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Slashdot Asks: Do You Support Nuclear Energy? (gallup.com)

Reader mdsolar writes that for the first time a majority of Americans have told Gallup they oppose nuclear energy. Support peaked at 62% in 2010, but "as Americans have paid less at the pump, their level of worry about the nation's energy situation has dropped to 15-year-low levels," Gallup reports. Their latest poll found 44% of respondents still supported nuclear energy, while 54% opposed it, a trend which could eventually affect the future of nuclear power. The New York Times reports that operating licenses will expire for 36 of America's 99 reactors between 2029 and 2035. What do you think? How strongly do you support (or oppose) generating electricity with nuclear energy?

13 of 485 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Not about fear by AmiMoJo · · Score: 5, Informative

    Better alternatives, distrust of the people building and running the reactors, the extremely high cost, a proper understanding of the risks... And the attitude of people who dismiss legitimate concerns as blind fear of radiation.

    --
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  2. Re:Not about fear by Rei · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Meh, except in extreme cases, it's not public opinion that kills nuclear power in the general case (developers generally can find at least *some* site that will let them build). It's finances. Nuclear power has always had a lot more support on K-Street than Wall Street. If nuclear power is to have a future, they need to stop having new construction projects run behind schedule and over budget.

    --
    Hourglass says she knows a kid in Iowa who grows up to be president.
  3. Do I support nuclear power? by Chas · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Yes.

    Unless we figure out fusion power quickly (which I'm doubtful of), fission power, combined with existing hydro and thermal solar is our best bet for stable baseline power in this country.
    Renewables like PD solar and wind power, as well as power storage solutions, are best left to cover demand peaks.

    The problem is that so few people know anything more than "nuclear = bomb" and "radiation will kill you", that it's created this vast climate of FUD around nuclear power.

    And all they say when you mention nuclear power is "Chernobyl, Three Mile Island, and Fukushima".

    None of these were failures intrinsic to the reactor.

    Chernobyl: Idiots disabling safety equipment and fucking around with the reactor.

    TMI: Human error compounded by bad control indicators.

    Fukushima: A company cheaping out and not listening to civil engineering with regards to a sea wall meant to stave off large waves.

    We're also talking about reactors based on decades-old technology and Rube Goldberg systems to stave off every possible problem an engineer could envision.

    Rather than just designing a reactor with a default state of "off".

    More modern reactor designs take this sort of thing into account.

    Additionally, people gripe about the amount of nuclear waste being produced. Never mind that most reactors based on this older technology consume, at best, 5% of the actual "fuel" in the medium (rods, pellets, etc) before the medium is removed from the reactor.

    With reprocessing, that fuel can continue to be used for extended periods of time. Resulting in far less long-lived waste, and the remainder being waste that is only being radioactive in the short term.

    --


    Chas - The one, the only.
    THANK GOD!!!
    1. Re:Do I support nuclear power? by modzer0 · · Score: 4, Informative

      We have four AP1000 Gen 3+ reactors under construction now. These are the shining examples of what the next generation design can be until the NRC approves any gen 4 or the number of MSR reactor designs being proposed. Nuclear can be much safer and more efficient if we can bring more next generation designs with drastically better safety measures online and retire the old units which do have a good safety record, but don't have near the number of safeguards as something like the AP1000 which can be kept safe even with a total loss of power unlike the older generations. Yes I support nuclear, and I support solar and wind, but those not familiar with the power industry don't realize how delicate a balance the grid is with supply and demand. There has to be a source to keep the grid stable with the varying wind and solar input. The best choice for that is nuclear be it fission, or fusion.

    2. Re:Do I support nuclear power? by modzer0 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The most current approved design, the AP1000 from Westinghouse can continue cooling the reactor with zero power using it's passive system. If there is a power failure condition the valves automatically open and the passive system takes over. Much like some of the US Navy's reactors the AP1000 can naturally circulate coolant without pumps by convection. The passive systems are mostly all within the containment vessel and will operate even with total loss of control systems. The most interesting design I've seen is the Moltex stable salt reactor. It's a molten salt reactor that relies totally on natural convection to cool itself with heat exchangers in the coolant to take away heat for producing power. It's impossible for it to melt down because the fuel and coolant is already a molten liquid salt. The design is so simple it's vastly cheaper. It's got many years until even experimental approval.

  4. I support it above coal by vadim_t · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Meaning I'm fine with it existing, but don't have any particularly romantic notions about it either.

    Nuclear power necessarily comes with a long list of downsides. The enormous expense of building a powerplant, the amount of care that needs to be exercised to properly run it, the problem with waste disposal, the problem with that a dismantled powerplant still needs maintenance, the problem that disaster preparation is absolutely essential, the problem that the critical parts of the infrastructure are so highly radioactive it's not even possible to have a camera in them, which means any work on that is enormously expensive...

    And then there's the problem of that if things go wrong it causes the evacuation of a huge amount of the population. Now I know this isn't instant death of course, but it still means that accidents are enormously expensive and insurance is difficult.

    Then there is that all of this critically depends on people, who in many cases have reasons to cut corners in dangerous places.

    Once you take all of that into account, I think it becomes considerably less amazing than it is in theory. IMO, current nuclear power is something that will go away eventually. Many of its downsides aren't going anywhere, so it may well happen that we'll find a way to run a grid purely on solar and wind power, and just accept the downsides of that in exchange for not having to deal with radioactivity.

    That said, I'm all for improving the tech as far as possible and looking into thorium and of course fusion research.

  5. I support nuclear power by jonwil · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I support keeping reactors that already exist running where its safe to do so. But I also support building new nuclear reactors. Not the ancient technology PWR and BWR reactors but modern 4th generation reactors. Ones that can burn the waste products from the old PWRs and BWRs and dont produce waste that has to be stored for thousands of years. Ones that can operate in ways that mean they cant suffer the kind of catastrophic release of radiation that happened at Fukushima.

    4th generation reactors absolutely need to be part of the energy solution as the way to replace the world's dependence on digging dirty black ancient rocks out of the ground and burning them for electricity.

  6. Yes I support nuclear energy. by nbritton · · Score: 4, Informative

    Yes I support nuclear energy, it is the only viable solution to meet the world's energy demands and the need for clean energy. Burning coal releases more radioactive martial into the environment then any nuclear plant has. People are scared of radiation and it's unfounded, we are bombarded with radiation on a daily basis from the sun. People are also scared that nuclear plants can blow up like a bomb, but this is complete impossible. The waste they produce can be managed, in fact it can be recycled to produce more fuel. We need to figure out how to harness fusion into a viable solution.

  7. Yes by phantomfive · · Score: 4, Informative

    I especially support research in nuclear energy, Thorium reactors are a great place, right on the edge of practicality.
    Also, I support nuclear fusion research, and I think we should fund more of it, and this graph shows why.

    If we can make energy cheaper by an order of magnitude compared to how it is today, that opens the door for some great things.

    --
    "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
  8. Brain Drain by WheezyJoe · · Score: 5, Insightful

    turns out most people are too uneducated

    That's kinda the problem. The public is so uneducated that they make it hard to fund nuclear, which leads to engineers becoming less educated as old-timers retire and universities shut down their nuclear engineering programs because nuclear engineers can't find jobs (unless they go into the Navy, or are some of the very very few that make it into Los Alamos).

    So, nuclear gets caught in a Catch-22 where it doesn't get enough funding to support the advancement of technology that would make it safe and reliable enough to compete. Instead, our collective knowledge of nuclear slips as, again, old-timers retire and youngsters pursue something more likely to pay those hideous education loans.

    It's good that the stars have aligned to invest R&D into solar and wind. But it's not a good thing to allow nuclear to slip away... there's a lot of research yet to be done, with potentially great payoffs, if it wasn't so politicized by way of a public where a high-school education is becoming more and more worthless, again because of politics. A dumb electorate can be convinced of anything, like how supersonic transport causes skin cancer, and that was back in 1975. Today, politicians earn their pork-fat living by dumbing down science education, I figure to better guarantee re-election by the time the kids turn 21. These are the people who'll turn on Fox News and see "nuclear... bad ; fossil fuel subsidies... good", all because of fancy wine and caviar shared between the Koch brothers and Roger Ailes on a yacht in the Mediterranean.

    The problem with nuclear is it requires smart people not only for design and build-out, but also for for day-to-day operation and maintenance. A poorly educated public is bad for all of this. But fail to keep educating and innovating in this technology, and it slips away (or goes overseas), and that sucks for us all.

    --
    Take it easy, Charlie, I've got an Angle...
  9. Re:Nope by michelcolman · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The biggest problem is that we keep running old nuclear plants well past their designed lifetime instead of building new, safer ones and shutting down the older ones. People are afraid of nukes, so they oppose new plants, and therefore we actually increase the risk by extending the old plants.

  10. Re:Better question by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 5, Insightful

    You are mixing up risk with chance.

    The chance to get hit by a truck into the rear of your car during 50 years might be 2%.
    The risk you have is:
    - neck injuries (with a chance of 80%?),
    - total loss of the car (probably 50%?),
    - death (probably 0.5%?) ...
    - death/server injury of rear passengers (probably 50%?)

    Living near a nuclear plant your chance during 50 years is that it goes boom, perhaps 0.00001%?
    You risk:
    - evacuation and loss of all your property (chance 100%)
    - death or injury in the mass panic or evacuation (chance probably 5%?)
    - contamination with server health issues (chance probably 50%?)

    Even ingesting a small amount of material that is biologically 'sticky' is only a tiny risk adder
    No it is not. The chance might be low. The risk if you "catch it" is extremely high, close to certain death. The only question is: do you care if you die due to cancer 50 years after such an incident caused by digesting/breathing radioactive material? Or the other question is: do you die before that because a truck hit you? Or do you die before that because you get lung cancer for no apparent reason?
    Or: do you die to the same radiation exposure after 3 years already? As the time frame for cancer or if you get cancer at all, might look pretty random from the outside.

    I suggest to read up what the lethal dose of e.g. plutonium is, and how it works.
    In medicin they usually talk about a "50% death dose", which means: the amount of "poison" you have to give per kg weight of the subject to each subject that 50% of the subjects die.
    The amount of plutonium to kill 50% of the test subjects is so incredible low, you won't believe it: go google.

    What you do is wagering the chance, not the risk.

    In simple words:
    You place 10 bucks on the number 13 in roulette: you risk 10 bucks. You have a chance of 1:37 to win 360 bucks and a chance of slightly higher than 35:37 to lose your money.
    You place 1 million bucks on the number 13 instead: you risk 1 million bucks ... the chance to lose and to win is the same. Only the payoff is higher if you win

    In other words:
    Both bets have exactly the same chance to win or lose.
    The second bet has a much higher risk.

    --
    Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
  11. Re: Not about fear by Rei · · Score: 4, Informative

    . Almost all of the problems are lawsuits,

    [Citation needed]

    I see this trope often, but whenever I look into specific plants that are behind schedule and over budget, NIMBY lawsuits are almost never part of the reason.

    For example, one of the most (almost comically) behind schedule / overbudget reactors being is Olkiluoto Unit 3, which is a decade behind schedule and still not expected to be finished for years. The reasons for the delays are numerous - and not one of them is due to NIMBY lawsuits. The concrete for the foundation was bad. The forgings were wrong and had to be recast. The welders for the containment structure were given incorrect instructions. There were compensation disputes. Automation planning was behind schedule.

    The head of their nuclear planning division's main excuse was that it's hard to deliver nuclear power plants on schedule because workers aren't used to the exacting standards required for them. But regardless of the reason, NIMBY lawsuits were not the reason. In fact, the only lawsuits involved were between the two construciton contractors, suing each other. By the time it's all said and done, the unit will likely be more expensive than the LHC and be one of the most expensive structures on Earth.

    Nuclear reactors end up this way all too often. Reactor operators managed to convince enough investors that there would be a new "nuclear renaissance" because their new plants will produce plants cheaper that are more reliable. Their construction track records thusfar are scaring away most investors from followup.

    --
    Hourglass says she knows a kid in Iowa who grows up to be president.