NIRS is the "Nuclear Information and Research Service
Reactor Watchdog Project".
TMIA is the "Three Mile Island Alert". Here is their self-description:
Three Mile Island Alert is a non-profit citizens' organization dedicated to the promotion of safe-energy alternatives to nuclear power and is especially critical of the Three Mile Island nuclear plant. (Emphasis mine.)
They both share the problem common to all advocacy organizations, whether pro- or anti-nuclear -- they want you to believe in their cause and forsake all others.
It is extremely difficult to find information that simply analyzes a situation without injecting a political point of view -- but I don't think we can afford to play Culture Warrior anymore with any source of energy. I've been to both websites before, and they are major culture-war players. (You know ... "nukes are un-cool" ... "solar power is for hippies".) In addition, they make a number of sweeping assertions about nuclear energy that are doubful at best, and then simply expect their readers to believe them.
Yes, I've seen the same thing from pro-nuke sites; you don't have to remind me. It all sucks.
I'm pro-nuclear, but no, I'm NOT uncritical of it. I am also quite open to non-nuclear options. But I have been very disappointed from NOT being able to find the kind of large-scale alt-energy planning that will be required to replace oil and/or nuclear energy. We need a whole lot of power to do that -- about 500 EJ (the exajoules of which NNadir writes) or Quads (a nearly identical measure)
per year. And we don't have a lot of time left to get to work on the actual generators, be they nuclear, wind, solar, or even cold fusion. The nuclear industry is further along in planning and development. We know that most of the problems with nuclear are very down-to-earth -- the incompetence and greed of their owners.
Yes indeed -- it sucks that all our energy supplies seem to be held by rat bastards who live to crack the whip over Humankind. But their political might can be checked, and the extra dangers their avarice brings to all energy generation can be greatly reduced by vigorous oversight and regulation. And you know that if they gain control over windplant, tidal generator, and/or solar panel production, they will muck it up just as they did with nuclear reactors. (Although I think the risks of nuclear energy are lower than you probably do, I recognize that there have been some truly heinous, dumb-ass mistakes made.)
But criticisms of both nuclear and non-nuclear energy must also be made in the context of ongoing, active global warming, and the possible deaths of 6.5 billion people. The risks and benefits of every kind of energy source are substantial, and will absorb most of our capital and labor over the next half-cenutry -- or more. We, as a world, are facing a number of nasty choices. There will be real dread, pain, and the frustration of the hopes of billions. None of us are likely to get our way, whatever we think "our way" is. The best we can hope for is to ride out the storm with as few deaths and as little damage as possible. That may include or exclude nuclear power. But unfortunately, for the "perplexed" (to use Maimonides' term), advocacy organizations are not helpful in figuring out what to do.
And I also know that most of us "pro-nuclear" DUers came to that position after long, sometimes agonizing, consideration. I can't speak for everyone, but my experience is probably common: I was anti-nuke for years, but as we wasted time and opportunities, the problem became increasingly imminent -- and threatening. In 1978, a purely non-nuke future was possible; in 2006, I do not think we will survive without a major effort that includes nuclear power generation. And it is not a pleasant conclusion for me by any means.
Of course, I could be wrong. But I've gone over this time and time again and come to the same conclusion -- nuclear
might save us, but if we reject it entirely, we're doomed. No cogent plan for any renewable has yet emerged. With any mix of technologies, the transition will be extremely difficult. But give me a solid plan for the development of a 500 EJ/year energy infrastructure that uses renewables, and that can be built and come on-line by 2025, and sign me up.
Whether we have a mini-nuke on every block or a windplant on every building, it IS essential we have enough energy to prevent global catastrophe from taking place. And whatever solution(s) we opt for, we should demand popular control of all forms of energy under any regime. But rejecting any energy solution out-of-hand is a luxury we declined when we decided back in the early 1980s that there really was no problem after all. This loss of choice is merely the first price we will have to pay.
--p!