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As Sea Levels Rise, Are Coastal Nuclear Plants Ready? (nationalgeographic.com)

mdsolar writes with this National Geographic story about the danger of rising sea levels to low-lying power plants across the country. According to the story: "Just east of the Homestead-Miami Speedway, off Florida's Biscayne Bay, two nuclear reactors churn out enough electricity to power nearly a million homes. The Turkey Point plant is licensed to continue doing so until at least 2032. At some point after that, if you believe the direst government projections, a good part of the low-lying site could be underwater. So could at least 13 other U.S. nuclear plants, as the world's seas continue to rise. Their vulnerability, and that of many others, raises serious questions for the future."

302 comments

  1. At My Door by JimSadler · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I am very close to a nuke that is right on the beach on Florida's Treasure Coast. Apparently to shut down a reactor and clean up everything that is contaminated is a process that takes years. This nuke has only one road that runs along the beach and if that road is swamped access to the plant would be by helicopter or boat, weather permitting. And that road frequently has challenges with hurricanes and spring tides as it is. I wonder if any planning is going on in regard to this situation.

    1. Re:At My Door by MightyYar · · Score: 5, Informative

      The one one Hutchinson Island? I used to stay there every summer. This article is (surprise!) alarmist. Read carefully, it claims nothing prior to 2032 - and makes references only to things that could happen in the fairly distant future. Compared to the cleanup costs, shoring up a road or building a berm along the Indian River would be pretty cheap.

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    2. Re:At My Door by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I wouldn't spend a lot of time worrying about it. If you're in Florida and near the beach, your property won't even exist above water 50 years from now. In other words, nuclear plants are the least of your worries.

    3. Re:At My Door by mdsolar · · Score: 1, Interesting

      The NRC has pretty much ignored this in relicensing decisions. And they've made no plan for the waste stored at Humboldt Bay in northern California.

    4. Re:At My Door by BitZtream · · Score: 4, Informative

      You do realize that if the road gets wiped out while they are trying to decommission the plant ... they'll just build one on a bridge, right? As a Floridian, you're probably aware of just how good Florida's construction crews are at rebuilding after the REGULAR hurricanes and tropical that come pretty much every year ...

      Building roads and bridges is pretty trivial and cheap compared to decommissioning a nuclear power station. And do you know how they brought a lot of the construction materials to the site ... probably by barge actually (thats what happened at the Crystal River plant)

      And decommissioning takes years because its cheaper to wait out certain things than to deal with them while hot. You have to shut the planet down, get it into cold shutdown (no need for active cooling measures), remove the fuel, then wait for all that shit to 'cool down' radioactively enough that it doesn't require robots to work on it. During that time you go tear down all the other crap thats not radioactive and wait for 10 years. Then you come back and get the rest of it with men in some radiation suites that cost about 1000 times less than trying to do it with the robots you'd have had to design, build and use if you tried to do it immediately after shutdown.

      But to answer you actual question.

      Yes, thats all been thought of, before the plant was even built, its all part of the initial environmental studies and is public record if you really want to go digging for it. At one point Looked up all that information for the Crystal River plant, so unless the state was thinking completely differently between the studies for the two stations we're referring to, yes, they've thought of all that already. It might no longer apply (environment changes, hence this discussion), but its been considered.

      --
      Persistent Volume manager for Kubernetes - https://github.com/dwimsey/openshift-pvmanager
    5. Re:At My Door by Zak3056 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I'm shocked, shocked, that an alarming article about nuclear power was submitted by a guy named mdsolar.

      --
      What part of "shall not be infringed" is so hard to understand?
    6. Re:At My Door by NotDrWho · · Score: 3, Interesting

      In the U.S. we already have entire cities that are below sea level. Fortunately, we have these things called dikes, levees, and cofferdams that we can build when we need to to protect them from actually being underwater (as long as they're properly built and maintained). So even if sea levels do rise as predicted, these plants aren't going to be flooded unless for some bizarre reason we allow them to be flooded.

      But hey, alarmism sells.

      --
      SJW's don't eliminate discrimination. They just expropriate it for themselves.
    7. Re:At My Door by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      He is a Shill's Shill.

      Legendary among Solar Trolls.

    8. Re:At My Door by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's assuming no catastrophic event happens, like for example a giant block of ice breaks off of antartica or greenland.

    9. Re:At My Door by TWX · · Score: 5, Insightful

      They had made plans for the storage of nuclear waste, and spent billions of dollars preparing the facility. They were then told that they couldn't do that and had to stop.

      Note, I am not discussing the technical merits of the facility in question, I am merely pointing out that there was a plan.

      --
      Do not look into laser with remaining eye.
    10. Re:At My Door by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's correct, anything warning you of a problem you don't want to know exists is alarmist.

      Of course, this doesn't make the claim wrong,and calling it "alarmist" is a weasel way of avoiding calling it wrong whilst giving the desired impression that it is.

    11. Re:At My Door by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You do realize that if the road gets wiped out while they are trying to decommission the plant ... they'll just build one on a bridge, right? As a Floridian, you're probably aware of just how good Florida's construction crews are at rebuilding after the REGULAR hurricanes and tropical that come pretty much every year ...

      That makes them good at business, not construction. If they were good at building they wouldn't have to rebuild every year.

    12. Re:At My Door by voss · · Score: 1

      I wish we could switch over to molten salt reactor, They can be easily shut off if needed.

    13. Re:At My Door by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      A SJW's idea (if we understand what 'social justice' means) of having a conversation is everyone talks without some immature fuckwhippet in the corner disrupting the conversation because he doesn't like how gay/black/straight/white/Muslim/Christian some other participants are.

      Translation: Everyone talks as long as they agree with me. Anyone who disagrees with me is an immature fuckwit who deserves to be silenced.

    14. Re:At My Door by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No. It makes you bad at math and valuation.

    15. Re:At My Door by MightyYar · · Score: 2

      Calling attention to a problem that is likely to occur after the plants in question are all shut down is, in fact, alarmist. The only possible impact is on cleanup, and that's not something to prepare for right now. Keeping water out for a while is a straightforward engineering problem that has been more or less mastered for over a century.

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    16. Re:At My Door by mdsolar · · Score: 0

      That was a Department of Energy plan for waste. The NRC is responsible for individual sites. Storage at Humboldt Bay will be innudated, and they have not addressed this.

    17. Re:At My Door by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 1

      Yes, *one* city, where the dikes etc. where built over a course of hundred years? What about New York, was't there bizzar damage during the last hurricane? Or Miami?

      So even if sea levels do rise as predicted, these plants aren't going to be flooded unless for some bizarre reason we allow them to be flooded.
      A few years ago a nuclear plant made the news (in the US) in the middle of a flooded river area. For some reason the river was up to the edge of the hand made sand bag wall. So: you obviously are quite often about to "let it happen".

      --
      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
    18. Re:At My Door by Lendrick · · Score: 1

      At My Door

      The expression is "in my backyard", and this is why a lot of people don't want nuclear power plants in theirs.

    19. Re:At My Door by Impy+the+Impiuos+Imp · · Score: 1

      100 years, much less 200 or 300, we cannot predict the technological differences. We can less predict them than the people of 1900 (or 1800 or 1700) could today.

      How stupid the prople of 1900 would have been to slam the brakes on their economies by crushing the energy industries...to present us, in 2015, with a happy planet and 1970-level tech...if we were lucky.

      It's bad enough most of the world lives in areas full of freedom fail as it is, and cannot contribute much per capita to advancing tech.

      --
      (-1: Post disagrees with my already-settled worldview) is not a valid mod option.
    20. Re:At My Door by mrchaotica · · Score: 1

      That, and build them away from areas prone to natural disasters.

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    21. Re:At My Door by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Occasionally Vs. Spamming Slashdot with multiple a week.

    22. Re:At My Door by Coren22 · · Score: 0

      It looks like he did, one article back in 2013. While you, have no submissions. Very interesting, do people often call you a pot?

      --
      APK likes to ask for responses to the same things over and over. Maybe he just likes the responses?
    23. Re:At My Door by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Shutting down a nuke station (and remember, this isn't known that it will be AFTER, unless you have some model and proof of the future...) isn't enough. You have to leave it to cool down and become less reactive, decades.

      Leases also last for decades, and it takes a decade or two to build them. That's five decades before you can shut down any you want to build now, and another five decades before you can remove it.

      Tell me, what is the opposite of alarmist, where you claim "no problem" rather than put ANY thought into it at all, but merely pretend that it'll be fine?

      Stupidity?

      Yeah, I think that's what it's called.

      Unless you're doing what you can to stop any building of new nuclear, in which case SOME of the current nuclear power stations are unsafe.

      But for those who want to build new ones, pointing out a problem that MIGHT be delayed beyond the end of the life of the current fleet is rather required.

      Why do you want private industry to build an expensive plant and not tell them that they'll not be allowed to run it to end of life, but will have to pay to remove it from site decades earlier than they thought they could manage?

    24. Re:At My Door by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And? What is wrong with that? Why don't you submit occasionally an article about "stuff that matters" (to you?)

      It's a stupid article with a stupid headline....

      Sea level rise is slow, even with most crazy scenarios, it's a few inches PER CENTURY.

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

      Sea level rise is expected to continue for centuries.[10] Because of the slow inertia, long response time for parts of the climate system, it has been estimated that we are already committed to a sea-level rise of approximately 2.3 metres (7.5 ft) for each degree Celsius of temperature rise within the next 2,000 years

      So, since nuclear plants are going to be there for about 100 years, we are looking at sea level rise of about 1-2 ft. or 50cm in their lifetime. Furthermore, these things are SMALL. You can build stuff around them? You can have water tight doors?

      It's a completely stupid premise to even ask these questions considering sea level rises more in a typical storm. A much more valid question to ask, is whether Miami is ready for sea level rise, or Florida in general, or New York. All those places will be there far longer than a nuclear power plant and are so much larger where you can't easily build something to protect them against sea level rise.

      But no! Let's concentrate on nuclear power plants that will not even be physically there in 100 years.... because nukular is scary!

    25. Re:At My Door by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 0

      Actually I had a "submission", but someone submitted the same article and he "won". Was about foam and heating problems of the main tank of a space shuttle after a crash.

      Most stuff I'm interested in, is not suited for /. otherwise I would perhaps regularly submit something.

      --
      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
    26. Re:At My Door by Coren22 · · Score: 1

      How exactly do you propose to cool nuclear plants that aren't built on rivers? There is a reason nuclear power plants are built on moving water (or large pools of water), and it is to allow them to run more efficiently, and not require giant cooling towers.

      --
      APK likes to ask for responses to the same things over and over. Maybe he just likes the responses?
    27. Re:At My Door by Coren22 · · Score: 2

      What would you like them to do about it? Every time the government comes up with a solution, NIMBYs lose their shit over it. Yucca Mountain had a minor incident due to someone not folowing procedures. The incident caused no issues that were not planned for in the construction of the facility, but it was shut down because "OMG Nuclear!".

      --
      APK likes to ask for responses to the same things over and over. Maybe he just likes the responses?
    28. Re:At My Door by Coren22 · · Score: 1

      Because they are ignorant morons? We already know that.

      --
      APK likes to ask for responses to the same things over and over. Maybe he just likes the responses?
    29. Re:At My Door by thinkwaitfast · · Score: 2

      completely stupid premise

      If the premise is to truly ask a question, they would be asking it to engineers, not a public forum. If the premise is to create some sort of fear and or outrage to boost sales of their magazine, then it makes more sense.

    30. Re:At My Door by MachineShedFred · · Score: 1

      What should probably be looked at more closely is if the plant would be in any kind of danger at a moderate amount of flooding. What are we actually talking about here? A flooded basement where some old filing cabinets and broken office chairs might rust a bit, but the plant can be safely idled until a crew gets on site to pump the overflow out, or a Fukushima catastrophe where the backup generators are underwater and access to the plant is completely severed?

      Also, are these coastal plants designed so that it's impossible to retrofit them with a proper sea wall or flood mitigation in the next 20 years? I highly doubt it.

      This whole article is a reactionary troll. I don't understand why mdsolar thinks that for solar to win, nuclear has to lose. I work for a god damn solar company, and would rather see nuclear base load than more coal. Being pro-solar doesn't mean you have to be anti-nuclear, and in fact makes you look like an idiot. The real enemy here is fossil fuels.

      --
      Slashdot still doesnâ(TM)t support Unicode after it was added to the HTML standard in 1997.
    31. Re:At My Door by LeadSongDog · · Score: 1

      "On the beach" is the key to the problem. All of Florida is built on sand, so as sea level rises dikes won't be enough to keep the water out, it will simply go under them. You'd need a waterproof basement floor, plus pumps to deal with the inevitable leaks and breaches. You need to turn the whole place into a ship. It is just not going to happen. Florida is doomed, but they're still in denial.

      --
      Oh, I'm sorry sir, I thought you were referring to me, Mr. Wensleydale.
    32. Re:At My Door by thinkwaitfast · · Score: 1

      your property won't even exist above water 50 years from now

      This was taught in schools in the 70's. The end is closer than you think.

    33. Re:At My Door by MachineShedFred · · Score: 1

      Trojan Nuclear Generating Station in Oregon was shut down in 1992, and demolition completed in 2005. That's 13 years from the last volt going out, to the reactor vessel being buried a couple hundred miles upriver at Hanford, and the cooling tower being imploded. Not decades, plural. Today, the only thing that remains on the site is a helipad, a couple of warehouses, a guard shack thing, the spent fuel storage, and a remaining office building. The spent fuel is only still there because Congress won't get off their ass and do something about permanent storage.

      So let's not inflate things beyond what they actually are, and proven to be - it makes you look like a fool, and does a disservice to your argument.

      --
      Slashdot still doesnâ(TM)t support Unicode after it was added to the HTML standard in 1997.
    34. Re:At My Door by MachineShedFred · · Score: 1

      I believe the GP's point is that the storage there wouldn't be necessary (outside of the cooling pools, of course) if they could put the dry-cask stored waste on a train and get it to a proper storage facility, as was planned decades ago. Then the senior Senator from Nevada became part of the Senate leadership, and ended responsibility for this issue in favor of NIMBYism.

      Was Yucca Mountain perfect? Probably not, but it's far better than what we're doing today.

      --
      Slashdot still doesnâ(TM)t support Unicode after it was added to the HTML standard in 1997.
    35. Re:At My Door by Coren22 · · Score: 1

      The power plant evaporates the water from the treated sewage from several nearby cities and towns to provide the cooling of the steam that it produces.

      So, evaporating water that could be reused while existing in a desert where there is a significant lack of water...poor planning.

      Sure, that will work everywhere, we should get right on building every nuclear power plant to these specs. We could name them thinkwaitfast plants, then when multiple of them go supercritical in droughts, you can get full credit for your idea of using this cooling method.

      --
      APK likes to ask for responses to the same things over and over. Maybe he just likes the responses?
    36. Re:At My Door by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      You have a couple of ways to handle the decommissioning of a power plant. The fastest and most complete choice is called DECON, which basically returns the land to whatever other use. This does not take as long as you indicate. For instance, the (admittedly small) Humbolt Bay reactor stopped running in 1976 and they are currently wrapping up the DECON process. Zion, a large (2GW) plant near Chicago, stopped operating in 1998 and is scheduled to be cleaned up by 2020. I'm the first to admit that the schedule will likely slip, but we're talking about 22 years for a huge plant - and this is when they are in no particular hurry.

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    37. Re:At My Door by mdsolar · · Score: 1

      Turned out that the data for Yucca was irredeemably falsified. We'll never be able to use that site because of corruption polluting the knowledge base.

    38. Re:At My Door by mdsolar · · Score: 1

      It turned out to be corrupt. USES scientists falsified data.

    39. Re:At My Door by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      -1, for sarcasm... yay!

    40. Re:At My Door by Coren22 · · Score: 1

      I see nothing about that here:

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

      Please, link to a source for this falsification of data. The stories I have read were that some peon used the incorrect kitty litter in several of the barrels, and it didn't perform the function the kitty litter is put in for because it was paper based instead of clay based kitty litter.

      --
      APK likes to ask for responses to the same things over and over. Maybe he just likes the responses?
    41. Re:At My Door by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      [Citation Needed]. The biggest complaints on Wikipedia are NIMBY.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    42. Re:At My Door by mdsolar · · Score: 1

      http://usatoday30.usatoday.com... You've got the wrong dump.

    43. Re:At My Door by phantomfive · · Score: 1
      From your article:

      the report said a review of modeling reports and notebooks didn't turn up evidence that information actually was falsified or modified as the e-mails suggested.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    44. Re:At My Door by bobbied · · Score: 1

      Yea, according to Al Gore's movie, we should all be just about dead now.. Either drowned by the sea, blow away by a hurricane or burnt to a crisp from the baking heat.

      --
      "File to fit, pound to insert, paint to match" - Aircraft Maintenance 101
    45. Re:At My Door by bobbied · · Score: 1

      What would you like them to do about it?

      Me? REPROCESS the fuel assemblies and separate out the fissionable materials from the toxic waste and high level radio active materials. Hang on to the plutonium and uranium and other useful stuff, package up the rest in glass/ceramic blocks and bury it or dump it into the deepest part of the ocean where it will be safe for a few thousand years.

      --
      "File to fit, pound to insert, paint to match" - Aircraft Maintenance 101
    46. Re:At My Door by mdsolar · · Score: 1

      Which leaves us even more uncertain. We're the reviewers also corrupt?

    47. Re:At My Door by ColdWetDog · · Score: 1

      Water is an excellent moderator.... Of course, water is an excellent solvent - at least at near geological time scales.

      If things get really bad, we can ask the Navy to step in. They're pretty good at underwater reactors.

      --
      Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
    48. Re:At My Door by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      Maybe the USA today reporters were corrupt, too. Maybe we're stuck in the Truman Show?

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    49. Re:At My Door by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      SJW slurs someone who disagrees with him with vile personal insults! Film at eleven!

    50. Re:At My Door by riverat1 · · Score: 3, Informative

      Fortunately, we have these things called dikes, levees, and cofferdams that we can build when we need to to protect them from actually being underwater (as long as they're properly built and maintained).

      Dikes and levees to keep the sea out don't work very well in much of Florida because the underlying bedrock is largely porous limestone. Even if you build a levee the water will just come up through the ground.

      "Conventional sea walls and barriers are not effective here," says Robert Daoust, an ecologist at ARCADIS, a Dutch firm that specializes in engineering solutions to rising seas. "Protecting the city, if it is possible, will require innovative solutions."

      Link

    51. Re:At My Door by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      Calling attention to a problem that is likely to occur after the plants in question are all shut down is, in fact, alarmist. The only possible impact is on cleanup, and that's not something to prepare for right now. Keeping water out for a while is a straightforward engineering problem that has been more or less mastered for over a century.

      Given the porosity of the underlying limestone bedrock (think Swiss cheese) keeping the water out at Turkey Point in Southern Florida may not be as straightforward as you believe it is.

    52. Re:At My Door by Coren22 · · Score: 1

      I agree with you, I don't know why the US is so hesitant about reprocessing, but you have to work with what you've got.

      --
      APK likes to ask for responses to the same things over and over. Maybe he just likes the responses?
    53. Re:At My Door by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yea, that never happened in AIT. Thanks for pretending, though.

    54. Re:At My Door by SvnLyrBrto · · Score: 1

      The bizarre thing about New York is not that it was damaged by a hurricane. They can be pretty devastating. The bizarre... and very troubling... thing is that Sandy, the hurricane that wrecked New York so badly, was only a category 1 hurricane. While no hurricane is exactly trivial, a cat 1 really is fairly weak sauce. For it do do as much damage as it did speaks to a vast lack of adherence to building codes and a very decrepit and sub-standard infrastructure. That's quite a concern considering the social and economic importance of New York.

      When I lived on the east coast, a cat 1 was mostly an opportunity to get together with friends and use up our supplies of rum and fruit juice; and this was in Florida, which has neither the level of developed infrastructure nor the advantages of elevation and drainage that New York enjoys.

      --
      Imagine all the people...
    55. Re:At My Door by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      The problem with guys like you is you never pay close enough attention to the time frames that are put on those predictions. You just assume it's going to happen "soon". Or it's possible you are deliberately ignoring the time frames attached to the predictions so you can make silly statements like that.

    56. Re: At My Door by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But, see, that's what happens with SJWs. They sit there and try to lecture everyone, but when they are proven wrong they make a customized insult for whoever is doing that. Woman? Internalized Mysogony. Black man? Uncle Tom. White? Racist/sexist/ everything you can name.

      Truth is, they're just brainwashed. A friend of mine lived in Sanfran for a few years. When he came back here, he had troubles fitting in because no one was part of his bizarre PC culture. He tried to get people kicked out of a student club for NOT LIKING a movie he liked.

    57. Re:At My Door by ultranova · · Score: 2

      You realize you're identifying with "some immature fuckwhippet in the corner disrupting the conversation because he doesn't like how gay/black/straight/white/Muslim/Christian some other participants are", don't you?

      No, they're not. They're expressing their belief that dave420 wishes to violate immature fuckwhippet's ability to exercise his right to free speech with the specific aim of silencing opinions dave420 disagrees with. This is worrisome, because it's essentially killing off the soul of the democratic process - the public arguments about various ideas which allow the public to judge them - and keeping only the now-empty shell of elections, which become a circus battle between competing troupes.

      The idea of flushing down the toilet the entire Western civilization just so you don't have to tolerate random interruptions from an annoying kid is insane.

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    58. Re:At My Door by bobbied · · Score: 1

      Actually, I know why, or at least the reason they claim. It is claimed that it would violate international agreements because it would provide a stockpile of weapons grade fissionable materials.

      Since Carter's administration, it's been the policy that we don't reprocess fuel. But this has been stupid from the start. It leaves highly dangerous spent fuel assemblies languishing in cooling pools literally all over the place in varying levels of security and monitoring.

      --
      "File to fit, pound to insert, paint to match" - Aircraft Maintenance 101
    59. Re:At My Door by bobbied · · Score: 1

      We don't eh? Name one thing ole Al said was going to happen in 2006 that has in the last 10 years.... But before you do, name the 9 known scientific errors in his little film..

      --
      "File to fit, pound to insert, paint to match" - Aircraft Maintenance 101
    60. Re:At My Door by wyHunter · · Score: 1

      Indeed. Let's say that things were incredibly wonky and that sea levels would rise 1 foot in 25 years. Oh my! We couldn't possibly build a dyke. You know, like the Dutch have done for centuries?

    61. Re:At My Door by wyHunter · · Score: 1

      ARGH! DIKE.

    62. Re:At My Door by HiThere · · Score: 1

      No! Those bricks are a source of process heat. You can use them to preheat water for other purposes.

      You do end up with a bunch of stuff that so low level that it's less dangerous than Denver bedrock, but that can just be road gravel or something.

      That said, until a reprocessing system is implemented I don't want any more nuclear plants. Promising that "We'll build one as soon as we finish building the plants"(not a real quote) hasn't worked out very well so far.

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
    63. Re:At My Door by HiThere · · Score: 1

      What do you mean "irredemably"? I've heard that there were some minor problems with it, but nothing that, to my mind, said it was a terrible solution.

      OTOH, if you were asserting that the correct solution wasn't burial, but reprocessing, or even burning in a fast breeder, I'd say perhaps you have a point. (I'm not really convinced about the "fast breeder" argument, and I won't be until there's experimental evidence that proves it actually works even nearly as well as its proponents claim, but I'm not just discarding it.)

      P.S.: While I hope fusion works, we don't have it yet, and I'm not convinced that it will be free of radioactive waste either, despite some claims I've read. Most sources seem to only claim less radioactive waste. So we still need reprocessing.

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
    64. Re:At My Door by HiThere · · Score: 1

      What successful shutdowns and decomissionings can you point to?

      The only one I can think of that *might* be called successful is one in Britain where they ended up filling the plant with cement as the cheapest answer. My suspicion is that all the pre-construction estimates for decommissioning were done by assuming everything worked optimally for the entire process, and then low balling the cost estimate.

      P.S.: I'm not sure that filling the plant with concrete was a bad approach. I'm just sure that wasn't was the original decomissioning plans called for.

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
    65. Re:At My Door by budgenator · · Score: 1

      The point is the oceans are rising at a rate of about 3mm per year, not likely to swamp anything expectantly, and if it does happen the reactors will have been at cold-halt status for decades.

      Records and research show that sea level has been steadily rising at a rate of 0.04 to 0.1 inches per year since 1900.

      This rate may be increasing. Since 1992, new methods of satellite altimetry (the measurement of elevation or altitude) indicate a rate of rise of 0.12 inches per year. Is sea level rising?

      --
      Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
    66. Re:At My Door by budgenator · · Score: 1

      Some Peanut Farmer from Georgia decide he didn't trust the process.

      --
      Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
    67. Re:At My Door by bobbied · · Score: 1

      Oh we have three reprocessing systems already. We used them for producing nuclear bomb material... I believe the Savannah River site has just been sitting there rusting since the military stopped using it in 2002 while the others are a few decades older...

      --
      "File to fit, pound to insert, paint to match" - Aircraft Maintenance 101
    68. Re:At My Door by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      Nothing that Gore said in "An Inconvenient Truth" would be expected to come to have come to full fruition in a mere 10 years. For instance you mentioned sea level rise. What Gore said in the film was that if the Greenland ice sheet were to melt it would cause about 20 feet of sea level rise. That is an accurate statement but he didn't put a time frame on it at all. The scientific literature says it would take as least several centuries for that to happen.

      I know about the Dimmock case and the "9 errors" although the judge in the case called them inaccuracies. Gore may have been a bit hyperbolic in overstating some things but none of them are demonstrably absolutely wrong.

    69. Re:At My Door by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So, the phrase "I'll be happy to make more stuff up" is something that in your mind inspires lots and lots of confidence in a source? Or did your mind just conveniently happen to block that out?

    70. Re:At My Door by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      Maybe you need a different approach to your point, because your current approach sounds conspiratorial.

      Maybe you should try to make the point clear that, "nuclear power requires constant, careful supervision (unlike wind or coal), and the government is not reliable enough to provide that over time."

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    71. Re:At My Door by bobbied · · Score: 1

      So you admit you don't know the 9 things and that Ole Al was talking in general about stuff that is centuries away from happening? Oh, and let me add, even after 10 years we don't know for sure if what he seemed to have clamed was accurate or not? 10 years on we don't see evidence he was correct, you said so yourself.

      That about sums up the movie... There where some serious flaws in the science and facts Al used. He implies a whole lot of stuff but parses his words carefully to lead the audience into believing stuff that is totally inaccurate even in the view of folks who believe in man made global warming/climate change or what ever they call it today. Then even after 10 years, all we know is that the number of issues with Al's little slide show just continues to grow. Face it, Al was pretty much just peddling hype and was mostly wrong... But let's not forget he made a nice chunk of change with all this....

      Then you tell me that I'm not informed.... That's rich man...

      --
      "File to fit, pound to insert, paint to match" - Aircraft Maintenance 101
    72. Re:At My Door by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So you admit you can't say what 9 things you've asserted exist to add to the other asinine claim made about what was said in AIT that was also made up.

      And you whine about being called "uninformed"...

    73. Re:At My Door by mdsolar · · Score: 1

      I just mean that scientists a devoted to truth. Once they start to lie, the whole thing must be rotten and can't be redeemed.

      On waste, I think using accelerators to transmute to stable isotopes is best. There will be plenty of excess cheap solar power to get the job done safely on site.

      Regarding fusion, the waste is not long lived so not such a headache.

    74. Re:At My Door by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      From what I've heard the rate of sea level rise was about 1 mm/year in the early 1900s, 2 mm/year in the mid 1900s and since about 1992 it is about 3 mm/year. Are you confident the rate of sea level rise won't continue increase as time goes on?

    75. Re:At My Door by mdsolar · · Score: 1

      Conspiracies do exist, and Yucca seems have a focus of coverups, sort of the basic pattern for a conspiracy.

      I find the opposite to your view on government to be persuasive. This is attributed to Ralph Nader's sister by my mother: nuclear power begets a permanent security state to deal with the waste and is thus one of the most pernicious enemies of Liberty ever.

    76. Re:At My Door by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      And yet the temperature of the Earth continues to increase, the sea level continues to rise, ice continues to melt and the oceans continue to acidify. All things expected to happen with global warming even if they don't get the exact number right.

      I do know about the 9 things from the Dimmock case. I consider them for the most part nitpicking that doesn't disprove the main thrust of the message. Gore donated all of his proceeds from the movie to an educational campaign to spread the word about anthropogenic global warming.

    77. Re: At My Door by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Grandpa stated "If the sky falls then all the birds are dead."

    78. Re: At My Door by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How's that strawman working for you?

    79. Re: At My Door by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's the problem with SFSRs, they think it's their right to act douchey and everyone still has to like them and laugh at their 'jokes'. Guess what, if people don't like you, they don't have to deal with you, sorry if that makes you a sad boy. Just keep saying it's all the sjws, don't bother looking in the mirror at your crappy personality.

    80. Re:At My Door by MrKaos · · Score: 1

      I find the opposite to your view on government to be persuasive. This is attributed to Ralph Nader's sister by my mother: nuclear power begets a permanent security state to deal with the waste and is thus one of the most pernicious enemies of Liberty ever.

      Few of the Nuclear Fanbois here would ever reach the level of education about the nuclear industry to recognize this as an issue.

      These nuclear shills here are so lost in their own ineptitude that things like the 'net energy return' of the nuclear industry is met with a 'huh?', they think 'breeder' reactors burn up transuranics and *somehow* the unenriched uranium from coal fly ash is not as much as a problem as using DU as weapons mass and payload.

      The thing that entertains me is that their shilling draws the end of the nuclear industry closer every day. The government report into Fukushima revealed it is the very mindset we see demonstrated here led to the culture of collusion that prevented any safety enhancements for the plant receiving any budget. Of course that is blamed on NIMBYS who are excluded from interfering by acts of law.

      What disturbs me is that when the nuclear industry is done we will still have a lot of toxic radionuclides persisting in the environment.

      I hadn't seen you post an article for a while, so thank you for the articles you post.

      --
      My ism, it's full of beliefs.
    81. Re:At My Door by mdsolar · · Score: 1

      Thanks, I took a warm season Internet fast. Strangely, however, it is still warm.

    82. Re:At My Door by MrKaos · · Score: 1
      --
      My ism, it's full of beliefs.
    83. Re:At My Door by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      Mastered, yes. Implemented? Maybe. I seem to recall that a certain country that if prone to sudden rises in the water level was somewhat unprepared. What you need to ask is of there was a really bad, once on a millennium storm tomorrow, would that plant be okay?

      If the OP is correct then the single access road seems like a major weakness. I would love to know what contingency plans they have. Seems like they should be published for public scrutiny.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    84. Re: At My Door by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The expected sea level rise by end of century is between 80cm and 1.5m. Likely at the lower end, around 1m. 1m is not trivial, especially when you take into account a more volatile climate.

      The article is fairly alarmist, but it's still a prudent question to ask. I live near Fukushima and I can tell you, if Tepco had truthfully answered whether they were ready for a ten metre Tsunami, they wouldn't have had the issues they had. All they had to do was move their backup generators to a revised suggested height, and we would have avoided the disaster there.

      So - I think the question still remains - are current nuclear reactors ready for sea lvevl rise (that includes the period when they are undergoing commission), because while nukes are mostly safe - that is only true if the humans running them don't get complacent.

    85. Re:At My Door by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 1

      I was not really referring to the destruction to buildings, but the ordinary flooding and destruction of "dikes" sand banks etc.

      Especially the "super rich" beach houses got problems with displacement of large amounts of coastal sand.

      --
      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
    86. Re:At My Door by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      The plant in question took two direct hits from hurricanes about 1 month apart back in the early 2000s. It's out on a barrier island and pretty much extends from the beach to the river side of the island. You can find the plant easily on Google Maps - St. Lucie Nuke Plant.

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    87. Re:At My Door by MrKaos · · Score: 1

      Just coming into our warm season, well over 1Kw per square metre, I suspect.

      --
      My ism, it's full of beliefs.
    88. Re:At My Door by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      Florida is far better prepared for, and much more frequently hit by, hurricanes. New York has "elevation", as you say (though not in the parts that flooded). It also has a lot of underground infrastructure, unlike Florida. A place that gets hit by a hurricane every 50 years is going to suffer a lot more damage than one that gets hit every few years - if only for the Darwinian-like reason that 50 years worth of crappy infrastructure can build up.

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    89. Re:At My Door by budgenator · · Score: 1

      They are not even sure the rise has really increased, because they are using a new measurement system, it's really difficult to measure a signal that 1/1000th of what the noise is with confidence.

      --
      Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
    90. Re:At My Door by Anonymous+Cow+Ward · · Score: 1
      Your own citation says the work was being redone nine years ago, which directly refutes your claim that "we'll never be able to use that site because of corruption polluting the knowledge base." Moreover,

      Among other things, the report said a review of modeling reports and notebooks didn't turn up evidence that information actually was falsified or modified as the e-mails suggested.

      --
      Examine even your most deeply held beliefs. Nobody is always right.
    91. Re:At My Door by Anonymous+Cow+Ward · · Score: 1
      Really take a look at mdsolar's source - I enjoyed this quote:

      Among other things, the report said a review of modeling reports and notebooks didn't turn up evidence that information actually was falsified or modified as the e-mails suggested.

      Oh, and this part:

      the Energy Department said last year that the scientific work was being redone by Sandia National Laboratories in New Mexico, at a cost of more than $20 million.

      Which makes it seem to me that they've had nine years to redo the work, and had the budget for it.

      --
      Examine even your most deeply held beliefs. Nobody is always right.
    92. Re:At My Door by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      From what I read at the time, and heard from friends, the damage was primarily flooding, and that Sandy had an impressive and wide storm surge. If the sea level goes up by half a meter, the storm surge goes up by half a meter, and that can flood a lot more ground.

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
    93. Re:At My Door by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      It seems to me there's also a low chance, over a century, that a large land ice sheet might slip off or something, raising the sea level considerably more. Climate forecasting for such details is hard.

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
    94. Re:At My Door by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      Conceivably. We could also be living in the Matrix. Amelia Earhardt might have discovered the Fountain of Youth and assassinated Kennedy, while the cover-up blamed Oswald. There may be a secret society of wizards controlling the world. I can't disprove any of that.

      However, if you want to convince us that the Yucca Mountain study was falsified, you really do need to come up with some credible evidence. When your source turns out to contradict what you say, you're not presenting any evidence. The USA Today article doesn't leave any of us more uncertain. You seem to be set on your belief that the stuff was falsified, and the rest of us aren't going to believe it unless we see evidence.

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
    95. Re:At My Door by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      When scientists lie about anything important, they will eventually be found out. That's how science works. There are numerous checks to try to weed out bad papers, which don't necessarily work very well, but something that is in one peer-reviewed journal can be rechecked, or can be found to be in conflict with later theory and put up for a recheck.

      Accelerators take a LOT of energy to deal with very small amounts of matter. They aren't an option for disposing of quantities of nuclear waste, no matter how many solar panel we put up.

      You don't know what fusion radioactive waste will be, and neither do I. There's different processes, and they give off different numbers and probably energies of neutrons. While some experiments have been energy-positive in some way, none have come anywhere close to giving off as much energy as is put into the entire process. Therefore, we don't know how to make commercial fusion reactors, and we don't know what's going to be required for them. Therefore we have to deal with materials we don't know being hit by some unknown neutrons. Do you care to tell us what radioactive isotopes we'll have to deal with?

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
    96. Re:At My Door by mdsolar · · Score: 1

      You can read the emails yourself. http://www.google.com/url?sa=t...

    97. Re:At My Door by Coren22 · · Score: 1

      On top of that, does any of it really matter for the usage of a nuclear waste dump? Did the "falsified data" mean that suddenly the salt mine wouldn't contain the nuclear material and would instead disperse it into the atmosphere?

      I also laughed at the "you've got the wrong dump" part, as he linked to the same Yucca Mountain facility I did.

      --
      APK likes to ask for responses to the same things over and over. Maybe he just likes the responses?
    98. Re:At My Door by mdsolar · · Score: 1

      Gag.... Physics has been doing neutron experiments for some time now. Yes, fusion is cleaner than fission by far.

    99. Re:At My Door by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In the U.S. we already have entire cities that are below sea level. Fortunately, we have these things called dikes, levees, and cofferdams that we can build when we need to to protect them from actually being underwater (as long as they're properly built and maintained). So even if sea levels do rise as predicted, these plants aren't going to be flooded unless for some bizarre reason we allow them to be flooded.

      But hey, alarmism sells.

      Perhaps our inland cities should be built on or near mountain peaks. Or on rocky terrain where we cannot plant vegetables, or grow fruit trees or cultivate livestock. Rocky terrain should be good for housing whose footing does not shift, even after 100 years elapsed.

    100. Re:At My Door by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      They are not even sure the rise has really increased, because they are using a new measurement system, it's really difficult to measure a signal that 1/1000th of what the noise is with confidence.

      Sure, that's true with a few measurements but as the number of measurements add up the errors more and more cancel out and your confidence increases.

    101. Re:At My Door by HiThere · · Score: 1

      "sitting there rusting" isn't implemented as a reprocessing system. But, yes, it's been proven technically doable. I don't know that it's been proven economically doable.

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
    102. Re:At My Door by bobbied · · Score: 1

      It is a reprocessing facility which was put into mothballs. It is capable of any number of reprocessing techniques and I believe is something we could restart easily if we wanted too.

      BTW the USA is unique among the major nuclear powers in that we are NOT running a reprocessing operation. There are other countries which still have reprocessing plants in operation.

      --
      "File to fit, pound to insert, paint to match" - Aircraft Maintenance 101
    103. Re:At My Door by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      That fusion is cleaner than fission seems very likely, but we still don't know what the first commercial fusion reactor is going to be like, what nuclear reactions it will use, how we're going to capture the energy, or what it will be built with. We have promising experiments that don't achieve positive power output, but the experiments are of all sorts, involving both magnetic and laser containment. Unless someone can outline very roughly how commercial fusion reactors will work, we don't have a good idea as to what the waste will be.

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
    104. Re:At My Door by mdsolar · · Score: 1

      ITER https://www.iter.org/ quite detailed.

    105. Re:At My Door by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      On the site, they say that the ITER project is a large experiment, and may lead to commercial fusion plants. In other words, maybe it's what commercial fusion reactors will be, and maybe it's not.

      They have good reason to believe that the radioactive waste will be low-level in ITER, and it's likely in other fusion schemes. However, I'm not going to swear to the properties of stuff we simply don't know how to build.

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
    106. Re:At My Door by mdsolar · · Score: 1

      No one is asking you to.

  2. Poor planning by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Sea levels have been rising for hundreds of years, ever since the end of the little ice age. Maybe they should have taken that into account when the build the structures? Did they think it was going to stop?

    1. Re:Poor planning by Zobeid · · Score: 3, Interesting

      That's an extremely gradual process. However, we've just recently learned about the collapsing ice sheets in Antarctica, which appear likely to cause the much more rapid rise in sea level over the next few decades. Nobody had planned on that, and it will cause headaches, hazards and costs far beyond this example of nuclear power plants.

    2. Re:Poor planning by Crashmarik · · Score: 3, Informative

      You mean the expanding ice sheets in Antarctica ?

      https://www.nasa.gov/content/g...

    3. Re:Poor planning by Layzej · · Score: 1

      The GP isn't even really correct. Sea level rise was rapid 10,000 years ago during deglaciation, but has been fairly flat for the last 8,000 years or so.... until recently where we've seen accelerated sea level rise.

    4. Re:Poor planning by Barsteward · · Score: 1

      You've still got people in this day and age thinking its not happening so for them unless it happens next week, its not happening ever.

      --
      "The hands that help are better far than lips that pray." - Robert Ingersoll (1833-1899)
    5. Re:Poor planning by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thanks! No climate thread on slashdot is complete without trolls making these three assumptions:

      1. Volume equals area.
      2. Local equals global.
      3. Greenland does not exist.

      You have now checked number 1. Let's sit back another hour or so and we will probably have covered the whole list.

    6. Re:Poor planning by Crashmarik · · Score: 2, Informative

      http://journals.ametsoc.org/do...

      And no thread is complete without a self righteous zealot being incorrect on the volume

    7. Re:Poor planning by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Troll

      We don't want to let the facts impede the climate hysteric political agenda.

    8. Re:Poor planning by dave420 · · Score: 5, Informative

      There you go again confusing sea ice with land ice. You do this every single time, and it gets pointed out to you every single time. Your failure to take on board such simple information is staggering, but would go quite some way to explain why you believe abject nonsense in the face of scientific rigour. Or, maybe, you do understand the difference, but are prepared to lie in order to make some point. Pick one. Please. It's tragic, but fascinating.

    9. Re:Poor planning by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh I also have to ask, will it take a glacier plowing under your home before you stop insisting on your idiocy ? Or would you still be crying global warming ?

    10. Re:Poor planning by moeinvt · · Score: 3, Insightful

      At least he cited a source. Do you have a link to nasa.gov which explains the difference?

      Seems like the "climate change" alarmists are willing to constantly manipulate their data and revise their models to reach the preordained conclusion.
      What's tragic is that no matter how many times they're fooled, people are still completely vulnerable to a barrage of fear mongering. "Climate change" is just the latest iteration of the Red scare and the terrorist scare. One that appeals to the political left more than the right. Be afraid! Be afraid! We're all going to be burned alive! Only government can save us!

    11. Re:Poor planning by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For bonus points, confuse the Antarctic Ice Sheet with the sea ice AROUND Antarctica. You're on a roll here!

    12. Re:Poor planning by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You need a link to nasa.gov to explain the difference between sea and land? Sorry, but after careful consideration it looks like you don't have anything to contribute to a discussion about sea level rise.

    13. Re:Poor planning by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And that only goes to prove the claim that sea level rise is going to be a problem in the future. What *precisely* were you attempting to do with your empty rhetorical claim?

      Oh, and given we're well above the pre-LIA temperatures, "we're coming out of the LIA" really doesn't work, unless you think the MWP never existed, it was just globally always that warm, or warmer for every period prior to the LIA.

      Lastly, your assertion is only from those whose claims you reject categorically when they explain that this isn't any sort of natural return to the mean. Your acceptance of scientific conclusions depends only on whether you can abuse those conclusions, it seems.

    14. Re:Poor planning by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      yeah it is important that we continue to feed the Opec.

    15. Re:Poor planning by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think the point is that your link is for sea ice. More land ice would take water out of the ocean, but sea ice does nothing.

    16. Re:Poor planning by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 1

      Why don't you read links before you post them?

      Modeled Trends in Antarctic Sea Ice Thickness

      That is the title of the paper. (*facepalm*)

      --
      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
    17. Re:Poor planning by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't pay any attention to actual measurements! Our computer models all say IT'S A CRISIS!!!!

    18. Re:Poor planning by Crashmarik · · Score: 1

      Perhaps you should take your own advice

      The model successfully reproduces observations of mean ice concentration, thickness, and drift, and decadal trends in ice concentration and drift, imparting some confidence in the hindcasted trends in ice thickness

    19. Re:Poor planning by Crashmarik · · Score: 1

      And for a triple score you can continue on in your religious belief

      http://phys.org/news/2015-10-m...

      Thank you for playing.

    20. Re:Poor planning by bobbied · · Score: 1

      They think so.. Why else would they be pumping as fast as they can, driving world oil production though the roof and prices below subsistence levels for many of it's members? Something fishy is going on...

      --
      "File to fit, pound to insert, paint to match" - Aircraft Maintenance 101
    21. Re:Poor planning by bobbied · · Score: 1

      Yea, and some of them don't think saving for retirement is necessary or that the federal debt doesn't matter too...

      --
      "File to fit, pound to insert, paint to match" - Aircraft Maintenance 101
    22. Re:Poor planning by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      From the abstract of your citation:

      This ice volume increase is an order of magnitude smaller than the Arctic decrease, and about half the size of the increased freshwater supply from the Antarctic Ice Sheet. Similarly to the observed ice concentration trends, the small overall increase in modeled ice volume is actually the residual of much larger opposing regional trends.

      That checks #2, now let us see the Greenland one...

    23. Re:Poor planning by srmalloy · · Score: 1

      3. Greenland does not exist.
      You have now checked number 1. Let's sit back another hour or so and we will probably have covered the whole list.

      Who am I to prevent the Slashdot readers from finding the data on the Greenland ice cover from the Danish Meteorological Institute?

    24. Re:Poor planning by Crashmarik · · Score: 1

      A new NASA study says that an increase in Antarctic snow accumulation that began 10,000 years ago is currently adding enough ice to the continent to outweigh the increased losses from its thinning glaciers.

      The research challenges the conclusions of other studies, including the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change's (IPCC) 2013 report, which says that Antarctica is overall losing land ice.

      I see why you post as AC.

    25. Re:Poor planning by Trailer+Trash · · Score: 0

      You mean the expanding ice sheets in Antarctica ?

      https://www.nasa.gov/content/g...

      DENIER!!!!!!

    26. Re:Poor planning by riverat1 · · Score: 0

      You mean the expanding ice sheets in Antarctica ?

      https://www.nasa.gov/content/g...

      You mention Antarctic ice sheets yet the link you provide is talking about expanding sea ice, a completely different subject. You should spend some time understanding the difference between land based ice sheets and sea ice. On top of that the article was about 2014. In 2015 Antarctic sea ice extent was less than in 2014.

    27. Re:Poor planning by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      The GRACE satellites which measure changes in gravity show that Antarctica is still showing a net loss from the ice sheets. The research you cite is probably a good study but needs more work before it is confirmed. There are some issues with the measurements that come from two different satellites, one using a radar altimeter and the other using a laser altimeter. There was no overlap between the two satellites so it's impossible to cross correlate them. Also the assumptions on compression of the snow was modeled on computers with little on the ground confirmation of the correctness of the model. And finally the study ends in 2008 so it says nothing about what's happening now, 7 years later.

    28. Re:Poor planning by riverat1 · · Score: 0

      Seems like the "climate change" alarmists are willing to constantly manipulate their data and revise their models to reach the preordained conclusion.

      As opposed to climate science deniers who are willing to constantly accuse thousands of climate scientists from around the world of fraud in there science when in actuality science is one of the most intensely competitive activities that humans engage in. The way to make your name in science is to come up with something new that no one else has discovered. If any scientist were able to come up with that in the climate field you can be sure it would get plenty of publicity.

    29. Re:Poor planning by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      However, we've just recently learned about the collapsing ice sheets in Antarctica, which appear likely to cause the much more rapid rise in sea level over the next few decades. Nobody had planned on that, and it will cause headaches, hazards and costs far beyond this example of nuclear power plants.

      Are you suggesting that the ice sheets were not collapsing before we found out about it? If not, then why would the water being rising quicker now?

    30. Re:Poor planning by Crashmarik · · Score: 2

      And the funny thing is, your later reply demonstrates you were aware of the full extent of the information.

      So that makes you a liar ? or what ?

    31. Re:Poor planning by HiThere · · Score: 1

      Some ice sheets in Antarctica are expanding, but others are melting. I believe that the estimate is that MUCH more ice is being lost than is being added.

      P.S.: This should be expected with global warming, particularly with warming seas. Warmer seas evaporate more water yielding more precipitation. Some of that will fall on parts of Antarctica, yielding growing ice sheets. This can be expected to cause the ice sheets which aren't rapidly moving to grow. The ones that are moving rapidly will also add ice, but are likely to lose ice faster than new ice is added. The estimate is that they are losing ice faster than new ice is added in the entire continent rather than just in the individual ice sheets, but that doesn't prevent some ice sheets from growing. (The ones that aren't moving.)

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
    32. Re:Poor planning by budgenator · · Score: 1

      It's rising at the rate of 3mm a year, even your graph shows that, not really that scary. If you really look close you'll see that the error band is bigger than the projected rise!

      --
      Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
    33. Re:Poor planning by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      Yes I am aware of it. The question is were you being deliberately misleading by commenting on ice sheets and citing an article on sea ice or were you just to dumb to know the difference?

    34. Re:Poor planning by Layzej · · Score: 1

      It's the second order derivative that is worrisome.

    35. Re:Poor planning by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 1

      And? As plenty of people pointed out to you: sea ice

      Enough said.

      --
      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
    36. Re:Poor planning by Crashmarik · · Score: 1

      Yes I am aware of it

      Makes you a liar I see.

    37. Re:Poor planning by Crashmarik · · Score: 1

      http://phys.org/news/2015-10-m...

      Still factually challenged as always.

      BTW do you need me to go into the effect of volcanic activity in the region to further demolish your point or will you keep screaming "sea ice" ?

    38. Re:Poor planning by Toshito · · Score: 1

      I live in Montreal, Canada.

      This year it will be fucking 12 Celcius on christmas eve. It won't even freeze on christmas night.

      We don't have ANY snow yet. In fact, we probably won't have any snow until early january.

      I rode my motorcycle in december, for the first time in my life.

      I'm in my 40's and I've never seen a december so hot. It's worse than last year, which was worse than the year before.

      Usually the snow starts to fall in mid November.

      When I was young it was usually -20C to -30C at the same period of the year. With 3 to 4 foot of snow on the ground.

      Year after year ski resorts have to delay the start of the skiing season, and these last years it's almost impossible to ski in the holidays, which used to be the best week for those resorts (almost 30% of their yearly revenue).

      And you call them "climate change" alarmists?

      --
      Try it! Library of Babel
    39. Re:Poor planning by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      In Minneapolis, we're complaining because the temperature has dropped closer to normal weather for the time of year. (Seriously, we don't get used to the cold until it actually hits, and we're still somewhat in summer mode.)

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
    40. Re:Poor planning by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      I'm confused as to what you think I lied about.

    41. Re:Poor planning by hawkfish · · Score: 1

      At least he cited a source. Do you have a link to nasa.gov which explains the difference?

      Sure. Not hard to find. Took me about 30 seconds with Google.

      Now how about you supply some evidence of your own for the massive ad hominem conspiracy theory you regurgitated into the thread? Things like documents from the world wide alarmist conspiracy? Protip: if you don't see my name in the transcript, it's fake.

      --
      You will not drink with us, but you would taste our steel? - Walter Matthau, The Pirates
    42. Re:Poor planning by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 1

      We talked about sea ice ;D
      Because you always where linking sea ice links.

      That NASA link got debunked months ago ... plenty of talk about it here on /. and my mind is not that weak that I don't remember you posting in those threads: so you know it is debunked, no idea why you still bring it up.

      --
      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
  3. Thorium! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Thorium thorium. Thorium. Thorium Thorium Thorium. Thorium.

    (there ya go: you can go back to rest mode)

    1. Re:Thorium! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      nice in theory. EXPENSIVE in practice.

    2. Re:Thorium! by ColdWetDog · · Score: 1

      Thorium thorium. Thorium. Thorium Thorium Thorium. Thorium.

      (there ya go: you can go back to rest mode)

      Vaporware. Vaporware. Vaporware. Vaporware. Beta at best. (remember Beta?)

      Come back when you show that thorium reactors are commercially viable and safe, not just demonstration projects.

      --
      Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
  4. Non Issue by klingens · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Yes the sealevels will rise, but they already rise with every hurricane or tides of the moon.
    After Fukushima everyone knows that you need big ass dams, flood walls, protected and working backup generators etc.

    If you build a 10m high floodwall or a 11m high one to also protect against global warming induced sea level rise simply doesn't really matter. If someone hasn't already built said 10-15m high flood wall, it's not global warming that is an issue but the regulatory commission in your country. A much more immediate problem too.

    1. Re:Non Issue by CrimsonAvenger · · Score: 2

      Yes, sealevels will rise.

      Of course, we're talking a century-plus before they rise as much as a meter.

      Hardly a problem today. Hardly an issue in a century, really. A meter high floodwall doesn't actually require a century to build (more like a few weeks one summer).

      And if worse comes to worst, well, we add a meter to the floodwall every century (that's about four inches a year for the Amis among us), which is hardly a major undertaking....

      --

      "I do not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"
    2. Re:Non Issue by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is a good point, because whenever there is a hurricane and/or a high tide, the sea level rise from melting glaciers will politely recede and not come back until there is a low tide and nicer weather.

    3. Re: Non Issue by voights · · Score: 1

      That would be 0.4 inch/year, not 4 inches/year...

    4. Re: Non Issue by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, it's just that, when you're designing for storm surge, the rise in baseline sea level over the lifetime of the structure is a mere rounding error.

    5. Re:Non Issue by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's not the average sea level that poses the problem. The issue is that "outliers" happen more often and more severely. Your "century storm" is becoming a once a decade event, and there will be a new once a century storm that you didn't plan for. Hurricanes have more energy and reach further north, not because the sea levels rise, but because the cause for the rising sea levels is a warmer climate, and that also powers more and stronger hurricanes. The rest is just statistics.

    6. Re:Non Issue by wisnoskij · · Score: 1

      A floodwall is not a permanent dam. No where on Earth has anyone ever successfully held back the sea permanently. And there are many places where they have tried. There is a big difference between knowing how to build a wall a meter high, and knowing how to build a working sea dam.

      --
      Troll is not a replacement for I disagree.
    7. Re:Non Issue by dave420 · · Score: 1

      It only takes a slight change to see large changes in storm surges. That's the real worry at this stage.

    8. Re: Non Issue by Geoffrey.landis · · Score: 1

      Higher sea level makes a given amount of storm surge a much worse problem.

      --
      http://www.geoffreylandis.com
    9. Re:Non Issue by JasterBobaMereel · · Score: 1

      The conventional power plants on the same coast of Japan were destroyed to thier foundations, meanwhile the Fukushima Daini, Just 12km from Fukushima Daiichi suffered almost no damage at all ...

      --
      Puteulanus fenestra mortis
    10. Re:Non Issue by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Half of Netherlands is below sea level.

    11. Re:Non Issue by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Netherlands seem to have done it for centuries now.

    12. Re:Non Issue by erapert · · Score: 1

      Yeah, because they're just going to completely ignore the walls around a nuclear reactor, never perform maintenance, and just assume that all is well without checking, right?

    13. Re:Non Issue by mdsolar · · Score: 1

      Florida is much more porous.

    14. Re:Non Issue by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 1

      No where on Earth has anyone ever successfully held back the sea permanently.
      Well, as time is open end, and we don't know what the future brings, you are obviously right.
      However I beg to look at the Netherlands or Germany ... our dikes hold quite well.

      --
      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
    15. Re:Non Issue by Layzej · · Score: 1

      we add a meter to the floodwall every century

      The issue is the cost. In Miami alone they are spending between $400-$500 million over the next five years to keep up with the rising sea level which is already causing salt water incursions into streets and fresh water supplies during high tide. And the costs will only accelerate along with sea level rise. Economists agree that a revenue neutral carbon tax is the most cost efficient way forward.

    16. Re:Non Issue by bobbied · · Score: 1

      Oh really... All this salt water incursion doesn't have *anything* at all to do with how much ground water is being pumped out of the ground? It's all due to global warming and sea levels going up?

      Tell you what, build a couple more reverse osmosis plants and stop pumping ground and surface water and I'll be wiling to wager the progression of salt water will literally slow to a trickle in Southern Florida.

      --
      "File to fit, pound to insert, paint to match" - Aircraft Maintenance 101
    17. Re:Non Issue by bobbied · · Score: 1

      Problem is, we are seeing a unprecedented lull in "major storms" hitting the USA right now. So it seems that for the last decade, the actual damage from hurricanes has been at an all time low in the USA.

      They will eventually start up again, but the problem here is that there is no way to know of forecast where the "outliers" will fall and how bad they will be. They are statistical anomalies and where we can guess they exist, we don't have enough information to accurately gauge the risks. So you build to what you know, plus some margin for safety. Problem solved.

      --
      "File to fit, pound to insert, paint to match" - Aircraft Maintenance 101
    18. Re:Non Issue by ColdWetDog · · Score: 1

      Yeah, because they're just going to completely ignore the walls around a nuclear reactor, never perform maintenance, and just assume that all is well without checking, right?

      It is industry that we are talking about. That and government. So your (sarcastic) concern might be more realistic than you realize.

      cf: Fukashima, New Orleans, Hanford Reservation

      Han Solo: [sounding official] Uh, everything's under control. Situation normal.
      Voice: What happened?
      Han Solo: [getting nervous] Uh, we had a slight weapons malfunction, but uh... everything's perfectly all right now. We're fine. We're all fine here now, thank you. How are you?
      Voice: We're sending a squad up.
      Han Solo: Uh, uh... negative, negative. We had a reactor leak here now. Give us a few minutes to lock it down. Large leak, very dangerous.

      --
      Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
    19. Re:Non Issue by ColdWetDog · · Score: 1

      Almost.

      --
      Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
    20. Re:Non Issue by bobbied · · Score: 1

      Yea it was that pesky lack of electricity to drive the cooling pumps that really was the problem. Had they managed to keep or get a working generator on site, it would have been a non-event even though the earthquake they experienced was many times larger than the supposed design limits of the plant.

      --
      "File to fit, pound to insert, paint to match" - Aircraft Maintenance 101
    21. Re:Non Issue by Immerman · · Score: 1

      It is a lot cheaper that way, and those executive bonuses need all the help they can get.

      Seriously, we've known how to build theoretically very safe reactors for a long time now. Pretty much every failure can be traced to businessmen cutting corners during construction or maintenance to line their own pockets. The problem isn't with our engineering or nuclear technology, it's with our virtually non-existent social technologies in the realm of anti-corruption and personal accountability.

      --
      --- Most topics have many sides worth arguing, allow me to take one opposite you.
    22. Re:Non Issue by Layzej · · Score: 1
    23. Re:Non Issue by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      Floodwalls may not work very well in Florida where the underlying bedrock is porous limestone (kind of like Swiss cheese). The water can just come up from below.

    24. Re:Non Issue by wyHunter · · Score: 1

      At Fukushima Daiichi, they would have been perfectly fine if the emergency generators had been in the containment building,like they were at Fukushima Daiini, about (IIRC) 25km south.

    25. Re:Non Issue by HiThere · · Score: 1

      Throughout history dikes and dams have failed. There's no particular reason to believe that they won't fail in the future. And when they fail you already have an emergency that is often more than available resources can deal with. If the failure of the dam or dike also means that you're going to flood your nuclear reactor, you've just vastly increased the difficulty of dealing with an emergency that already exceeds your ability to deal with.

      This strike me as a bad answer. They shouldn't have been build in areas subject to flooding anyway. They were because it made cooling them cheaper. Now they can't be moved.

      This isn't a crisis, but if it's not treated as an important problem it will BECOME a crisis at just the time when it can't be dealt with. It becomes critical that passive cooling suffice, and that the plant can be sealed against the incursion of water, probably with submarine style locks to allow personnel in ingress and exit. This should be in addition to the dams and dikes, not instead of. For normal operation you want the plant to be on dry land for lots of different reasons.

      The above paragraph probably means you don't want to store spent fuel on site. It's also worth noting that even if passive cooling of a working plant is "safe", it will probably wreck the plant. So an auxiliary source of power that is expected to continue to work is extremely highly desirable. (Fukishima had one, but it was swamped by the tidal wave. So part of my recommendation is based on hindsight.)

      N.B.: Whatever you build, expect that it will possibly fail, and ensure that the foreseeable failure modes are not excessively dangerous. This is one reason that space elevators are a dubious idea on Earth. There are other skyhooks which while not quite as beneficial are a lot less dangerous.

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
    26. Re:Non Issue by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Interesting theory. So you're saying by increasing the baseline sea level by, say, 10 cm - we will get a 2-3 meter increase in storm surges? Sir, I find your theories intriguing and wish to subscribe to your newsletter.

    27. Re:Non Issue by budgenator · · Score: 1

      a tsunami from the Canary Islands is a more likely danger than the sea rising 3 mm a year is; and if that happens Florida is erased anyway.

      --
      Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
    28. Re:Non Issue by budgenator · · Score: 1

      That has nothing to do with ground subsidence due to ground water being pumped out of the aquifers, or even ground subsidence due to development caused over-burden increases on a bedrock of limestone that looks like swiss cheese crushing it.

      --
      Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
  5. No problem... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...as long as the homes they're powering are also in low-lying areas.

  6. They don't need to be 'ready' by BitZtream · · Score: 3, Interesting

    We can move them. Yes, it would suck complete and total ass and be ridiculously expensive and environmentally dangerous, but the sea doesn't rise over night without an Earth quake so in the many many many years while the water is creeping up the shoreline towards the plant ... we can decommission it and move the dangerous bits to higher ground.

    Well, in theory we can ... unfortunately the utterly retarded NIMBY anti-nuke crowd will ensure that instead we'll leave it right where it is cause god fucking forbid some accident might happen ... and instead we'll just let it pollute thousands of square miles of sea and destroy our food stocks instead ... because thats way better than moving some dangerous materials in a controlled and actually very safe method.

    So you either move it and don't tell anyone, so that NIMBY morons don't have a chance to stand in the way of the trucks doing the moving (which makes it way more fucking dangerous!) before you get it to higher ground. Remember these are the same morons who would swallow coal dust and get cancer for sure rather than take the risk that if they hang out at the nuclear plant after a major disaster they might have a slightly higher chance of thyroid cancer ... that can't be proven scientifically anyway.

    Besides ... nuclear reactors are water tight from the start, at ridiculously high pressures, if you get them into a cold shutdown state, you can just leave them under water for centuries without anything actually happening. Put a concrete sarcophagus around it so that nothing can easily damage it and forget about it. By the time it actually starts leaking it will have decayed to something we don't care about nearly as much.

    --
    Persistent Volume manager for Kubernetes - https://github.com/dwimsey/openshift-pvmanager
    1. Re: They don't need to be 'ready' by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's cheaper to build a new nuke than move an old one. Everything is always about costs. Why do you think they are built by the sea... cheap source of cold water.

      In any case, there's more variation in tidal flow than there is in 100 years of projected sea level rise, even if you believe it will happen. Anyone caught unawares of a 100 year threat is hopelessly apathetic.

    2. Re:They don't need to be 'ready' by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 1

      We can move them.

      Are you a Poe, or auditioning for the titular role in a remake of Dr Strangelove?

      --
      The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
  7. What about solar panel factories?! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As sea levels rise, solar panel factories will be underwater in low lying areas. Solar panel factories are poisoned with a witches brew of Arsenic, Caclium Telluride, and Polyvinyl Fluoride--deadly chemicals used in the manufacture of so-called "clean" solar power. The sea water will wash all those pollutants into the sea and poison some countries' main sources of food, and then poison our children. These plants are licensed to stay in business INDEFINITELY! At some point after 2032, if you believe government predictions, they'll be underwater.

    This raises many serious questions about the future of solar power and how it will devastate the aquatic environment.

    (Okay, I don't actually believe any of that, but this ridiculous alarmist anti-nuke article posted by mdsolar deserves an equally alarmist and equally accurate comeback about solar power).

    1. Re:What about solar panel factories?! by Geoffrey.landis · · Score: 1

      (Okay, I don't actually believe any of that, but.

      Then don't post it.

      The answer to misinformation promulgated on one side of a debate is not even more misinformation posted supporting the other side.

      --
      http://www.geoffreylandis.com
    2. Re:What about solar panel factories?! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And where is the earth shattering kaboom as the irradiated and incandescently hot solar panel gets inundated by that cold seawater? How come all these eco-green-watermelon-commie-nazi scum never mention the massive amount of radioactive fallout when the hot solar panel gets in contact with cold seawater, huh?!?!?

      THE ILLUMINATI HAS BRAINWASHED THEM!!!!

      But they can't get me, my MAGIC PANTS protects me!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

    3. Re:What about solar panel factories?! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, because we all know that the containment structures of nuclear reactors, and the reactor vessels themselves are open air structures where sea water can just flow right into the core. Primary coolant loops absolutely aren't sealed loops, and just have intakes that suck in cooling water out of open canals or something.

      You're an idiot.

  8. It would be a problem if sea level were rising... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    but it's not.

  9. Many are hopelessly apathetic when convenient. $ by PeterM+from+Berkeley · · Score: 1

    Hello,

    When $$ is involved, people can be hopelessly apathetic, willfully ignorant, utterly selfish, blind, even.

    --PeterM

  10. Re:It would be a problem if sea level were rising. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Do you live in North Carolina where that shit is illegal?

  11. mdsolar writes.... by thegarbz · · Score: 2, Insightful

    mdsolar writes with another sensationalist article about how we will all die a nuclear death.

    In the mean time I live in a country that is mostly below sea level, yet somehow my feet have kept dry. Is it possible that humans are capable of engineering their way around problems? What does this mean for the future of the human race? We'll explore all of these questions and more at 11.

    1. Re:mdsolar writes.... by Mashiki · · Score: 1

      mdsolar writes with another sensationalist article about how we will all die a nuclear death.

      Just remember, that solar is such a great choice. I mean it's not like we haven't had 17 consecutive days of overcast skies or anything in my neck of the woods here in Canada. The solar panel(30x30ft) nearby has reported a grand total of 1.28kWh of generation for that entire period. Which of course is why we have the second largest nuclear generation plants in the world here.

      --
      Om, nomnomnom...
    2. Re:mdsolar writes.... by dave420 · · Score: 1

      Your feet won't always be dry. It took a massive tragedy for Dutch sea defences to be as good as they are now, and with every rise in sea level, the amount of work required to hold it off grows massively, as the storm surges will get larger, and the frequency of dangerous storms will increase.

      So yeah - looking at the present is not a great way to evaluate the future. Shocker.

    3. Re:mdsolar writes.... by Creepy · · Score: 1

      You're also in late fall, which is a terrible time for solar generation in northern climates. Where I'm at there's also been a massive solar build-out, but nuclear is such a horrible, evil technology they built new coal plants and new natural gas plants instead. Yep, both natural gas and coal emit radiation in their waste, so thanks ignorant dumbfucks.

    4. Re:mdsolar writes.... by thegarbz · · Score: 1

      It's almost like we need a massive tragedy in the nuclear industry to remind us on the importance of keeping the water out. It's a shame I can't recall of one happening.

    5. Re:mdsolar writes.... by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 1

      Yes, and to set it into a right perspective, for centuries the land you live on behind the dikes was kept "dry" by: wind power

      --
      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
    6. Re:mdsolar writes.... by thegarbz · · Score: 1

      It's almost like they picked whatever was cheap and available at the time.

    7. Re:mdsolar writes.... by Mashiki · · Score: 1

      The best for the year according to the data I had(it rolls over every 2mo), was 15 consecutive days of sunlight totaling 288.9kWh of generated power. But you are right on the fall bit, and yeah here in Ontario they shut down the coal plants and the price of electricity at the consumer level went from 3-5c/kWh to 7-14c/kWh and it's still climbing. Of course they also went to build a gas plant, and it was found that the data relating to it was deleted and two members of the current government were directly involved, one being the former premier's chief of staff. Could be interesting on that one, because in Canada they could be looking at 20 years in prison and the investigation still isn't done.

      --
      Om, nomnomnom...
    8. Re:mdsolar writes.... by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 1

      No, it is almost so as if electricity did not exist at that time ;D
      ROFL

      And honestly: wind power is still available and cheap ... and it is still partly used in wind mills to pump water around. No need to make electric power and run electric pumps.

      --
      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
  12. Let the FUD fly by Applehu+Akbar · · Score: 0

    First of all, ocean rise is a problem that, even if climate alarmists are right, is a matter of inches per century. Plenty of time to make seawalls higher.

    Most importantly, if the climate alarmists are right, we will need a lot more nuclear.

    1. Re:Let the FUD fly by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 1

      10 inchs last century, likely 100 this century.

      if the climate alarmists are right, we will need a lot more nuclear.
      For what? What reason would there be that we (in the west) need more electric power?

      --
      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
    2. Re:Let the FUD fly by Applehu+Akbar · · Score: 1

      If climate alarmists are right, we will have to convert all of our fossil generation baseload to nuclear. Renewables will help, but we can't run our entire economy on fluctuating sources and there isn't enough new hydro potential available in developed countries.

    3. Re:Let the FUD fly by MachineShedFred · · Score: 1

      Maybe so we can shut the fossil power which is causing the sea level rise to begin with, should the climate guys be correct?

      Worst case, we stop killing an estimated 50,000 people per year in the US alone from the diseases associated with the emissions of coal plants, even if you don't buy in on the climate change arguments.

      --
      Slashdot still doesnâ(TM)t support Unicode after it was added to the HTML standard in 1997.
    4. Re:Let the FUD fly by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 1

      Maybe so we can shut the fossil power
      And why not replace them with wind and solar? No nukes needed.

      Worst case, we stop killing an estimated 50,000 people per year in the US

      Yeah, bad in math?
      The USA has something like 400,000,000 inhabitants. 50,000 dead per year is 500,000 in ten years. That would be 5Million in 100 years, so over a course of 100 years more than 1% of the population is dying to power plant emissions? Sounds not really plausible. That would require plants far worse than what Indians and Chinese are suffering from.

      --
      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
    5. Re:Let the FUD fly by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 1

      As pointed out often enough on /.
      Yes you can run a country on wind and solar alone.

      The claim that hydro potential is exhausted is plain wrong. The problem with hydro is: high installation costs and low productivity, so a very long term investment. Besides that all countries have plenty of space to build flow water plants along the rivers. They simply don't want to install more hydro.

      There is a huge initiative in the states to change that ... you can google for it.

      --
      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
    6. Re:Let the FUD fly by MachineShedFred · · Score: 1

      Ok, I remembered the stat wrong. It was 24,000 deaths attributed in 2004, and 13,000 in 2010. But it wasn't only those two years that people die from the crap being spewed forth from coal plants. The point is that tens of thousands die from diseases related to burning coal every year. It is the only energy source that kills on this order, and somehow that's okay. And that's not even speaking to the problems with mine tailings that are destroying waterways, or the several fly ash dam breaks that have destroyed rivers. And notice that I haven't even touched climate change yet, because you never know if you're talking to a rabid disbeliever or not.

      And speaking of bad math, please tell me how 12kW solar installs will replace 1300MW nuclear plants at night. Or how many wind farms covering how much acreage of deforestation? I'm a huge fan of solar - I even work for a company that installs solar and has been involved in helping to get the ITC renewed so that the expansion of solar can continue relatively unabated. I'd love it, and my stock portfolio would love it if there was a massive boom in solar. But you still need to have something that works at 100% regardless of the position of the sun, cloud cover, and wind speed. We can't build more hydro, because any river worth having hydro on already has it. So that leaves natural gas, coal, and nuclear.

      In a perfect world, we would be using 100% renewables. But we can't get there with today's technology. We need a stepping stone to get away from 1850s technology that kills people and causes untold environmental catastrophe (coal), and properly engineered and managed nuclear power is probably it.

      --
      Slashdot still doesnâ(TM)t support Unicode after it was added to the HTML standard in 1997.
    7. Re:Let the FUD fly by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 1

      And speaking of bad math, please tell me how 12kW solar installs will replace 1300MW nuclear plants at night.
      Did you typo? Why are you comparing 12kW with 1300MW?
      Obviously at night those 12kW don't need any replacement. Would make more sense if you asked how you want to replace 1200MW solar power at night. The obvious answer again is: most countries have at night a very low demand of power. Below 50% of the daytime peak, so again: at night you don't need a replacement for solar power.

      Or how many wind farms covering how much acreage of deforestation? No idea what you mean with that, if your country is deforesting woods to built there wind farms, they do it wrong. Wind farms you build either on agriculture land or off shore.

      But you still need to have something that works at 100% regardless of the position of the sun, cloud cover, and wind speed.
      Just build enough and good enough distributed wind plants.

      We can't build more hydro, because any river worth having hydro on already has it. So that leaves natural gas, coal, and nuclear.
      That is extremely unlikely. In the USA there is an initiative that wants to build 1000 river flow water plants. If I remember correctly that would only replace about 10% of the current demand. So you see: river plants are difficult because of environmental concerns (unjustified), long construction times, relatively high costs, relatively low output, possibly long distance to a consumer. There are no reasons for not building more ... basically regardless of country. I doubt thee is a single country in the world that has exhausted its options to build more river dams.

      In a perfect world, we would be using 100% renewables. But we can't get there with today's technology.
      Germany, Portugal, Denmark and emerging countries like Bangladesh show otherwise.

      --
      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
  13. "sea levels rise" from TFA by fche · · Score: 1

    "Estimates for how quickly sea levels could rise vary widely, from up to 4 feet by 2100 to almost 30 feet anywhere between the next two centuries and 2,000 years from now."

    So in the next 90 years, during which time we'll probably build and retire two generations of nuke plants, we might have a whole four feet of sea level rise.

    Please excuse me if I don't take the title seriously.

  14. After Fukushima by mdsolar · · Score: 1

    Learning nuclear lessons is so enjoyable.

  15. Retirement by mdsolar · · Score: 1

    The fashionable retirement plan for nukes is sixty years in mothballs before decommissioning. Soggy mothballs are an issue for these plants.

    1. Re:Retirement by MachineShedFred · · Score: 1

      Really? Because the one plant that I know of that has been decommissioned in the US was done in 13 years. Trojan Nuclear Generating Station put out it's last watt of power in 1992, and the reactor vessel was buried at Hanford in 2005, as well as the cooling tower being imploded. Sure, there's still spent fuel on site, but that's because the government hasn't gotten off their ass to create a permanent storage facility like they were supposed to.

      Not one mothball to be seen. Just a couple warehouses, a guard shack, an office building, and a helipad.

      Hyperbole doesn't serve your cause.

      --
      Slashdot still doesnâ(TM)t support Unicode after it was added to the HTML standard in 1997.
    2. Re:Retirement by mdsolar · · Score: 1

      Humboldt and Maine Yankee are also pretty much taken apart as well. I think the argument goes that the ones that have run a long time will be hotter. But I'm suspicious that it is more a matter of wanting to be dead and gone before it is obvious the decommissioning fund is inadequate: I got mine Jack....

  16. er by sociocapitalist · · Score: 1

    We can build nuclear submarines. Presumably we could build nuclear power reactors that live underwater from the get-go.

    --
    blindly antisocialist = antisocial
    1. Re:er by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We can build nuclear submarines. Presumably we could build nuclear power reactors that live underwater from the get-go.

      Or you know... just build a longer pipe from the ocean to a slightly higher elevation for the cooling water. Nuclear power has plenty of power to run a few extra pumps.

    2. Re: er by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Holy CAPEX, Batman!

    3. Re:er by MachineShedFred · · Score: 1

      Naval reactors are a very different business to a commercial power plant. They are usually quite a bit smaller, and usually a sealed vessel that is removed wholesale from the submarine rather than being 'refuelled' in place. I believe they also run a mixed-oxide fuel.

      --
      Slashdot still doesnâ(TM)t support Unicode after it was added to the HTML standard in 1997.
    4. Re:er by sociocapitalist · · Score: 1

      Naval reactors are a very different business to a commercial power plant. They are usually quite a bit smaller, and usually a sealed vessel that is removed wholesale from the submarine rather than being 'refuelled' in place. I believe they also run a mixed-oxide fuel.

      Yes I'm sure you're right that there are differences - but are they differences that can't be surmounted? Modular everything, removed to the surface as needed but based underground, underwater.

      We can build tunnels under water and ground between countries, I'm sure we can figure this out if we want to -

      --
      blindly antisocialist = antisocial
    5. Re:er by MachineShedFred · · Score: 1

      Like all things, it's a question of cost efficiency and politics.

      For the US Navy, it's far more important to have your boats at sea, on patrol, than save money in refueling reactors. So they designed them to be able to refuel as fast as possible so they can get the boat out of the dock. Also, nuclear proliferation concerns are not high on the list of priorities for an organization that operates vehicles carrying both a nuclear reactor, and nuclear warheads at the same time. Even on aircraft carriers, they have multiple smaller naval reactors rather than scaling up a single reactor, because they can just throw more people at it while in dock in order to refuel and get back on patrol.

      For commercial generating stations, it's far more important to have cost efficient operations. They are designed to be refueled in place, where only the spent fuel is removed. This takes something like 6 months to do. Commercial operators also have to operate in a way that is 'anti-proliferation' which restricts what kinds of fuel mixes and reactor designs they can use. And the reactor is far bigger, with far larger output - powering several cities rather than a vehicle and a couple hundred people.

      Toshiba took a stab at a modular reactor design like you suggest, but I don't think it's gone anywhere as the project they designed it for was scrapped.

      --
      Slashdot still doesnâ(TM)t support Unicode after it was added to the HTML standard in 1997.
  17. Re:Low-lying reactors are actually quite safe by vel-ex-tech · · Score: 0

    Nooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo!

    (Nicely done, btw, AC.)

  18. AND refineries AND chemical plants by OrtCloud · · Score: 2

    In the US alone - 130 natural gas, 96 electric, 56 oil and gas, and 4 nuclear facilities at or slightly above sea level. http://www.motherjones.com/blu... Would seem to be a matter of national security !

    1. Re:AND refineries AND chemical plants by mdsolar · · Score: 1

      Nukes need a longer planning horizon. First, they are so costly that they need long license periods to hope to break even. Second, they are so radioactive that decommissioning is very dangerous and has to be taken slowly. Yes, we'll lose other coastal infrastructure, but that will shift inland more gracefully than nukes.

    2. Re:AND refineries AND chemical plants by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Conflating nuclear weapons ("nukes") with nuclear power plants, how cute and predictable.

    3. Re:AND refineries AND chemical plants by mdsolar · · Score: 1
  19. Cities below sea level [Re:At My Door] by Geoffrey.landis · · Score: 3, Informative

    In the U.S. we already have entire cities that are below sea level.

    City, singular: We have exactly one city below sea level, New Orleans, elevation -2 meters.

    Not sure if I'd call that the best example of why it's ok to have levees keeping out the ocean.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

    --
    http://www.geoffreylandis.com
    1. Re:Cities below sea level [Re:At My Door] by denis-The-menace · · Score: 1
      --
      Obama's legacy: (N)othing (S)ecure (A)nywhere and (T)error (S)imulation (A)dministration
    2. Re:Cities below sea level [Re:At My Door] by Coren22 · · Score: 1

      If you honestly believe that Miami is below sea level, why don't you edit the Wikipedia and give citations for it?

      --
      APK likes to ask for responses to the same things over and over. Maybe he just likes the responses?
    3. Re:Cities below sea level [Re:At My Door] by Immerman · · Score: 1

      Is it? I thought most of the Florida swamps were fresh/brackish water, which would suggest that they're at least slightly above sea level.

      --
      --- Most topics have many sides worth arguing, allow me to take one opposite you.
    4. Re:Cities below sea level [Re:At My Door] by Oligonicella · · Score: 1

      Oh bullshit. Swamps are created by having level land that drains slowly. Missouri has swamps ffs.

    5. Re:Cities below sea level [Re:At My Door] by budgenator · · Score: 1

      Different type of swamp, Florida has Fresh Water Lens contributes to the swamps; pumping out the fresh water and draining the swamps contribute to all of those sinkholes we keep hearing about.

      --
      Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
  20. Free Cooling.. What's the problem?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Free unlimited cooling what's the problem

    Bnz

  21. Well... by waspleg · · Score: 1

    I live below sea level too. Far in the midwest with dry feet. However I remember watching the levy break in New Orleans on live tv so my cynicism of engineering all our lives in to a utopian wet dream remains.

    1. Re:Well... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How deep is your mom's basement exactly?

    2. Re:Well... by Oligonicella · · Score: 1

      Let's let people judge for themselves if you're bullshitting.

  22. Say it ain't so by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Funny

    And here I thought the sea levels wouldn't rise in Republican states, don't they pray it away?

  23. Yes, sea level were rising... by Geoffrey.landis · · Score: 1

    [It would be a problem if sea level were rising...]

    but it's not.

    to the contrary, it is.

    http://www.tribune242.com/news...
    http://upload.wikimedia.org/wi...
    http://gizmodo.com/miamis-alre...
    https://www.skepticalscience.c...

    The fact that sea level is rising is not even controversial; and it's not particularly new information. The harder, and more controversial question is, is that rise going to accelerate due to melting ice?

    --
    http://www.geoffreylandis.com
  24. Vicious circle by DriveDog · · Score: 1

    ...that an energy source that doesn't emit CO2 is being endangered by those that do. So far we've found a lot more "tipping point" mechanisms than buffering mechanisms. Not a good sign.

  25. Elevation of the United States [Re:Well...] by Geoffrey.landis · · Score: 2

    I live below sea level too. Far in the midwest with dry feet.

    Unless you think that Death Valley and the Salton Sea basin are in the "midwest", or you live in a hole several hundred feet below the surface-- no, you don't live below sea level in the midwest.

    http://pubs.usgs.gov/of/2005/1...

    --
    http://www.geoffreylandis.com
    1. Re:Elevation of the United States [Re:Well...] by painandgreed · · Score: 1

      I live below sea level too. Far in the midwest with dry feet.

      Unless you think that Death Valley and the Salton Sea basin are in the "midwest", or you live in a hole several hundred feet below the surface-- no, you don't live below sea level in the midwest.

      http://pubs.usgs.gov/of/2005/1...

      Maybe he lived in the midwest of Jordan.

  26. More 'climate change' bullshit from 'Climatedot' by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

    Try reading this instead:

    www.climatedepot.com
    www.wattsupwiththat.com

  27. typical rubbish by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Typical Slashdot nuclear rubbish. First off, no one other than the True Believers believe the direst predictions. Secondly, believe it or not, we nuclear plant operators are pretty sharp people and will have taken the appropriate precautions far in advance of any flooding. So what other "questions" does your article raise?

  28. A matter of Scale by argStyopa · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I understand that the point of the article is really just to spread FUD, but even the terrified masses must understand that "warming" sea level rise is expected to measure a double handful of inches over the next century. Normal daily wave variation is more than that; if your nuclear plant designers aren't planning for bigger variation you have much more serious problems than what's going to happen a 100 yrs from now (and which of these plants is expected to run a century anyway)?

    --
    -Styopa
  29. Pitard hoist by mdsolar · · Score: 1

    Wind and solar turn out to be so much cheaper, that really it is the opportunity cost of nuclear power that has delayed climate action. The politically promoted and protected nuclear industry has slowed progress for decades.

    1. Re:Pitard hoist by bigpat · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Wind and solar turn out to be so much cheaper, that really it is the opportunity cost of nuclear power that has delayed climate action. The politically promoted and protected nuclear industry has slowed progress for decades.

      Solar power is more polluting, more toxic, less efficient, more destructive of habitat and much less safe than nuclear. Better than coal, sure, but better than coal isn't good enough. Mankind is better off without solar power. It would be much better to focus all of our resources on next gen nuclear power instead of going down the dead end of solar.

    2. Re:Pitard hoist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Solar power is less polluting, less toxic and more efficient, less destructive of habitat than nuclear. Better than coal, too, and better than both is good enough. Mankind is better off without nuclear. It would be much better to focus all our resources on the proven technology of current gen solar power instead of hoping that, unlike all previous times a next gen promise failed, that this time it won't end up a dead end.

    3. Re:Pitard hoist by mdsolar · · Score: 1

      You just can't do power purchase agreements under 4 cents/kwh with nuclear as you can with solar. http://www.utilitydive.com/new... Nukes are just too expensive.

    4. Re:Pitard hoist by bigpat · · Score: 1

      You just can't do power purchase agreements under 4 cents/kwh with nuclear as you can with solar. http://www.utilitydive.com/new... Nukes are just too expensive.

      Try doing that in New York, Chicago, Seattle or Boston... and then try doing that without solar panels made with a coal and diesel powered supply and manufacturing chain. You have so many externalized costs and negative effects with solar right now it isn't funny.

      Nuclear builds in every cost and provides a safe, clean and reliable source of energy for decades.

      With nuclear you set up a plant, dig up and refine a relatively small amount of fuel and plug it in to a grid designed for large reliable point sources of energy. And you have less waste compared with every other fuel source.

      With solar you have to keep churning out solar panels and keep trucking them around and disposing of a great deal of toxic waste and then you have to plug them into a grid that can't actually handle the fluctuating power generation without billions of dollars in investment or point of use storage that raises the cost of that electricity substantially.

      Solar is a way for rich people to pretend they are environmentally sensitive while they consume more and damage the planet more than the rest of us.

    5. Re:Pitard hoist by mdsolar · · Score: 1

      Nuclear power is subsidized by the Price-Anderson Act. During the last recession, if Indian Point had had an accident, the federal government would have ended up in receiveship. Nuclear does not have costs covered at all.

    6. Re:Pitard hoist by mdsolar · · Score: 1

      You should notice too that wind power purchase agreements under 3 cents a kwh http://energy.gov/eere/article... Nuclear energy is finished.

    7. Re:Pitard hoist by bigpat · · Score: 1

      The difference is that solar is an every day environmental disaster.

    8. Re:Pitard hoist by mdsolar · · Score: 1

      Uranium mining and thermal pollution are daily disasters, solar just does its job passively and cleanly. You seem to be very confised. You do know that solar panels are made out of sand don't you?

    9. Re:Pitard hoist by bigpat · · Score: 1

      Wind is great. I have nothing against wind where there is enough wind for it to make sense.

      If nuclear is finished, then we have no viable way to limit Global Climate change and we might as well just burn the fossil fuels we have now for maximum economic benefit and mitigate the effects later... which is pretty much what we are doing.

    10. Re:Pitard hoist by bigpat · · Score: 1

      You do know that solar panels are made out of sand don't you?

      So is nuclear. The difference is that solar requires a lot more of it.

    11. Re:Pitard hoist by mdsolar · · Score: 1

      Citation?

    12. Re:Pitard hoist by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      No, the difference is that nuclear runs even on a calm night. I'm all for solar and wind power, but they're unreliable, and I'm not real keen on storing all that solar energy in pumped hydro.

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
    13. Re:Pitard hoist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Let's ignore that giant nuclear battery in the sky that literally fuels all life on our planet because bigpat thinks it's wasteful!

  30. propaganda by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    knock it off with the eco-leftist propaganda trying to brainwash the gullible. Sea levels are NOT rising.

    1. Re:propaganda by Ann+O'Nymous-Coward · · Score: 1

      Tell that to Kiribati, you brainwashed, gullible wingnut.

  31. Alarmist by mdsolar · · Score: 1

    The only thing alarming about National Geographic is that the accumulated weight of back issues in attics may sink Manhattan before sea level rise gets a chance.

  32. What me worry by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The only thing that worries me is that we will never get our science back from the politicians. Gang, the sea levels aren't rising; start doing some real science.

    1. Re:What me worry by Ann+O'Nymous-Coward · · Score: 1

      Suuure, they're not rising. Gee whiz, I guess all those Micronesian nations are just the victims of mass hallucination.

      You wouldn't know real science if it sat on your face and shimmied.

  33. Global Warming complicates real problem by gurps_npc · · Score: 3, Informative
    Global warming is a relatively minor issue by itself. The problem is that certain low lying areas already have major issues and global warming makes it much worse. It's not just a rise in sea level - it's also a huge rise in the ground's water table directly caused by the rise in sea level.

    Miami Beach Florida already has issues with tides - certain high tides of the year flood the city, leaving it deep enough for fish to swim into major roads. In some areas they had to raise the roads a full meter above land level so that at least the roads are clear. Of course this leaves the houses, parking lots, businesses all flooded.

    The main problem with Florida is that the water doesn't come from one direction it comes from all six directions. Rivers flow from the other states into Florida, sea water on 3 sides, rain falls down onto it and finally the land itself is porous limestone that sea water seeps into and UP out of the ground. Basically, most of the state of Florida is not solid land, but a sponge. That's why it has sink holes and why floods are so bad. Florida, unlike Holland, does not have a sealing salt/anihydrite layer that blocks water movement.

    For this reason, unlike the Dutch, merely building a huge dike is not enough. As global warming raises the sea level it invades deeper into the center of Florida's porous, limestone ground. What used to be safe relatively dry land, miles from the dangerous shore, is now wet, eroded limestone. Fresh water wells turn into salt water wells, sink holes open up, new springs suddenly appear where there were none before.

    Some of those new springs will be INSIDE the grounds protected by the dikes built around the nuclear power plants.

    In such circumstances, to truly protect a nuclear power plant, you have to put a solid layer of water proof concrete UNDER it, connect that to the water proof 10 ft wall around the nuclear power plant and then arrange for a pumping station to drain out any rain water that falls into the plant area. Good luck with that.

    --
    excitingthingstodo.blogspot.com
    1. Re:Global Warming complicates real problem by Drethon · · Score: 1

      Bah, just funnel that water into the reactor and use the heat to evaporate all of it.

  34. Dungeness shingle spit by LQ · · Score: 1

    The two Dungeness nuclear power stations (Kent, England) are built on the tip of a huge shingle spit. They employ trucks to move shingle from one end of the spit to the other to try and keep it in place like some labour of Sisyphus. That plan was deemed ok before anybody knew about projected sea level rises. Instead of abandoning the site, the owners are optimistic about getting permission to build a third station.

  35. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  36. Nuclear carrier by dasgoober · · Score: 1

    Build a nuclear carrier around it, add dirt and build houses on "flight deck" - and viola - floating city!
    And no hassle from the nuclear power NIMBYs.

  37. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  38. Better call... by Lorem_Ipsum · · Score: 1

    .. in the Dutch and start buying some bilge pumps. Or maybe just skip right to the end-state solution and dome the thing for underwater existence for the eventual new shoreline in Georgia.

    --
    --- Void where prohibited. Your mileage may vary. ---
  39. At some point after that, if you believe the direst government projections, a good part of the low-lying site could be underwater.

    Sea levels will have risen maybe a foot by the end of the century. Contrary to the magical thinking of some people, a foot is just a foot. The main area it makes a difference is in the height of dikes and other protective structures: a foot in sea level rise may significantly increase the probability that some water goes over such a structure if it is already marginal. That's easy to fix, though: raise such structures by a foot next time you maintain them (which is regularly).

    About a third of the Netherlands is below sea level, so this really isn't a big deal.

  40. Bottom Line by mdsolar · · Score: 1

    The effects of warming make nuclear power more expensive, be it having to plan for sea level rise owing to long planning horizons, or thermal pollution issues made worse by warming. Wind and solar power are already less expensive and cleaner and don't require fuel which will run out. Nuclear is a climate problem, not a solution.

    1. Re:Bottom Line by Mike+Van+Pelt · · Score: 2

      And we have the rising CO2 level because the anti-nukes have obstructed the implementation of the only carbon-free power source that actually has the capacity to power industrial civilization for the past 40 years or more. "We can't have nuclear because... oh, yeah, sea level rise" is sort of like Erik and Lyle Menendez demanding the court's mercy because they are orphans.

    2. Re:Bottom Line by mdsolar · · Score: 1

      We'd be out of uranium already if your hypothetical were the case. At the present rate of use, there is only 80 years left.

    3. Re:Bottom Line by Mike+Van+Pelt · · Score: 1

      We'd be out of uranium already if your hypothetical were the case. At the present rate of use, there is only 80 years left.

      Assuming the insanely wasteful "once through throw most of the fuel away" non-cycle. Also assuming no breeder reactors. Also assuming no use of thorium reactors. According to my copy of the CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics, thorium is "about as common as lead", and "there is probably more available energy in the earth's crust from thorium than from uranium and all fossil fuels put together."

      Also assuming no use of the ion exchange process that Japan demonstrated back in the 1970s, which could extract uranium from sea water at a cost of about $100/pound (1970 dollars).

    4. Re:Bottom Line by mdsolar · · Score: 1

      But that was your assumption. You wanted a past nuclear build up. That means same old reactors. You got it wrong. You'd have to stop the Gulf Stream to do the other thing. Crazy.

  41. Newsflash! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    NONE of those reactors will still be operational a hundred years from now when the seas MIGHT be an inch higher. Oh, and on the off chance that new reactors are built at those sites after the current ones are torn down after reaching the end of their service lives, the people a hundred years from now will probably have the technology needed to block an inch of water from wetting the "Welcome" mats inside the front doors of the visitors' centers. Why, I'll bet they will be so advanced that they'll know how to keep an inch of water from getting into a building.

  42. Permanent Storage by mdsolar · · Score: 1

    Permanent storage was looking like would be in Texas until Congress intervened an selected a hydrologically porous site in Nevada. Congress actually gets in the way when it gets involved.

    1. Re:Permanent Storage by MachineShedFred · · Score: 1

      Very true, but there's probably some well-meaning law in place that prevents the shipping of high-level nuclear waste without it being handled by the DoE. So until Congress gets off their ass, we've got waste sitting at 100+ sites around the nation, half-lifing away until something finally gets done about it.

      It just seems to be a race right now between Congress pulling their collective heads out of their asses, or this material becoming inert with a stupendous amount of time.

      --
      Slashdot still doesnâ(TM)t support Unicode after it was added to the HTML standard in 1997.
    2. Re:Permanent Storage by budgenator · · Score: 1

      They need to do something quick, because after a measly 3 centuries all the Cs137 will be decayed and the remainder is high in pure plutonium and easily extracted!

      --
      Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
    3. Re:Permanent Storage by mdsolar · · Score: 1

      I think it is useful to think of nuclear power as a battery. The energy must be paid back in transmuting the waste to stable isotopes on site. Luckily, solar energy will be available to run the accelerators to do this. No permanent storage needed.

  43. Yucca Mountain: What's already there by Mike+Van+Pelt · · Score: 1

    So, to get a hint of what is already buried in the ground in the general area of Yucca Mountain, go to Google Earth and search for "Sedan Crater" in Nevada.

    Start scanning south.

    Sedan Crater and every one of those other craters is a nuclear bomb crater, with the inside dusted with all the fission products and whatever plutonium didn't get fissioned. (A substantial fraction of it, as I recall.

    That doesn't count all the tests that didn't create an above-ground subsidence crater, all the bombs that fizzled, etc.

    None of this stuff has any containment whatsoever.

    So, for the shrieking technophobes: How is glassified waste possibly any greater threat than what is already there in abundance? Please be specific, shrieking "OMG NUKE!! OMG RaDiOAcTiVe!! OMG NUKE!!" doesn't cut it.

  44. Only rising in a technical sense... by maharvey · · Score: 1

    Interestingly, the east coast land is sinking around 20 times faster than the sea level is rising. Maybe the sinking land is displacing seawater that is causing the sea to rise? Just a thought. In any case sea level itself is kind of an academic concept when the entire surface of the planet is in continuous motion, the planet itself is not quite spherical, and gravity itself is unevenly distributed. (Interesting articles: http://articles.chicagotribune..., and https://www.newscientist.com/a...)

    In my opinion, Miami's perceived problems are likely due to overdevelopment, land subsidence, groundwater depletion, and perhaps climate hysteria -- not unlike Venice. The one thing I am pretty sure of is that the 1/4 inch of sea level rise is not a significant factor. The gizmodo article is misleading, and sadly the comments indicate that people are eating it up.

    1. Re:Only rising in a technical sense... by maharvey · · Score: 1

      Oops, I misread 'mm' as 'cm' so was off by an order of magnitude. Too bad I can't edit my post. Ah well let the flames commence.

  45. You first by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You have claimed he got a prediction wrong already, but nowhere is it mentioned where these supposed predictions appear like you claim. Oh, and there are no "known scientific errors" in his film, the judge claimed that he should have clarifying material in the film for teachers letting them know that the timescale was not immediate, that some morons (e.g. you) would take to mean "immediate). Which you did anyway, so it didn't help, and then also used the helpful suggestion as if it were some "scientific error", which it wasn't.

  46. Define ready by WillAffleckUW · · Score: 1

    Most fission plants are incredibly vulnerable, and I'd say more about how, but I don't want to give you ideas.

    Security is 99 percent perception and 1 percent reality.

    Now stop whining and just build solar on every new building and wind everywhere already.

    They're both cheaper than nuclear, which is heavily subsidized.

    --
    -- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
    1. Re:Define ready by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      Look, you're almost certainly not a one-in-a-billion genius (if so, why would you be on Slashdot?), and if you've come up with an idea the odds are that many other people have also. If you're only one in a million, there's hundreds of people in the US, and thousands in the world, at least as smart as you. Granted that there are Russian shills on Slashdot, at least sometimes, but the odds that you saying something on Slashdot that will result in a major terrorist action are vanishingly small.

      So, you've said that most fission plants are incredibly vulnerable, and that security is 1% real, and you've provided precisely no facts, evidence, or explanations to back your claims up. Personally, I believe there are defenses against anything you or I are likely to think up, even if they're not obvious, and that security can be pretty darn effective, particularly when protecting a small target.

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
  47. What I want to know: is /. sending an announcemet by spads · · Score: 1

    ...to the nuclear shills prior to publishing one of these articles? Not that their boiler-plate would be so difficult to produce on the spur of the moment, but, credit where credit is due, it sure does exceed in smugness and smarmy hail-fellow-well-met!

    I'll say one other thing about these polished shills - they win either way. Either they're out propounding their (sympathetic) "pooh-pooh, pooh-pooh..." rhetoric, or, when things do sometimes INEXPLICABLY go awry, they're the first to show up with their somber, contrite faces and roll up their sleeves and (make a pretense of) get (ting) down to DO ANYTHING POSSIBLE TO MITIGATE THE HIGHLY LAMENTABLE (and virtually inexplicable) TRAGEDY. They win either way! Either they're the cool, self-assured pooh-poohers of environmental alarmists, or they're MAKING A SHOW OF moving mountains to resolve something which NO ONE IN THEIR RIGHT MIND COULD EVER HAVE ANTICIPATED. LORD HAVE MERCY!!!!!

    --
    Bukowski said it. I believe it. That settles it.
  48. Re:What I want to know: is /. sending an announcem by mdsolar · · Score: 1

    You can look at the firehose to see potential upcoming articles.

  49. Re:Petard hoist by mdsolar · · Score: 1

    You might recognize yourself in this article: http://www.theguardian.com/com...

  50. Re:What I want to know: is /. sending an announcem by spads · · Score: 1

    thanks. had heard that term somewhere.

    --
    Bukowski said it. I believe it. That settles it.