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Edited on Thu Apr-13-06 07:37 PM by NNadir
I'm glad you have recognized the huge environmental impact of coal, which by far dwarfs the damage associated with nuclear power.
This fact has been measured now, and if one comes to the subject with objectivity, it is very clear that nuclear power is an excellent choice.
As for your concerns, I personally think that nuclear power stations are perfectly acceptable in populated areas. They are much less dangerous than trash burning facilities, much less dangerous than coal facilities, and, for that matter, much less dangerous than natural gas facilities.
In fact, the reason that people freak out about nuclear power, is because nuclear power is the only form of energy for which the possible consequences were examined before the industry was built. The men who conceived of the industry were first rate scientists, Nobel winners in some cases, men like Enrico Fermi, like Hans Bethe, Glenn Seaborg, Eugene Wigner, Alvin Weinberg and Neils Bohr. They were not only first rate scientists, but they were idealists with a highly technical orientation. Therefore they analyzed the situation to death, and built there systems with a comprehensive set of decision trees and probabilistic analysis.
The public, however, doesn't do probability very well. Most people, for instance, believe that they are going to win the lottery, even the vast majority of people won't. Similarly people believe that any disaster that could happen will happen. This is why the American people have surrendered a brilliant constitution for a trivial concern like terrorism. Nobody is likely to be killed by a terrorist. You are infinitely more likely, in fact, to be killed in a car accident, or to get cancer or be killed in a plane crash not involving a terrorist. The number of people killed in the World Trade Center is outnumbered by the number of people killed by lightning in the last 30 years. When the public saw, somewhere in the 1970's, that scientists had analyzed putative nuclear disasters and found that in a worse case scenario, thousands of people would die, they completely misinterpreted what that meant.
I don't think of nuclear power plants as terrorist targets. There has been zero acts of terrorism involving nuclear power plants, and a great many acts of terrorism involving fossil fuels, including acts of terror committed by the United States government. Even if a nuclear power plant were the target of a terrorist, there is a very, very, very, very small probability that the attack would succeed, and there is a zero probability that the consequences of such an attack would approximate the injury, death, and morbidity associated with air pollution not even including the dire consequences global climate change.
Plutonium is not forever. The primary isotope, Pu-239, has a half life of about 24,000 years. The geochemistry of plutonium has been exhaustively examined, including its behavior over billion year periods (via the naturally occurring nuclear reactors that operated in Oklo, Gabon.) Fission products also decay. Indeed, the much contemplated "nuclear waste" is the only form of energy side products that has an equilibrium value. There is an upper limit to how much you can create, since all radioactive materials are decaying at the same time as they are being formed. Any physical system that is subject to competing rates of reaction will approach an equilibrium. This is a law of physics. (The particular position of this equilibrium depends on fission yield, half-life, and the amount of power being produced.) Many fission products have already approached this equilibrium value, Ce-144, for instance. If you found a wonderful use for Ce-144, and wanted more than exists, you would have a hard time getting it without ramping up the number of nuclear reactors in which it is made. It has been shown in many places by many people at many times that the use of nuclear power will decrease the radioactivity of the planet, especially in the fuel recycling case, where the risk associated with spent nuclear fuel will be lower than the risk of natural uranium in about 1,000 years.
I compare this equilibrium situation with the heavy metal contamination associated with coal. No equilibrium applies here. You can put as much mercury into the environment as you have coal to burn. Although carbon dioxide is subject to biochemical and physical equilibria, there is good evidence that no such equilibrium applies in this case either.
Therefore the special concern for so called "nuclear waste" is in fact a case of exceptionalism. So called "nuclear wastes" when compared to other wastes is actually an environmental benefit of nuclear energy, but somehow people have translated it, mostly through mysticism, into a negative.
The probability that someone will ever be injured by the storage of so called "nuclear wastes" is very low. Moreover, as I have pointed out quite frequently here, there is good reason to suspect that the spent fuel will, in fact, be a much valued resource in the future.
With the last statement in mind, I would propose that spent fuel be stored for several hundreds of years, unless it is needed sooner, in casks pending the needs of future generations. I think Yucca Mountain is a bad idea that grows out of a waste mentality and the rather silly notion that the matter must be "solved," before we can proceed. It is not exigent. Again, spent fuel has injured no one. If we are looking to "solve" an important environmental problem, I think we should start with something with far more serious implications, global climate change, for instance, or plain old ordinary air pollution.
I would love to have a nuclear power plant near my home, even in my town (where I would enjoy tax revenues). I would have no problem with spent fuel storage in casks on site. It beats the hell out of coal ash. Nor do I have a problem with a more central location for spent fuel casks such as you propose. It is not really necessary that it be a desert or some remote location in my mind. But I do not believe in "permanent geological disposal" of nuclear materials, which will involve putting them in a state that by definition, will make retrieval difficult. Note that I believe that such a disposal structure will be very, very, very low risk, much lower than the risk of even one component, say nitrogen oxides, of air pollution. Still, I think it is not wise.
As for how long it might take to build 250 nuclear power plants (or more), I note that the United States built more than 100 reactors in a 15-20 year period. France built more than 50 in a similar time frame. Moreover, I note that in the US case, many of these reactors were more or less "first of a kind" reactors. Many of the approaches to building them were not systematized and there was few "one size fits all" approaches.
Those who have kept the faith with nuclear power, those who analyzed it's weaknesses, have made huge strides. It is my opinion that with a concerted effort and real commitment - which would involve a clear thinking public (something of dubious availability) - we could indeed build thousands of reactors world wide in the next few decades. I don't know that this will happen, but it is certainly possible. To the extent this possible, the survival of humanity and many other species is possible. Nuclear energy is the best shot we have. Other tools can help but no tool exists that will give us as large a chance as nuclear power. Even with nuclear power, our chance of survival is small now, I think, but without it, it is nearly impossible.
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