So what are your feeling about nuclear energy? I believe it is the only way for America to become totally energy independent, but this is coming from a nuclear engineer. I could go on and on why I think nuclear energy is the way to go but I want your input on the matter.This video has is very interesting and worth watching. It's a 60 minute story on nuclear energy and I believe it is done very well. It gives a good perspective on the dangers and benefits of nuclear energy.http://www.cbsnews.com/sections/i_video/main500251.shtml?id=2661956n I don't usually agree with the French on many issues but their nuclear energy policy and technologies is far more advanced than any other country in the world. This video really expands on the French's nuclear policies and how America is working to adopt and advance some of these policies and technologies.[Edited on April 9, 2007 at 10:01 PM. Reason : haha..sorry I forgot the h in the http in the link, it should work now]
4/9/2007 9:37:02 PM
until we have the means of taking care of the waste issue other than "store that shit in a mountain" I'm against going nuclear.
4/9/2007 9:39:10 PM
Reprocessing^
4/9/2007 9:48:25 PM
Yes, i admit the nuclear waste policy in America fucking sucks. Hopefully, America can start building reprocessing plants to recycle the old waste but until then the waste just gets stored on-site. Yucca Mountain isn't even open yet.What other alternatives do we have? We obviously cannot continue to spit dangerous fumes from coal fire plants in the air. In fact for every 9000 tons of coal burned 50 lbs of Uranium and ~20 lbs? of Thorium get release into the air. Those radioactive elements and other dangerous molecules such as sulfur dioxide cannot continued to be spit in the air at the rate is has been.You could go for wind and solar energy but both of those sources are highly unreliable. Solar energy panels are extremely inefficient and occupy lots of land for a little amount of energy. Wind energy also isn't very efficient. They also require a lot of land for a minimal amount of energy. I believe both of these energy sources are beneficial and should continued to be used, however they put out enough energy.And there are only a limited amount of lakes you can dam up for hydroelectric energy. Hydroelectric energy is a great source of power but the power output isn't close to enough to fulfill America's huge energy demand.
4/9/2007 9:52:55 PM
unfortunately, nuclear isn't a solution on its own, either. IIRC, our supply of uranium is, at best, ~100 years, and that's at our current rate of consumption. Fusion power suffers from a similar problem.And this is all without looking at the problem posed by waste. Reprocessing waste is not simply a matter of taking spent fuel, pushing a magic button, and sticking the end result back into our current reactors.Ultimately, basing our energy creation on nuclear power would be just as fool-hardy as basing it on oil. We need to have a diverse set of power creating methods, and the more renewable the sources, the better.
4/9/2007 10:04:29 PM
4/9/2007 10:14:06 PM
eh, I'm not up on the current research, but most of the promising fusion techniques I have read about rely on hydrogen isotopes that are not readily available to us.
4/9/2007 10:15:56 PM
^^^i agree with you on some points. We definitely need to diversify our energy sources to stretch the Uranium supply as long as possible. I've been told by many of my nuke professors that the supply was 200 years and best and could be stretched even longer with breeder reactors. Fusion power is not even close to being commercialized (maybe 20-40 years before our first commercial fusion reactor) however I believe its potential is amazing. Researching and further developing fusion energy along with using all clean sources of energy such as nuclear, hydroelectric, solar, wind, etc. could greatly reduce the amount of shit going into the air. Also, our energy bills will be ridiculously low ^there are a few different isotopes that could work for fusion energy with tritium being the most promising. Obviously tritium is not an easy isotope to come by yet with further research we can not only find ways to use readily available isotopes for fusion but we can also develop ways to produce it through decay and other means. The energy that can be released from from such a small amount of fuel during a fusion reaction is astonishing. The problem is being able to harness the energy and being able to use it.[Edited on April 9, 2007 at 10:25 PM. Reason : yo]
4/9/2007 10:17:11 PM
in looking up fusion stuff a little more, i stumbled across this fairly long, but compleletely readable pdf about cold fusion from last year:http://www.newenergytimes.com/news/2006/2006ExtraordinaryEvidence.pdf
4/9/2007 10:24:50 PM
^I'm to buzzed right now to read that so I'll get back to it.
4/9/2007 10:28:15 PM
[Edited on April 9, 2007 at 10:38 PM. Reason : emphasis added
4/9/2007 10:38:15 PM
4/9/2007 10:40:12 PM
^^the stupid in this thread?what have you contributed? This is a very important topic. Watch the link that I posted and make some comments so you can contribute something useful to this thread.
4/9/2007 11:08:57 PM
First of all I think the dangers of nuclear waste are way overblown. If we handled it carefully there could be virtually no damage to the environment. Of course if there is an accident it could get ugly. However, compare that hypothetical to the guaranteed pollution of fossil fuels. If nuclear fission is done right it is the best option that we have for I bet another 500-1000 years. I would be sceptical of claims that we only have 100 years worth, just like we'll be out of oil in 2050 ( until we improved the drilling technologies and found out that there is way more oil out there ). The real issue with that 100 year figure has to be the implicit assumption that we can only produce power as we are now with the light water reactors. But this is very short-sighted, it is well known physics that the nuclear by products of our current reactor system still have much energy left. The question is simply how to harness it, that is a large part of why the waste is dangerous, it has much potential by virtue of its radioactivity. The reactors that harness our nuclear waste are called breeder reactors. In principle you could have a series of these linked one after the other, each recycling the other's waste. In this fashion we could significantly extend the potential lifetime of nuclear power for mankind. This is not nearly as hypothetical as many of the so-called green technologies, the physics and technologies are essentially known they just need to be implemented. Moreover, the power available from nuclear fuels is orders of magnitude beyond chemical fuels. Btw, because of the potential national security risks I do think the government needs to monitor nukes pretty closely. In contrast there is no such need for say ethanol or other green technologies. I have no problem with research $$ going towards those, but I don't think it is good to manipulate the market through government interference. Finally, fusion has many technical obstacles to overcome as I understand the current research. In contrast, nuclear submarines travel around for months without outside help to maintain their nuclear reactor. During that time those sailors get less radiation then you or I do up here on the surface. Anyway with current technologies, fusion can be maintained for less than a second with roughly a return of the same energy you put into it. And this is only after the combined efforts of dozens of nuclear physicists. Again to contrast, the nuclear sub can be run by folks with a Masters level education. I like the idea of fusion but it is hypothetical at the current time, so we should count on fission until that changes. Hot fusion is fairly well known physics as I understand it, basically you can see it from the graph illustrating nuclear binding energies, at the low end stuff like hydrogen can combine or fuse together to make a new nucleus with smaller binding energy, the extra energy should be harnessed in principle to make power. Here's the problem, how to get stuff to fuse together. On the sun its not to hard, you just sit back and watch gravity crush it down until fusion happens. We have to supply those forces through some sort of magnetic trap or something, and those set-ups are hard to make stable. Think of the machine that has air blowing to keep a ball floating in air, but then imagine that the air-currents are magnetic fields and the ball is a nugget of nuclear fuel(tritrium I guess, I'm sure the nuclear engineers can fill in the details). It seems that some ingenuity is needed to make fusion a viable technology. It would also have radiation problems, but not as much as the fission. Certainly fusion is worth researching.Of course I think we should throw some more cash at high-energy particle physics, we should build a collider that makes the LHC look tiny. But that is motivated purely by my selfish desire to see what physics looks like beyond the Standard Model. I digress.
4/9/2007 11:59:48 PM
4/10/2007 2:21:08 AM
Or the amount of uranium and plutonium left in the fuel bundles when they are discharged.
4/10/2007 5:14:38 AM
From one of the other environmental threads:
US EUNuclear (MW) 98,145 130,267Fossil/Other (MW) 392,580 303,956Total (MW) 490,725 434,223
4/10/2007 7:58:15 AM
^ Yep, radiation levels around most fossil plants are much higher than around nuclear plants with the possible (but not certain) exception being Chernobyl. It's surprising when you first hear it, but it makes sense when you consider you're burning basically ore and the least flammable heaviest impurities that are most likely to settle out near your plant are also the nastiest. People also don't realize how much mercury, lead, and other toxic metals that fossil plants put out. A good article on this topic is this one:http://www.ornl.gov/info/ornlreview/rev26-34/text/colmain.html[Edited on April 10, 2007 at 8:10 AM. Reason : ]
4/10/2007 8:09:07 AM
Found this little piece which is kind of interesting about uranium:
4/10/2007 8:51:27 AM
when a coal plant fails you are out of power.when a nuclear plant faisl you are fucked.
4/10/2007 9:11:34 AM
Does it fucking genius?
4/10/2007 9:19:11 AM
^^ [no]
4/10/2007 9:20:36 AM
The world has already had two disasters with nuclear energy. No point in tempting further. We must look towards renewable energy, not the old standbys.
4/10/2007 9:29:14 AM
what are the 2 disasters? chernoble(sp?) and what?chernoble(sp?) is the only one i thought was considered a "disaster"
4/10/2007 9:32:05 AM
They are renewable, nutty. If and when they become uncompetitive you renew your energy supply by switching to a different source. It is in this way that each generation manages the highest standard of living possible.
4/10/2007 9:33:28 AM
coal, oil, and nuclear are the exact opposite of renewable.and we've had three disasters, not two.[Edited on April 10, 2007 at 9:43 AM. Reason : .]
4/10/2007 9:42:47 AM
Not in my opinion. I don't personally care where my energy comes from, as long as it is cheap and doesn't pollute much. By this reasoning, all sources are renewable: just get another source. We could impoverish ourselves by switching over the solar and wind energy today, or we can do it 100 years from now when it actually makes sense (here's hoping for fusion). My energy supply is renewable, whenever I want more there will always be nuclear, solar, wind, etc available to supply it. Until then my car burns gasoline; but so what, my car will break down long before oil becomes too expensive.
4/10/2007 10:25:07 AM
Chernobyl is the only disaster that comes to mind... and that was in the USSR. So what are these other two "disasters" you are talking about?
4/10/2007 10:29:16 AM
4/10/2007 11:52:08 AM
^your right about the coolant flow thing and the whole "kill the reaction" statement. We have learned from our mistakes and have put in backup system upon backup system into every current and future nuke power plant. Chernobyl was a huge disaster a on world scale but what few people know is that reactor design was faulty and every nuclear engineer in the world was telling the Russians to shut the plant down. Not only did Chernobyl not have a containment building (a 6 foot thick structure fo concrete and steel surrounding the reactor), but the engineers there were running the plant at dangerous levels while skipping protocal to do it. A disaster of this magnitude will never happen again. There are containment buildings on every nuke power plant in the world, and in the very very rare case of a meltdown, there will be no radiation leakage at all.Three Mile Island was the other "disaster" that you people speak of. Yes, there was a partial meltdown however, because of the containment building, no radiation at all was released into the outside enviroment. The workers did not even receive an elivatated radiation dose. And this was in 1971! It's been 30 years since the TMI disaster and much progress has been made.The NRC (nuclear regulatory committee) simply does not allow for error when it comes to nuclear power plants. The are the most conservative bunch of people in America, and they have all the reason to be. So to nutsmackr...I know you have your opinion but try to look into it more. Watch the video I posted above, read about the Chernobyl/TMI disasters, and also look at other alternatives to nuke power. I think you'll see that nuke power is the best way for America to go.[Edited on April 10, 2007 at 11:58 AM. Reason : asfd]
4/10/2007 11:55:37 AM
Why has no one mentioned next generation designs? The new designs imcorporate passive safety systems (i.e. they don't rely on an active electrical or mechanical component to function) like high head natural circulation systems that can prevent meltdowns even in a catastrophic event, like a main steam line break.
4/10/2007 2:01:10 PM
^ Umm....
4/10/2007 2:07:29 PM
^ Reduction of reactivity by ways of a SCRAM (cutting power to the magjacks on control rods) is an active safety and in cases where magnetically supported control rods are used (pressurized water reactors) is only enough to end rapid power excursions, but by no means is enough to completely and safely shut down the core. The three mile island core had the control rods inserted very early in the accident and most of the damage occurred hours later. Next generation reactors will be able to go from full power to COLD shutdown conditions without operator intervention and stay there for extremely long periods of time. Currently, the most common reactor type used in the united states will require some form of operator intervention within 6-12 hours. The control blades in current BWR reactors are sufficient to fully shutdown the core without the addition of some sort of soluble neutron absorber (boric acid.) Even so, they are still considered an active safety systems and control rods/blades can become stuck. The BWR control blades can also fail to fully insert since they rely on a pressurized system to insert them UP into the core, instead of using gravity to fall into the core.Furthermore, many next generation reactors will not use pumps to move the core coolant. They will rely on natural circulation instead and can cool themselves without relying on moving or powered (electrically or by steam pressure) components.[Edited on April 10, 2007 at 3:55 PM. Reason : ]
4/10/2007 3:53:42 PM
nutsmackr either you are trolling just to get a reaction out of people or you are a moron.
4/10/2007 5:43:23 PM
4/10/2007 6:19:11 PM
4/10/2007 6:49:31 PM
4/10/2007 6:54:08 PM
4/10/2007 7:02:25 PM
how was 3-mile Island a disaster?
4/10/2007 7:11:54 PM
it wasn't, but it is referred to as one, just was answerin his questionthe only "disasters" i can think of would be chernobyl, which really comes down to funding and infrastructure (their own fault) and the atom bombs (haha)
4/10/2007 7:29:24 PM
TMI is in pennsylvania. and another disaster was SL-1
4/10/2007 7:44:32 PM
what was SL-1?
4/10/2007 8:21:16 PM
SL-1 was an Army research reactor in the Idaho desert. While certainly a disaster in the sense that the reactor was destroyed and the three operators killed, it hardly qualifies as a disaster in the sense of large scale destruction, contamination, or loss of life. By 'large scale' I mean anything beyond the building itself.It should also be emphasized that SL-1 was an experimental research reactor from the early days of nuclear power (late 50's, I believe). It was not a commercial production reactor.
4/10/2007 8:32:47 PM
My uncles worked at SL-1 before it was destroyed.
4/10/2007 8:47:54 PM
4/10/2007 10:44:55 PM
Three Mile Island:
4/10/2007 10:55:34 PM
Regarding the new presidential candidatesDoes anyone know their (Romney, McCain, Clinton, Obama, etc.) take on nuclear energy as an alternative solution to fossil fuels?[Edited on April 23, 2007 at 11:24 AM. Reason : yo]
4/23/2007 11:24:33 AM
4/23/2007 12:43:57 PM
Has anyone managed to find an insurance company to underwrite a nuclear reactor without Congressional Exemption from Liability? As long as no such institution exists, I do not believe nuclear is sufficiently safe to operate in a free economy.
4/23/2007 3:47:18 PM
just curious, where does the US Navy fit into this equation?? they own a lot of reactors and their waste can't really be stored "on-site" for too long. what do they do??
4/24/2007 11:39:02 PM