch fusor and save yourself a lot of time and trouble - but those things will never be self-sustaining (unless Polywell's work out, but it seems more like those were a badly monitored experiment then real progress).

  44. Re:because we learned nothing from Fukushima by dotbot · · Score: 5, Informative

    The problem with nuclear power is the worst case scenario: Three Mile Island, Chernobyl, Fukushima.

    The problem is the willful ignorance of the media because the mysteriousness of nuclear power provides an almost unlimited source of material for media hyperbole. The differences between Three Mile Island, Chernobyl and Fukushima are so enormous - not just the outcome but the risks taken and events leading to the accident - it is ridiculous to include them in the same list.

    I would encourage people to understand these accidents and, in particular, look at the culture of safety/corruption in the organisations/countries involved. Chernobyl became operational before a key safety requirement was met (and, ironically, attempts to address this led to the accident). We now know that there were safety concens over Fukushima but TEPCO wasn't going to shut a profitable power station. Where safety regulators have the final say and are not corrupt, nuclear power, like everything else, will be much safer. Most aspects of everyday life are not 100% safe, e.g. walking down stairs, driving, flying etc., but in the USA/Canada and many European countries, at least, nuclear power should be low down on our list of things to worry about. My worry is that investment in nuclear power may detract from investment into developing sources of renewable energy.

  45. Re:because we learned nothing from Fukushima by Aryden · · Score: 3, Funny

    Parts of Ohiio have been burning for more than 125 years. (Devil's oven)

  46. Re:because we learned nothing from Fukushima by Gertlex · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I'm pretty sure there are no (commercial) graphite moderated reactors in the US. (Wandering slightly from that point: I'm also reasonably happy to leave policing other countries' nuclear policy to IAEA rather than the US...) So I'm not sure that's a great example.

    I'm not clear on what the bargain basement containment is that you refer to. But I have my own understanding of the changes, which I'll share... From what I've heard/read/learned, past light water reactors in the US use used a single containment vessel: steel reinforced concrete, which is also the reactor building. Newer ones have a solid steel containment vessel AND a concrete reactor building (with less steel reinforcement maybe?.

    Why this is better/adequate? Steel is much better as a secondary pressure vessel (think Fukushima hydrogen pressure -> explosion). Steel also conducts heat much better than concrete, so you get heat out of the containment without transferring mass out of containment. Then you drip water on the outside of steel containment to remove the decay heat building up inside, and this also controls the pressure, too. The concrete reactor building is your plane shield.

    That said, manufacturing that giant steel vessel is an added cost that other reactors didn't have. They also made the actual pressure vessel more expensive to fabricate by getting rid of some of the weld seams. (Said seams end up being the most likely candidate of problems after 40 years of reactor operation, though such failure has not occurred in the US... Fukushima maybe? I don't think we know yet.)

    (I am a nuclear engineering grad student, but keep in mind curriculum doesn't spend that much time on actual reactor containment design... so I'm not an expert, per se)