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> You try to cast me as someone who still wants to use fossil fuels as > your argument in answering the question.
I was trying to draw an analogy to the "treatment" of fossil fuel waste, both over the last few centuries and still going (stronger than ever) today.
I did not intend to suggest that you were actively in favour of this, merely that it is an undeniable fact that reflects the truth of the situation that we are in.
> It doesn't reach its first half life for 200 thousand years. during all > that time it's still deadly.
Any component that "doesn't reach its first half life for 200 thousand years" is most certainly not "still deadly" as it is emitting so s-l-o-w-l-y.
The dangerous components are the ones with half-lives of days, weeks, months or (at the safer end of the scale) years (i.e., rather than centuries, millenia or hundreds of millenia). *They* are the ones than need to be secured, guarded, protected & monitored very carefully for that period of highest danger.
The longest lived radioactive components are the least dangerous. The longer the half life, the longer the substance is taking to decay and thus the lower the intensity of radiation emitted during each second of that time.
> So again, we leave it for future generations to deal with.
Which is exactly my point w.r.t. the fossil fuel waste (that we are now
starting thinking about dealing with ... as long as it isn't too expensive ... or too inconvenient ... or too politically unwise before the next election ... or ...).
We *KNOW* that dumping the waste into the atmosphere and the oceans is a BAD mistake. That is proven every day. Again, I don't need to remind you of that.
> So what are we going to do with nuclear waste?
Well, as you said earlier, ...
>> Yeah, I get it, bury it in the ground so some other people in the future >> has to deal with it. >> good plan.
Strangely enough, yes, that is a "good plan".
Storing it on site (i.e., the site where it is generated) is not ideal as it is harder to manage a distributed "secure safe store" than a single purpose-built storage facility (or a small number thereof). Hell, you have read the same proposals that I have so I don't need to spell it out to you. Guard it, shelter it, monitor it.
What you don't do is dump it in the atmosphere.
What you don't do is dump it in the ocean.
What you also don't do is try to smother the safest way to store it in the hope that it will kill off the "nasty nuclear industry" *BEFORE* eliminating those very generating plants that *ARE* dumping their waste in the atmosphere and that *ARE* dumping their waste in the ocean.
I agree that the ideal situation is that we do NOT generate it in the first place. The ideal situation is also that we do NOT burn fossil fuels and spread that waste all over the damn planet. The ideal situation is that everyone reduces their consumption drastically and the resulting (far lower) demand is satisfied by renewable, sustainable, non-polluting sources.
With the best will in the world, that ideal is not reachable overnight.
Given the mindset of most of the current "leaders", it might never be reachable but we cannot give up all hope.
In the meantime, we act as responsibly as we can with ALL of the generating plants AND their waste output.
I hope I have explained better this time.
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