I think he is full of shit. Looking at his bio, I see a guy who wants to
sell the "renewable will save us meme." He's an "expert" like the moron Amory Lovings is an "expert."
Frankly your continual declaration of "expert" status is probably a representation of your ability to think for yourself. I note that people who continuously refer to "experts" usually are very, very, very, very, very bad at critical thinking.
If you would like to produce an article showing that any other form of energy
that is climate change free that produces the same quantity of energy as nuclear energy you are free to do so.
If you would like to split hairs with
meaningless worry about non-significant figures. If one is
capable of
interpreting the meaning of graphs, it is very clear that the rate or reactor building was once enormous.
Around 1990 anti-nuclear stupidity took hold, threatening the lives of everyone on the planet. Since that time there has been a dangerous surge in the use of dangerous fossil fuels and a surge in the indiscriminate dumping of dangerous fossil fuels into the atmosphere.
If one looks at the graph you provide and takes the slope of the line between 1984 and 1988, about 100 reactors came on line. Note that this was precisely the time when antinuclear ignorance became
fashionable. As I recall, people were yelping in 1986 about how wonderful solar power, for instance, was. The entire solar capacity for the entire country is
easily matched by just one reactor that began to operate in 1986.
Oh, and by the way, if Dr. Rohm has "fostered" things like batteries, electric cars, and that good old bugaboo, hydrogen, it would seem that he is a
failure, does it not?
As for this claim to credibility from his bio:
In 2004 and 2005, he was quoted in over one hundred media outlets (see attached), including New York Times, Business Week, the L.A. Times, Fortune, Financial Times, Science, New Scientist, CNBC, NPR, CNN, the BBC, and CBS Evening News...
...I merely note that this looks remarkably like the media outlets that quoted Colin Powell on the weapons programs of Iraq. I'll let you know when I start getting my science information from the
CBS Evening News. Whattya think, did Katie Couric cite Dr. Rohm after the five minute blurb on Paris Hilton's incarceration or before the ten minute blurb on Brittany Spears' situation with respect to her underwear?
The problem with our culture is nothing more than a failure to think critically. Basically the things you see on TV are
distortions and not reality. If you'd turn of the TV, you'd do better but you
won't turn off the TV.
Frankly I have no problem saying that I regard Dr. Rohm as curiously deluded. Of course, I didn't know who he was until you told me, but I was pretty sure that he was out to lunch simply by reading what
he said.
There is, by the way, not one "renewables will save us" advocate, not one, who can distinguish between power and energy. Recognizing your inability to interpret the meaning of graphs, I nonetheless post one:
The flatness on the right side of this curve has nothing to do with technical issues, since nuclear reactors (from the embedded capacity utilization graph) have become the most reliable energy machines on earth. The flatness on the right instead comes from human stupidity that substitutes citing "experts" for common sense and
reason.