Despite the economic and environmental cost at Chernobyl, I still believe that properly managed nuke electricity, with modern reactors is the only way to go in the energy debate.
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Originally posted by Brian Ellis View Posthttp://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-25086097
Despite the economic and environmental cost at Chernobyl, I still believe that properly managed nuke electricity, with modern reactors is the only way to go in the energy debate.
The stories about how Tepco managed its power plants (up to the Fukushima accident) are downright surreal, and I'm sure they were not unique with this type of behaviour.
I'd love to see figures of how many spent nuclear fuel rods are stored in the same building as the reactor for nuclear power plants all over the world (and the post-fukushima change in these figures). And the role of so-called pro-environment organizations like Greenpeace that systematically block transport of spent nuclear fuel rods from the reactor sites.Last edited by dZeus; 28 November 2013, 01:52.
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A professor of mine has an interesting opinion on this. He considers investments in wind turbines and solar energy a waste of money, and claims it would be better to go full ahead on researching nuclear fusion. He says that science is currently at the point where it is known that it will work, so we just have to make it work.
He says that the faster we crack that one, the better. Achieving that one 5 years earlier might do much more for the environment than messing around with other sources.
It is a bit an extreme view, but I can get the reasoning behind it.
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Fusion for power using Tokamak tech will always be just 10-15 year's away. There are a couple of interesting alternatives, but funding isn't as good as it should be. To rocket propulsion it's much closer and may be tested in space within a few years.
As for fission, there are reactor designs that arye far safer than Fukushima etc. , even passively safe, so they need toibe used in the near and middle terms.Dr. Mordrid
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Originally posted by dZeus View PostThe stories about how Tepco managed its power plants (up to the Fukushima accident) are downright surreal, and I'm sure they were not unique with this type of behaviour.
I'd love to see figures of how many spent nuclear fuel rods are stored in the same building as the reactor for nuclear power plants all over the world (and the post-fukushima change in these figures). And the role of so-called pro-environment organizations like Greenpeace that systematically block transport of spent nuclear fuel rods from the reactor sites.
As for your last paragraph, I shudder to think how many Generation 1x reactors (>35 years old) are still in service. Even Switzerland has one (Mulhausen) of identical design to the Fukushima plant, cooled by a river flowing through steep-sided valleys (landslides possible, damming the river and suddenly ceding). The fuel rods are not stored there, but in Federal cooling ponds at Wuerenlingen (for all their reactors). The reactor was shut down within 24 hours, and the emergency generators had been moved to high ground less than 4 weeks after Fukushima. It will remain in service until, I think, 2020, despite many known problems. The national knee-jerk reaction to Fukushima, just one week after event, was a Federal Ordinance to close down all nukes by 2030, without having thought how to replace the 36% of the country's capacity.
As for blocking fuel supplies, Greenpeace should be treated as they were treated in Russia! They are not "so-called pro-environment organizations"; they are money-making fraudsters preying on the credulous.Brian (the devil incarnate)
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Originally posted by VJ View PostA professor of mine has an interesting opinion on this. He considers investments in wind turbines and solar energy a waste of money, and claims it would be better to go full ahead on researching nuclear fusion. He says that science is currently at the point where it is known that it will work, so we just have to make it work.
He says that the faster we crack that one, the better. Achieving that one 5 years earlier might do much more for the environment than messing around with other sources.
It is a bit an extreme view, but I can get the reasoning behind it.Brian (the devil incarnate)
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Originally posted by Dr Mordrid View PostFusion for power using Tokamak tech will always be just 10-15 year's away. There are a couple of interesting alternatives, but funding isn't as good as it should be. To rocket propulsion it's much closer and may be tested in space within a few years.
As for fission, there are reactor designs that arye far safer than Fukushima etc. , even passively safe, so they need toibe used in the near and middle terms.
I disagree re Tokamak, your 10-15 years are too optimistic. 25-30 years are more realistic, cf. ITER!
Even the 30 y.o. Generation 2n reactors were safer than the Generation 1n reactors still in service! Keeping with conventional U technology, the Generation 3a reactors currently on the market are considered to be as safe as possible with a mean time between catastrophic failure of the order of 10,000 years. As for thorium, there is a problem, Houston! It requires a fast breeder reactor to switch it to a useable isotope and every schoolkid knows that FBRs are the least stable of all reactors!Brian (the devil incarnate)
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Originally posted by dZeus View PostI'd love to see figures of how many spent nuclear fuel rods are stored in the same building as the reactor for nuclear power plants all over the world (and the post-fukushima change in these figures). And the role of so-called pro-environment organizations like Greenpeace that systematically block transport of spent nuclear fuel rods from the reactor sites.
Since most of stores for spent fuel are in the planning stages and no one wants them near their town, most spent rods are in reactor buildings.
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Originally posted by UtwigMU View PostSince most of stores for spent fuel are in the planning stages and no one wants them near their town, most spent rods are in reactor buildings.
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Originally posted by dZeus View PostI think spent nuclear fuel is also reprocessed, for example at the site in La Hague here in France. I'm not sure where the fraction of the fuel that cannot be re-used is stored.
The local communities in Slovenia won't even allow for military range to operate (infantry and occasional artillery fire) which has been there since Maria Theresa in 1700s.
Another problem is that a lot of plants are pre Chernobyl since nuclear energy became unpopular. Austria has a nuclear plant built that was never put in commission because people voted so on referendum. When plants came for consideration again recently Fukushima happened. Thus it's hard to build new plants and existing 40y+ old ones are becoming less safe.Last edited by UtwigMU; 28 November 2013, 12:39.
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Originally posted by dZeus View PostI think spent nuclear fuel is also reprocessed, for example at the site in La Hague here in France. I'm not sure where the fraction of the fuel that cannot be re-used is stored.
Why is the process not used more?
1. Because only Generation 3 reactors can use PuO2 fuel which requires fast neutrons to maintain a chain reaction. Earlier reactors are too slow. Thus, only a small number of reactors in service can use recycled fuel
2. Because US Congress and President Carter enacted a bill banning the use of recycled fuel, so that no MOX-friendly reactors have been built in the USA, which has no Pu-handling facility, as a result. This stupid law has cost the US taxpayer and electricity consumer an arm, a leg and both cojones. All weapons-grade Pu past its sell-by date has to be sent to France in a convoy of 3 cargo vessels (only one contains the Pu) and an armed escort amidst the tightest security. The Pu is then used in Europe and Japan for MOX reactors. The risk of a transport/handling accident is not negligible.
I believe the 4% non-recyclable is mainly low-level depleted U without specific precautions required. It has other lighter metals in it and it is uneconomical to exploit.Brian (the devil incarnate)
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Spent non-recyclable fuel rods are highly reactive and are kept in water for ~40 years under defined conditions, to moderate the neutron emissions and to keep them cold. After 40 years, their activity is medium-low and they can be handled. The cooling ponds were in ad hoc buildings in all 3 of the plants I've visited, 2 of them with tin roofs. Some are even outside. They seem to be in the general area where incineration and vitrification of low-level waste occurs.Brian (the devil incarnate)
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Originally posted by UtwigMU View PostAustria has a nuclear plant built that was never put in commission because people voted so on referendum. When plants came for consideration again recently Fukushima happened. .
If you get a laugh out of those things: we spent about a billion on something that looks like a nuclear power plant, but is used as a photovoltaic site.
Mfg
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