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The Nuclear Approach To Climate Change

Harperdog writes "A new roundtable at the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists explores the question of whether nuclear energy is the answer to climate change, particularly in developing countries where energy needs are so great. This roundtable, like the ones before it, will be translated into Chinese, Arabic, and Spanish within a week of each article's publication. Here's a summary: From desertification in China to glacier melt in Nepal to water scarcity in South Africa, climate change is beginning to make itself felt in the developing world. As developing countries search for ways to contain carbon emissions while also maximizing economic potential, a natural focus of attention is nuclear power. But nuclear energy presents its own dangers."

65 of 432 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Honest question by Jello+B. · · Score: 5, Informative

    The problem with burning fossil fuels isn't the net increase in entropy. It's the gasses that trap heat in the atmosphere.

  2. Re:Honest question by Namarrgon · · Score: 2

    Not in the case of solar, or solar-derived, energy sources (wind, tidal etc). These convert solar energy to electricity, which would've been almost completely radiated as heat anyway (excepting chemical storage, such as photosynthesis).

    Fission, fusion, geothermal etc add to our waste heat. Fossil is technically solar-derived, but is releasing millions of years of accumulated solar energy all at once.

    --
    Why would anyone engrave "Elbereth"?
  3. Not THE answer, but by crioca · · Score: 5, Interesting

    While renewable energy technology is the answer, nuclear energy is an excellent interim solution.
    Anyone whose concerned about safety, I want you to go and look up how many nuclear reactors are over 30, 40 years old. These antique behemoths are being run because there are many unnecessary obstacles to overcome if you want to build a new plant. Nuclear technology as well as construction and information systems have improved dramatically each decade, so how is it that people can react to modern reactors as if they have no safety advantages over their retro-ancestors?

    1. Re:Not THE answer, but by dark12222000 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      My concerns are not the original designs, or the engineers. It's the cheap profit seeking idiots who attempt to cut corners while running them. Fundamentally, Nuclear is a great idea! Unfortunately, Nuclear Power in the hands of a capitalist society which values immediate profit over the chance of blowing themselves up is actually really freaking dangerous.

      This is what we saw with Fukushima. That reactor was well designed - and the others in the region held up decently. If the plant had been kept up even close to spec - there wouldn't have been a disaster. Hell, even if after the initial issue, if they had just dumped the core, it would of been a passing mention in the newspaper. Instead, somebody who valued money over other peoples lives, decided to make a profitable decision instead of a safe one.

      It only takes one stupid idiot to ruin a good thing.

    2. Re:Not THE answer, but by hawguy · · Score: 4, Informative

      This is what we saw with Fukushima. That reactor was well designed - and the others in the region held up decently. If the plant had been kept up even close to spec - there wouldn't have been a disaster. Hell, even if after the initial issue,

      The reactor was well designed to faulty assumptions that in retrospect never should have been accepted.

      if they had just dumped the core, it would of been a passing mention in the newspaper. Instead, somebody who valued money over other peoples lives, decided to make a profitable decision instead of a safe one.

      It only takes one stupid idiot to ruin a good thing.

      I'm not sure what you mean by "dump the core", but I believe the reactors all underwent a SCRAM to shut down after the quake. But even after shutdown, the reactor core continues to emit a significant amount of heat for quite some time, and when the cooling failed, there was no way to dissipate that heat.

    3. Re:Not THE answer, but by jez9999 · · Score: 2

      While renewable energy technology is the answer, nuclear energy is an excellent interim solution.

      Why does nuclear need to be an intrerim solution? With IFRs, nuclear "waste" is actually fuel which can be processed, nuclear is cheaper, and safer, than it has been before. I don't see why we should throw this tech away.

    4. Re:Not THE answer, but by the+gnat · · Score: 2

      It's the cheap profit seeking idiots who attempt to cut corners while running them. Fundamentally, Nuclear is a great idea! Unfortunately, Nuclear Power in the hands of a capitalist society which values immediate profit over the chance of blowing themselves up is actually really freaking dangerous.

      Unless you lived in Soviet Russia, in which case nuclear power was in the hands of a socialist society which valued... actually, I'm not sure. But Chernobyl didn't work out too well either, so perhaps we should avoid simplistic assumptions about public sector versus private sector safety values. Building more of these things without heavy regulation and government oversight would be suicidal, but corporations don't have a monopoly on reptilian bean-counters.

  4. Re:Honest question by slew · · Score: 4, Informative

    Short answer: it does matter.

    Longer answer: The amount of energy that we use is a small fraction of the amount of energy that the earth receives from our nearest star (aka the sun). The heat we create from the energy that we use is also a small fraction of the heat the earth retains from the sun and the earth retains in its molten core. So if we are doing something to change the amount of heat we retain from the energy we receive from the sun** with different sources of power, it could certainly make a difference.

    Of course the $64G question: does buring carbon based fuels significantly change the amount of heat we retain on earth? Probably (that is the whole AGW debate). Of course we don't know for sure, but there is some evidence that it is true, but the bigger picture may be that things totally out of our control (e.g., volcanos, meteors, solar variation, etc), may in the end drown out our effect, but that doesn't mean the effect isn't there.

    **for completeness, we might also consider the distribution of the heat between the surface and the molten core, but to be fair, other than the trivial amount of geothermal energy we use, there's a negligible amount to think about here.

  5. SOS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Same Old Sh*t

        the nuclear industry is enormously profitable (if you ignore waste disposal) and long-lived (if you ignore a thousand years of aftermath).. these f*** wait in the wings and try this again and again.. What about an accounting system that values the natural world and rewards efficiency ?!!? If we are to survive as a species, the question is not "where do we get more power" but rather what we do with the capacity we have.

    1. Re:SOS by Zontar+The+Mindless · · Score: 2, Funny

      Look, if you mean "shit", say "shit".

      If you mean "fuck", then say "fuck".

      It's not like you're going to get struck by lightning or the ground's going to open up and swallow you or some such nonsense.

      See? I just did it and nothing bad hap*á%æ(*&*;u***$çç~``````__NO_CARRIER__

      --
      Il n'y a pas de Planet B.
  6. Simple solution by stox · · Score: 5, Funny

    A small scale nuclear war to produce a nuclear winter to offset global warming will do the trick, and possibly cut the population at the same time.

    --
    "To those who are overly cautious, everything is impossible. "
    1. Re:Simple solution by PolygamousRanchKid+ · · Score: 2

      The great advantage of this solution, is that it will not require agreement and action among all nations. The current attempts to agree on a plan are all failing miserably, because there are too many nations with conflicting interests involved. Now, everybody just sits back and waits for someone else to do something.

      Now if two nuke armed countries start squabbling, the rest of the world will not be able to agree on what to do about it. So the small scale nuclear war, will just happen by itself. No need for any agreement or an action plan.

      Duck, and cover.

      --
      Schroedinger's Brexit: The UK is both in and out of the EU at the same time!
  7. Just stop and think about it. by zippo01 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    If you took all the effort and energy spent, developing green energies, clean coal, fracking. Couple that with all the energy spent fighting each of them for what ever reason. Just think how safe and efficient 2020 nuclear power plants could be. A new nuclear plant hasn't been built in the US since what the 80's. Thats 30 YEARS. Just think of the improvements and innovations we could make or had made had we pursued it. If you really think that global warming is the end of days, then how can you not embrace nuclear? Its like vegetarians who believe in evolution. It just doesn't make since.

    1. Re:Just stop and think about it. by AmiMoJo · · Score: 2

      If you took all the effort and energy spent, developing nuclear energies and weapons, cleaning up after them, clean coal, fracking, drilling for oil. Couple that with all the energy spent fighting renewables for what ever reason. Just think how safe and efficient 2020 green energy could be.

      FTFY.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    2. Re:Just stop and think about it. by AmiMoJo · · Score: 4, Insightful

      PS. My mum is a vegetarian because she doesn't like meat. Some vegetarians just don't like the idea of factory farming and killing animals for food. I'm not sure how that is counter to evolution.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    3. Re:Just stop and think about it. by eennaarbrak · · Score: 2

      Its like vegetarians who believe in evolution. It just doesn't make since.

      Vegetarianism is a moral or health stance. Evolution is a scientific stance. I'm baffled why you think there is any possible contradiction between them.

    4. Re:Just stop and think about it. by trout007 · · Score: 2

      Exactly. Imagine if the only commercial planes we could fly in were De Havilland Comets? They were good planes for the day. They had some problems but figured out most of them. But anyone that has built any complicated system knows you would never build the next generation from the same way. With each generation you have a lessons learned and the next one is typically better. If we had a new generation every 20 years we would be 3-4 generation more advanced than we are now and it would be a non issue.

      As a libertarian one area I am still researching is damage to third parties and who is responsible for the victims. I am moving towards eliminating the concept of limited liability for stock owners when dealing with third party damages. If you own 1/1,000,000th of a power company that owns a reactor that causes $10B in damages in excess of what the company is worth you should personally be on the hook for $10k. Limited liability should only exist when dealing with second parties where they acknowledge that this limited liability exists. A third party never acknowledges it. Of course to attract investors a company would most likely maintain sufficient liability insurance to offset any damages but then at least that cost would be included in the costs to the company and not spread out to society.

      --
      I love Jesus, except for his foreign policy.
    5. Re:Just stop and think about it. by MachineShedFred · · Score: 2

      Point your mum to this research paper from a professor in the agriculture department at Oregon State University:

      http://www.morehouse.edu/facstaff/nnobis/papers/Davis-LeastHarm.htm

      If half of the total harvested land in the US was used to produce plant products for human consumption and half was used for pasture-forage production, how many animals would die annually so that humans may eat?

                              60 million ha, plant production x 15 animals/ha = 0.9 billion
                              60 million ha, forage production x 7.5 animals/ha = 0.45 billion
                                                                                                                                                      Total: 1.35 billion animals

      According to this model then, fewer animals (1.35 billion) would die than in the vegan model (1.8 billion). As a result, if we apply the LHP as Regan did for his vegan conclusion, it would seem that humans are morally obligated to consume a diet of vegetables and ruminant animal products.

      His conclusions:

      1. Vegan diets are not bloodless diets. Millions of animals of the field die every year to provide products used in vegan diets.
      2. Several alternative food production models exist that may kill fewer animals than the vegan model.
      3. More research is needed to obtain accurate estimations of the number of field animals killed in different crop production systems.
      4. Humans may be morally obligated to consume a diet from plant based plus pasture-forage-ruminant systems.

      --
      Slashdot still doesnâ(TM)t support Unicode after it was added to the HTML standard in 1997.
  8. Nuclear is the answer (Thorium) by pablo_max · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Just not the king we use. Uranium and plutonium are terrible ways to achieve nuclear power. There is relatively little power output and a large amount of waste product, which we know will kill us if we even come close to it. The only benefit is being able to create nuclear weapons.
    Thorium on the other hand produces much more power per gram and has very little waste. The waste it does produce is exceedingly less dangerous than the current 1950s style reactors.
    Plus, there is craps loads of the stuff everywhere. Time to switch. I think we have more than enough Nukes to destroy the world population many times over, so there is no need to stick to a dangerous tech just so we can make more.

  9. Re:Honest question by Z00L00K · · Score: 4, Informative

    And even nuclear power is a problem there - mining and enrichment are very expensive phases and they produce carbon dioxide.

    It's a question of calculating the total emissions for each type of energy source, and it's not an easy process.

    Add to that the environmental impact that each type of energy has, both under normal conditions and under extreme conditions. Just look at Chernobyl - that disaster made quite an impact over a large area for a long time. Fukushima wasn't as bad, and partially thanks to a large amount of the spill being diluted into the pacific.

    Hydroelectric power isn't free from making an environmental impact, but it's also of a more local type and if a disaster strikes the area suffering will be usable relatively soon. Wind power has it's own problems, one is that it's not very efficient so it requires a lot of space, and the wind doesn't always blow.

    Coal and oil - they are finite known resources. We better prepare ourselves for the day when they run out by looking for alternative energy solutions.

    Geothermal energy is quite interesting. It's available in many locations, but requires some investment to be usable.

    --
    If builders built buildings the way programmers wrote programs, then the first woodpecker would destroy civilization.
  10. Re:Honest question by Dan+East · · Score: 4, Informative

    The amount of heat generated by power consumption is small compared to the energy received from the sun and emitted back into space. The earth receives around 175 PW of power from the sun, and the amount emitted back into space is around the same providing an equilibrium. The global power consumption by everyone on the planet is around 15 TW. So that's a ratio of 175 PW to .015 PW, which means we consume around .008% of the amount of power we receive from the sun / radiate into space.

    A lot of our energy comes from fossil fuels, so basically that is releasing energy that was solar originally, so technically we aren't adding energy to the earth. Solar, geothermal and hydro is just converting / moving energy around from place to place within the existing system, so that doesn't add energy either. Nuclear would be the only way we'd be changing the amount of energy in the system, as we're directly converting it from mass. So it would matter what power source we use from that standpoint, and if your argument has merit, then nuclear would be the issue from an entropy standpoint.

    --
    Better known as 318230.
  11. Re:Migrate! by hawguy · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I moved to Alaska several years ago. After three winters, I am acclimatized. For instance, when it gets up to 50 degrees Fahrenheit I am strolling around in shorts and a t-shirt. Trying to survive shifting climate is something life has always done. Those who migrate and adapt survive. Those who nuke themselves deserve what they get - just leave the rest of us out of it.

    It's much easier to adapt to a cooler climate than a warmer one. When you get cold you can put on another jacket. You can only remove so many clothes to remain comfortable when the temperature rises to 101 degrees with high humidity.

  12. Re:Nuclear is the answer (Thorium) by ThatsMyNick · · Score: 4, Informative

    Thorium on the other hand produces much more power per gram and has very little waste. The waste it does produce is exceedingly less dangerous than the current 1950s style reactors.

    You forgot most important part (assuming you are referring to the molten-salt thorium reactors), there is no boom. The reactor can never go out of control. Hence there is never a nuclear cloud or fall out. And also, the reactor can be designed to be started and stopped in minutes rather than hours or days or months.

  13. Re:Honest question by hawguy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    And even nuclear power is a problem there - mining and enrichment are very expensive phases and they produce carbon dioxide.

    It's a question of calculating the total emissions for each type of energy source, and it's not an easy process.

    If you had practically unlimited and cheap electrical power available from nukes (an awfully big "if"), you could eliminate much of the carbon emissions while extracting nuclear fuel. If nothing else you could split hydrogen out of water and use hydrogen as a fuel for equipment and processing plants. There'd still be some carbon emissions from things like deforestation during mining, etc.

  14. Re:Honest question by c0lo · · Score: 4, Interesting
    1 tonne Oil = 42 GJ - thus 1 kT oil=42 x 10^12 J

    1. total world energy production - 2012 = 12 x 10^6 kT oil - thus about 5 x 10^20 J.
    averaging over 356 days => average power produced=1.6 x 10^13 W

    2. Solar constant - 1361 W/sq m
    Surface of Earth intercepting Sun's energy = PI*(6384 km) ^ 2 = 1.28 10^14 sq m
    Sun's radiation total power on Earth = 1.74 x 10^17 W

    Average power produced by the world / Sun's radiation power = 0.01%. Yet, until recently, Earth (or Gaya - to encompass the ecosystem as well) managed to deal with the Sun's radiation without warming.
    Conclusion: the major cause of the warming is very unlikely caused directly by the world's energy production (ultimately transformed in heat) - as it contributes with only 0.01%. Look elsewhere.

    --
    Questions raise, answers kill. Raise questions to stay alive.
  15. Re:Honest question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    but the bigger picture may be that things totally out of our control (e.g., volcanos, meteors, solar variation, etc), may in the end drown out our effect,

    Total from conduction, vulcanism, and plate tectonics: 0.1 W/m^2
    Total from solar variation since 1750: 0.12 W/m^2
    Total from human activities so far: 1.6 W/m^2

    Nothing is going to drown out our effect (Ref IPCC AR4).

    For completeness, the worldwide electricity production is about 2 TW. The heat from combustible fuels not used for electricity is probably comparable. Compare this to the value for conduction, vulcanism, and plate tectonics which has a value of about 44 TW (~0.1 W/m^2).

  16. Re:no by hawguy · · Score: 2

    Nuclear Energy is stupid. It's bad enough we have a bunch of cartels making massive profits of oil, nuclear power has an even higher barrier to entry than that.

    So what's your answer? Only generate power from generator-bicycles so there's a much lower barrier to entry?

    Nuclear fusion may ultimately prove to be an even cleaner source of power -- with an even higher barrier to entry than fission. Should fusion be abandoned because it will have a high barrier to entry?

  17. Re:Honest question by symbolset · · Score: 4, Insightful

    **for completeness, we might also consider the distribution of the heat between the surface and the molten core, but to be fair, other than the trivial amount of geothermal energy we use, there's a negligible amount to think about here.

    Well thanks at least for including it for completeness, since that one source exceeds our current electrical energy needs for the next thousand years with current technology - by which time technology may have advanced a wee bit. The Yellowstone Caldera by itself throws off more thermal energy each minute than, converted to electrical energy, the world requires. And cooling that damned thing might be in our best interest since it's likely to bury 60% of the US in ash someday - again, as it has many times before.

    Solar is great too, and can also be baseload power with a big enough heatsink - or balanced with geothermal plants that produce on demand solar and wind can use geothermal for a heatsink / corrector for low/no production. Geothermal plants can with slant drilling occupy a tiny surface space and tap a vast region, and can be baseload power as well as a peak power source.

    There are a lot of other sources we aren't using right now. Petroleum refineries throw off a lot of waste heat, as do pulp mills, organic composting, server farms, volcanos, iron and aluminum and glass refineries. Any place there is a reliable significant thermal delta is an opportunity to reap electrical power, and the question is whether or not it can be done economically. As science progresses the delta and size of the installation becomes smaller. It's not as much "geothermal" as it is "thermal delta" electrical power.

    There is no reason not to use both solar and geothermal to diminish our dependence on oil.

    Nuclear works on thermal deltas too, but doesn't exploit them enough. Spent fuels, for example, heat their pools for a decade before they're considered "cool" enough to put into permanent storage (should any ever come available). That's a waste heat that's dissipated by evaporation (phase change) of water rather than claiming it as electrical power through modern energy capture technologies. Given modern technologies the spent fuel might give more electrical power than the reactor if it were exploited. I have issues with the whole "we don't have to take the trash out" mentality of nuclear proponents, but I have no problem with making the most of what they do.

    We need to come to grips with the idea that "a big enough thermal delta is an electrical energy source." And then moderate the "Big enough" term with advances in technology. That's the ultimate recycling: finding utility for the thermal energy we are now throwing away.

    --
    Help stamp out iliturcy.
  18. Re:Honest question by polar+red · · Score: 4, Informative

    things totally out of our control (e.g., volcanos, meteors, solar variation, etc), may in the end drown out our effect

    the earth had reached sort of an equilibrium - CO2 released by volcanoes etcetera was being cancelled out by plants taking it out of the atmosphere, but in the latest few centuries humans have changed the co2 concentration in the atmosphere from 200/250 to 400 ppm

    --
    Yes, I'm left. You have a problem with that?
  19. Re:Migrate! by sFurbo · · Score: 2

    The parking lots that was built with Phoenix climate in mind is doing fine in Phoenix climate. The mix of asphalt is adjusted to the expected temperature range the finished structure will experience. A hotter climate will soften the asphalt, so a harder mix is chosen, and vice versa. If the climate changes faster than the lifetime of asphalt, there will be trouble, regardless of the direction of the local climate change.

  20. Re:Nuclear is the answer (Thorium) by c0lo · · Score: 2

    Just not the king we use. Uranium and plutonium are terrible ways to achieve nuclear power. There is relatively little power output and a large amount of waste product, which we know will kill us if we even come close to it. The only benefit is being able to create nuclear weapons.

    We could even get rid of the "waste product"

    --
    Questions raise, answers kill. Raise questions to stay alive.
  21. Re:Water power by hawguy · · Score: 2

    Even in the USA, we're dealing with nuclear and coal plants on the brink of shutting down,
    because the mild winter and extended drought is bringing rivers down near critical levels.

    Fortunately, most of the population lives close to the coasts where there's lots of water available.

    In Africa, you need to desalinate water before you can do anything.

    Why not use the seawater to cool your cooling fluid instead of using saltwater directly? Pump the heated waste water far offshore.

    And desalination creates its own set of problems (what do you do with the brine?).

    Why not put it back where it came from -- the ocean? Let it seep out of miles of pipe to reduce local effects of high salinity.

  22. Pick One by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Global Warming, Nuclear Energy, Agrarian Society

    This is news to few; heck the bumper sticker I made for myself with that saying has this in its footer metadata: "Made on 4/24/2007 1:19 PM".

    I hear Richard Branson has repeatedly tried to get appointments with Obama to talk about IFR reactors (and been rebuffed), so I probably don't need to be prosthelitizing them any longer.

    --
    My God, it's Full of Source!
    OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
  23. Re:Honest question by hawguy · · Score: 5, Insightful

    cheap electrical power available from nukes

    That's not really true.

    That's why I said it's a big "if", but in any case, the cost of nuclear power versus fossil fuels depends on how seriously you believe that there is a link between carbon emissions and global warming. Global warming could result in many trillions of dollars of damage as coastal areas are inundated by rising seas, droughts and other extreme weather, crop loss, etc.

    If Nuclear power really does emit less carbon and carbon is causing global warming, then nuclear power could be far less costly even if the raw price per kwh is higher.

  24. Re:Migrate! by Zontar+The+Mindless · · Score: 3, Informative

    What did it cost you to move you and your family from the continental US to Alaska? How much energy was required? And what's different about the area around what's now your home since you took up residence there?

    Now multiply that by 7 billion. Well... you did say *everyone* should migrate, right?

    But they'll all get to smoke a joint without being hassled, so that makes it sensible. Yeah, right.

    BTW, I live just as far north as you do. Also in a place where people don't pay much heed to the War On Some Drugs.

    And yet... I'm pretty sure that you've managed to contribute little or nothing of use to the discussion here.

    --
    Il n'y a pas de Planet B.
  25. Re:Honest question by hawguy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    With enough electrical energy we could convert to a hydrogen/oxygen economy, rather than a carbon-based one. There are some issues though, like the Hindenburg.

    Then don't build your airship with a highly flamable skin - hydrogen was only part of the problem.

    It turns out that Hydrogen in a normal Earthlike atmosphere is explosive.

    So are many other common fuels like gasoline and natural gas, yet we've learned to harness them safely.

    Also, it wants to be a gas rather than a liquid, which limits its utility.

    As does natural gas, yet there's growing talk of using Natural Gas to fuel long haul trucks due to the dropping costs of natural gas.

     

    And as a gas, it passes freely through any known material at room temperature because hydrogen2 molecules are as small as molecules get.

    Generate it at the filling station so it doesn't have to be pumped for long distances, and dissolve it in some other substance to ease storage.

    And then there's the whole "we get half of our electrical energy from coal" thing, and the conversion losses.

    But the whole premise of this article is that we need to move to "clean" nuclear power, not fossil fuels.

    Unless we get some good watts from some other source, your electric hybrid is likely generating more CO2 than my Chevy truck.

    Unless your Chevy truck gets better than 53/48 mpg, then my electric hybrid generates less CO2 than your truck since both of our vehicles are powered by the same fuel - gasoline. Even when electric cars are powered by coal plants, they than conventional cars.

    If I had an electric car, most of its power would come from hydroelectric power.

  26. Re:Honest question by AK+Marc · · Score: 3, Insightful

    If power, from whatever source, was free, what would the world look like?

  27. Re:Honest question by JSBiff · · Score: 4, Insightful

    In addition to the other commentor's point about using nuclear power to extract, transport, and enrich fuel would allow you to dramatically decrease the carbon footprint of nuclear, there's also the points that:

    2) Newer enrichment technology like centrifuges and, soon, laser excitation enrichment, dramatically reduce the energy needed to enrich uranium (which is a proliferation concern of course, but us keeping ourselves from having centrifuges doesn't seem likely to stop Iran from building them). I mean, the energy requirements for a gas centrifuge is something like 1/50 the power needed for the old gas diffusion plants (which were just horribly inefficient). I don't know what laser enrichment will be, but I gather it will use something like 1/100th the the power of gas diffusion facility.

    3) If you use Thorium in a molten salt reactor, you don't need any enrichment at all (well, ok, you need startup fissile and for the first few decades, that probably means some enriched uranium or U/Pu mix, but eventually you can start new plants from the U-233 which was bred in old Thorium plants which will be being decommissioned, so you wouldn't need much Uranium mining at all), and it is currently a waste product of mining other minerals, so there's essentially no additional mining footprint (as demand grows, this may eventually change).

  28. Re:Honest question by hawguy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If power, from whatever source, was free, what would the world look like?

    A whole lot brighter at night!

  29. Re:Migrate! by SwampJack · · Score: 5, Insightful

    In the 1960's and 1970's, through the concerted efforts of well meaning organizations like Greenpeace, the nuclear power industry was destroyed. In their attempt to do good this organization indirectly caused the construction of untold numbers of carbon emitting power stations. In our current attempt to "do good" it is important not to let our hubris lead us to make mistakes that will cost future generations. No scientifically accepted model says the Earth with turn into a Venus-like desert. Average temperatures are expected to rise 2 - 12 degrees F by 2100 according to the EPA. Sea levels are expected to rise at most 2 meters by 2100 according to the IPCC. If it costs us a mere 1-2% of our GDP each year to prevent that change, over the course of 100 years that adds up: Current World GDP (About 64 Trillion USD) * 1.02 ^ 100 = $ 460 Trillion Dollars For $460 Trillion dollars we could move everyone within a mile of the ocean inland, build greenhouses to supply the entire world's food supply, and plant 100 billion trees with money left over.

  30. Re:Waste problem by JSBiff · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Well, for one thing, our current approach to nuclear waste is completely moronic. Trying to bury it for 100k years is a bit of a fool's errand.

    The only sane solution to the nuclear waste problem is to force the long-lived waste (mostly plutonium, but some other actinides as well) to fission, and the only way to do that is in a fast nuclear reactor.

    In truth, we've painted ourselves into a bit of a corner. We NEED to do R&D on fast reactors (especially molten salt fast reactors, and the Integral Fast Reactor), and start to build whatever is going to be the safest, most effective nuclear reactor.

    When you burn off the long-lived waste in a fast reactor, you do get more radioactive waste as output BUT that waste cools off "quickly" - it becomes basically non-radioactive after 300 years (I say "basically non-radioactive" because you do get extremely low levels of lingering radiation for a long time - that's how half-lives work, mathematically, but the radiation is lower than average earth crust after about 300 years).

    I don't know about you, but I'd rather have a 300 year problem than a 100k year problem, wouldn't you?

  31. Re:Nuclear is the answer (Thorium) by rmstar · · Score: 3, Informative

    Thorium on the other hand produces much more power per gram and has very little waste. The waste it does produce is exceedingly less dangerous than the current 1950s style reactors.

    Experience suggests that this is an oversimplification. The HTTR (High Temperature Thorium Reactor) had a few unexpected failure modes that led to some discharge of radioactive stuff into the atmosphere. The other german experimental Thorium reactor (Juellich) almost went boom because, for some nowadays not so mysterious reason, the graphite was heated way beyond what it should have. Nobody knew that back then. While nothing happened, it still is a mayor waste problem to this day.

    This leads us to another issue. The failure mode of the HTTR was not that unexpected. It was, like the Tsunami issue at Fukushima, predicted by other people and ignored by those responsible. The designers and builders of the the HTTR made a point about how they were completely sure that nothing could possibly go wrong, and whoever claimed otherwise was an idiot. Doubts were brushed aside. The moral of the story is that we cannot trust the judgement of nuclear engineers to the extent that would be necessary.

    "The design is inherently safe, nothing can go wrong" -- yeah, right.

  32. Re:Refining by JSBiff · · Score: 2

    I found this with a quick Google search:

    http://www.nrc.gov/materials/fuel-cycle-fac/laser.html

    That mentions the process as being Australian, so I'm going to conclude that is likely the same process you refer to.

    Looks like, at least in the US, it hasn't been buried. Maybe in AU they buried it, dunno.

  33. Re:Honest question by Immerman · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Right - the problem is primarily due to an incremental increase in solar energy retention due to greenhouse gasses. Basically all of that 1361W/m2 ends up radiated back into space - some reflected, but mostly as infrared radiation (heat), but let greenhouse gasses capture even a fraction of a percent more of that infrared energy and it dwarfs humanities energy production and the global temperature will rise until it's hot enough that the amount of escaping energy again matches the incoming. Of course all manner of ecological feedback loops can contribute as well, and that's where the question really gets complicated. So far though it seems like, at the rate we're forcing the system, there are more positive (self-accelerating) feedback loops than negative (self-limiting), and that's a scary proposition for any engineer.

    --
    --- Most topics have many sides worth arguing, allow me to take one opposite you.
  34. Re:Honest question by nusuth · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It would be like magic, almost post-scarcity. Energy is *the* price setter. We tend to think raw materials and technology are more limiting, but actually more energy can substitute both raw materials and technology. For example, it is possible but energy inefficient to separate dilute chemicals.If energy is free, it would be possible to mine *everything* from waste and oceans. If you need a complex molecule, make an organic soup and separate useful stuff. If a certain production process has low yield, do not research ways to increase yield, instead increase capacity, separate, reuse. If farmland is not sufficient, use hydrophonic farms with artificial lightning and synthesized fertilizers. Need water, desalinate. Need water in the middle of Sahara, pump. Need cold air, condition. Make a dome over the a city o a desert; you don't need an impermeable dome if you don't mind using energy inefficiently...

    --

    Gentlemen, you can't fight in here, this is the War Room!

  35. cooling is a disaster by kenorland · · Score: 2

    It may be easier to keep warm in a cold climate, but things don't grow well there. Even brief and light periods of cooling in the past ("little ice age") have cause massive famine and death. Furthermore, with global warming, we lose far less arable land around the equator than we gain up north.

    Cooling is a disaster for civilization, warming is merely an inconvenience.

  36. Re:Nuclear is the answer (Thorium) by Kokuyo · · Score: 4, Informative

    That's why we are talking about LFTR and not the reactor type you are refering to.

    The german reactor was more or less a Uranium reactor that ran on Thorium as well. A LFTR runs almost purely on Thorium, needing Urianium only as a starter.

    Do NOT mix the two up.

    Please make yourself familiar with that concept. Thorium is a fuel. The reactor design is somewhat independent of it.

  37. irrational fear by Tom · · Score: 5, Insightful

    yes, nuclear is the answer.

    Our culture has an irrational fear of nuclear power, much like in the early trains of steam trains, people thought they would die from asphyxiation if the train went too fast.

    Some nuclear technology is dangerous. Thorium reactors (see other comments), for example, aren't.

    But through our irrational fear, we've actually put us into a worse situation. In most western countries, we have nuclear reactors running well beyond their lifetimes, because we are too afraid to allow the construction of new, modern reactors. So instead we have old, less reliable, less safe and slowly falling apart reactors. Do you really think that's an improvement?

    Burning coal and oil and gas is what has to stop, right now. I'm with a power company that offers renewable energy right now. But if there was one that offered renewable plus nuclear, I'd sign up immediately. For some reason, there isn't. You either get totally dirty power, with nuclear and fossil, or renewable. But nobody has the balls to ask the market if maybe there are enough people like me who don't really mind nuclear, but do mind fossil.

    --
    Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
  38. Re:Nuclear is the answer (Thorium) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    The thorium cycle produces Uranium 233 which is a very good weapon grade material... that's not the reason.

  39. Re:Honest question by nospam007 · · Score: 2, Funny

    "A new roundtable at the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists explores the question of whether nuclear energy is the answer ..."

    Dear Atomic Scientists, if all you got is a hammer, everything looks like a nail to you.

  40. I agree with you, but... by Firethorn · · Score: 2

    Being a bit of a precisionist, I feel the need to point out that coal is generally NOT refined in any practical sense of the word; simply crushed and sorted a bit. That's part of the reason for the pollution problem with it - any non-coal bits go into the burners as well.

    Oil is used for 'power' all the time, it's just not a significant source for *electrical* generation.

    Many people use 'burn' as a term for using up uranium/nuclear fuel.

    Coal: Mine, crush, burn.
    Uranium: Mine, refine, enrich(sometimes), cast, assemble, burn, recycle(sometimes), dispose.

    To address some of the higher threads-
    The true difference is that a single train car of Uranium a year can produce as much power as a daily 200 car train of coal. Or 1 train car(mostly shielding) of Uranium = ~73k train cars of Coal. In the mining and refinement of said car of uranium you might release about 10 cars worth of CO2, making the CO2 release from nuclear power 'insignificant'. IE we wouldn't have a global warming problem from CO2 release if we were all nuclear power(and did something about oil usage).

    We dont' need to get down to 'carbon neutral' in order to avoid global warming; we simply need to avoid overwhelming the planet's ability to re-absorb it.

    --
    I don't read AC A human right
    1. Re:I agree with you, but... by Muad'Dave · · Score: 2

      Coal: Mine, crush, burn.

      You left out a step: Coal: Mine, crush, burn, dispose in atmosphere

      --
      Tiller's Rule: Never use a word in written form that you've only heard and never read. You will end up looking foolish.
  41. Re:Please Journalists, get facts! by Immerman · · Score: 3, Informative

    As others have pointed out, building and operating the plant has to be done regardless of the energy source, so factoring that in won't change much - though admittedly historically nuclear plants have been larger and more sophisticated. There's no reason that has to be the case though - the Hyperion reactor designs for example consist of a sealed reactor unit a few cubic meters in volume that produces 70MW of heat energy for ten years. The rest of the power plant could then be a retrofitted coal-fired plant for all that it matters. Well, aside from the underground vaults protecting the reactors from accident or sabotage, but that's just a big concrete-lined hole in the ground.

    As for mining - a pound of U235 contains roughly 2.3 MILLION times the energy of a pound of coal. Even once we factor in the fact that only 0.7% of uranium is the readily fissile U235 isotope, and modern light water reactors (LWR) only extract about 0.6% of the available energy that's still about 100x the energy from a pound of mined uranium than a pound of coal. Refining it cuts even further into that energy budget, but still the shear reduction in the amount of "stuff" you need to move around should make it apparent that uranium has an edge in mining energy costs. And you can reprocess the "spent" fuel, which still actually contains most of the original U235 and improve that return considerably.

    And things look considerably better for Thorium, 100% of mined thorium is the fertile Th232, and it "burns" much more efficiently without reprocessing - it has roughly 10,000x the energy density of coal, and at those levels it becomes painfully obvious how much lower the CO2 emissions from mining and transportation are. Plus it's a common by-product from rare-earth mining, so you get a fair amount for "free" in that regard.

    As for handling the waste - with the exception of the spent fuel, which is all valuable isotopes and should be reprocessed anyway(in a LWR) or only moderate risk relatively short-half life isotopes in a Thorium reactor, the ash from a coal plant is actually more radioactive than anything coming out of a nuclear plant, as well as being highly toxic and far more voluminous. If we held everyone to the same environmental standards I suspect coal plants would have the higher energy footprint to deal with their waste.

    --
    --- Most topics have many sides worth arguing, allow me to take one opposite you.
  42. Re:Nuclear is the answer (Thorium) by pablo_max · · Score: 3, Informative

    Experience suggests that this is an oversimplification. The HTTR (High Temperature Thorium Reactor) had a few unexpected failure modes....

    True. I was talking about Liquid fluoride thorium reactor however. It is simply not possible for this design to explode like Fukushima. When power is gone, the reaction cannot continue.
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liquid_fluoride_thorium_reactor

  43. For want of modding... by Firethorn · · Score: 3, Interesting

    If I'd seen your post earlier, I might of modded you up.

    At this point I'll concede on the global warming/climate change point. As you point out, the real question now is: Is avoiding the damage economically worth it? In some cases I hear people advocating to switching to electric sources that run 10X the cost of conventional ones.

    As somebody else pointed out, if we were given a source of essentially free unlimited electricity we'd be 99% of the way towards post-scarcity. Cheap power enables so many things.

    I think we still need a healthy mix of power sources, and I don't like coal due to the ancillary pollution - not just global warming. By the time you pilo on enough pollution controls to qualify coal power as 'clean', it's more expensive than nuclear.

    We dearly need affordable power, and I think nuclear has the best promise. Even then I don't propose making it our 'sole source.' I like to place my ideal non-carbon electric mix at 40% nuclear, 20% solar, 20% wind, and 20% 'other' such as hydro. In order to reach this in the USA we simply need around twice as many nuclear reactors if we keep building them in the 1-1.4GW size range. We could use a whole raft of the small kw range devices for both providing electricity and heating remote Alaskan towns. Put the solar panels on roofs south of the Mason-Dixon line, the wind turbines in North Dakota and such, where they make sense.

    --
    I don't read AC A human right
  44. Re:That is completely incorrect by Dunbal · · Score: 2

    Burning coal decreases mass

    What? Gases have mass too. Unless you're trying to tell me that CO2 magically blows off into space, in which case what exactly is the problem with CO2? Please don't try to rationalize things through a scientific approach unless of course you're a scientist. Those extra years of university weren't all just about partying.

    --
    Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
  45. Re:Honest question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Yes, it's science. The link between human carbon emissions and global warming is a model. It fits very well with the current data, including the estimations of past data (with the associated big error bars). However, new observations CAN invalidate the model, either with new data or better estimations of past data.

    Be careful. It's science, not faith. It's a theory, just like relativity. It CAN be falsified by real data, just like Newton's gravitation was falsified in the large-field regime by Einstein. It's not a "settled" dogma.

  46. Re:Nuclear is the answer (Thorium) by rmstar · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It is simply not possible for this design to explode

    That is exactly the type of claim I take issue with. If you are talking "gigawatts" and "can't blow up", then you are likely talking nonsense.

    like Fukushima.

    That's a very narrow definition of safe. It will most likely have its own way of making a mess. Perhaps it will be bloody unlikely in theory, but in practice, corrupt, greedy and stupid operators will make it happen.

  47. Re:Honest question by moeinvt · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Come up with a solution other than "The government needs to ...." and I'll weigh your solution with patience and objectivity, then likely participate.

    F*** the government. They just want you to be a serf with a government-issued energy ration card and a electricity monitoring meter on your home.

    Not to mention a food voucher, an apartment with X# sq feet of space (as determined by some federal bureaucracy to be what you "need") and a job that pays slave wages from whatever corporation paid the most in campaign contributions.

    "global warming" is the new "fear generator" that they need now that they've milked terrorism, "the children" and communism for everything they're worth.

    Stop being afraid.
     

  48. Scotland 100% renewable by 2020? by Firethorn · · Score: 2

    I'd like to see a source on this claim. All too often when I see such projections it's heavily weighted with unrealistic assumptions and back-end installations. For example, stuff like 75% of the renewable power will be installed in 2015-2020, and they're already behind their 25% goal by 2015.

    A google search - seems the goal is 100% electricity from renewables, not energy. The goal for heating is only 11% by 2020:
    Not until 2030(by Oil&Gas, admittably)
    Equivalent, not 'actual' 100% - They'll be trading with other countries, buying non-renewable power, but will sell renewable at other times, but will net out 100%(realistic).
    This page suggests they lucked out on the renewable resource trend; favorable wind and tide power locations. They're also 'ahead of schedule' and 35% of the way there. Still, they'll need to increase 8% a year to meet the goal, which I find a bit ambitious.

    That doesn't mean that I wouldn't be trying to reach similar goals if I was evil overlord of the United states; it's just that nuclear power would very much be part of the mix.

    --
    I don't read AC A human right
  49. No, he's made a simple mistake by Kupfernigk · · Score: 3, Informative
    There have been articles demonstrating that, watt for watt, electric vehicles may result in more emissions than Diesel ones in areas where a lot of electricity is produced using coal. This is a fair point and one I wouldn't dispute. It is also an argument in favor of nuclear power, since the emissions benefit (very large over the life of the plant) apply to electric vehicles as well as stationary use.

    Where he is wrong is in failing to realise that this only compares like with like. If I put a big electric motor in a Chevy truck and drove it like a redneck, it would possibly result in similar emissions to the Diesel version (there are benefits because the electric motor doesn't use power when stationary, and there is no auto transmission to waste fuel). But a hybrid isn't nearly as big and heavy as a truck, and it has much better aerodynamics. If I am transporting up to 4 people plus luggage, a hybrid is far more energy efficient than a truck. The problem is people who commute in overly large vehicles, for reasons of status.

    --
    From scarped cliff or quarried stone she cries "A thousand types are gone, I care for nothing, no not one."
  50. Re:Honest question by tmosley · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I'm not sure you understand what the tragedy of the commons is (it refers to common property that doesn't have a distinct owner, and as such is not taken care of). You certainly don't understand why it doesn't apply here.

    Energy that is so cheap that it is easier to give it away than to sell it will be given away, while money is made from other sources. For example, the energy is so cheap that it might not be cost effective to charge households for its use, but you WOULD charge customers that use more than a certain amount (ie factories, large buildings, etc). This is similar to the way we treat roads now. Yes, we pay a gas tax, but commercial vehicles pay a use tax that is assessed by the mile. If roads were so expensive that they couldn't pay for the roads that way, then it would be more likely for roads to cost money to use for individuals.

    I think a major mental block you are dealing with here is the fact that you aren't able to wrap your mind around the way that economies of plenty work. This is understandable because almost all real goods are governed by scarcity economics. Luckily, we have created a realm that is governed by economics of plenty--the internet. Think about the way internet services are provided. Free email. Free websearch. Free porn. Free everything. Yet the services continue to be provided, even by big companies that use expensive infrastructure. There would be nothing to stop a company like Google from providing free power to consumers if they could do it effectively.

  51. Third world not ready for nukes by __aaltlg1547 · · Score: 2

    The recent debacle in Japan and the previous disaster in Chernobyl illustrate why nuclear energy isn't a viable option for third-world economies. If first-world countries can't manage the risk of nuclear power plants effectively, third-world countries will be much less able to do so, and they'll wind up fucking themselves over much worse than Japan did if they try. The economic strains will inevitably cause them to skimp on safety and maintainance, with the result of more breakdowns and meltdowns per facility. That is, until a better, more fail-safe, lower maintainance design is developed and demonstrated in the first world.

    Then there's the issue of transporting nuclear fuel all over the place and dealing with spent fuel in a responsible manner, another thing that the first world can barely do.

  52. Wrong Nukes by morgauxo · · Score: 2

    Ultimately we aren't going to fix this problem until it is way too late and something drastic is requires for us to survive. Most likely... bombing Antarctica just enough to produce a 'mild' nuclear winter. Don't worry about Antarctica's wildlife though.. they will be long since dead from the climate change anyway at that point.

    Alternatively.... those who can afford to will move to Antarctica while the rest of the continents become to hot to survive and everyone else dies. Then when it starts to become too hot even there they can bomb the now de-populated old continents. So... you see... bombing Antarctica is actually an optimistic view on the future compared to what else might happen.

  53. Re:Honest question by Hartree · · Score: 5, Informative

    FYI: The Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists is a noted anti-nuclear publication. Their name comes from long ago when a number of atomic scientists put it out to oppose nuclear weapons.

    This is like having the RIAA do a review on the future outlook of The Pirate Party,