Old threads were dead, and I just spend the day with my peers visiting the staffs of various congresspeople in the spirit of advocacy.Also saw some interesting legislation voted on (and passed) that could open the door for reprocessing further down the road.Thoughts?
5/19/2009 9:16:57 PM
Is it true that we only have like a 45 year-ish supply of fuel for nuclear power plants in the earth? I thought I'd read somewhere, and it seems to make the debate moot.
5/19/2009 9:19:25 PM
good. getting out of the navy in two years and I'm going to need a job
5/19/2009 9:19:46 PM
5/19/2009 9:21:22 PM
Is it remotely true? I'm curious about how finite the stuff is.Not that I'm opposed to nuclear power. It's clean energy, as far as I'm concerned.
5/19/2009 9:30:44 PM
Reprocessing is a de facto necessity; even if Yucca Mountain ever opened, OCRWM estimates show it reaching capacity in terms of ejected fuel in mid-2010. And if you thought Yucca Mountain was difficult to open, wait until Yucca Mountain II: Son of Yucca Mountain.I'm really holding out hope that this is what Chu announces will be the administration's new waste policy, but I'm very doubtful this will be so. Chu has gone on record as saying we need to "research" reprocessing, but has not come out in favor of it due to proliferation concerns. Which while on face seems sensible, completely ignores the fact that we have safeguards designed for this very reason. France has been doing it for years now; hell, the Navy doesn't seem to have too many problems on that end either.Basically, "more research" strikes me as a stalling tactic. But also, the most likely outcome.
5/19/2009 9:31:54 PM
5/19/2009 9:34:46 PM
I've seen values ranging from 150+ years to "so much, don't worry about," varying from textbooks to articles to journals.It's like predicting ocean rise due to global warming - lots of speculation, who knows for certain?But to address what I think is the intent of your point, just suppose that yes: there is a finite amount, relevant to, say, three generations from now. Keep in mind there are other sources; for example, the fuel for the plant I work at is not mined, but rather is made from refurbished material from Russian nuclear warheads. Also keep in mind that by that time (decades and decades), we will have even more efficient steam cycles, and perhaps even new reactor types (fast reactors and breeder reactors, for example).^, ^^[Edited on May 19, 2009 at 9:38 PM. Reason : ]
5/19/2009 9:36:53 PM
from what I understand, and chaos does a better job of explaining it, the estimate you heard is based on the assumption of no reprocessing.Uranium isn't like gasoline in your car. You can't burn all of the uranium in a reactor, because the fission products end up fucking up the system, so you have to take the stuff out and put new fuel in. However, you've still got a fuck-ton of usable fuel left in the old stuff. You just can't use the old fuel in its used-state. You have to pull out the bad shit to get at the good shit. And that requires reprocessing. And, guess what, we can do that right now with current technology. We do it every day. We just do it for bombs right now.Probably a better explanation would be to say imagine if your car puts the H20 from the combustion process back into the gas tank. Eventually, the H2O in the gas tank will stop the combustion process, despite the fact that there is plenty of gas. it's almost entirely the same in the case of a nuclear reactor, only with different elements "stopping the combustion."
5/19/2009 9:52:28 PM
5/20/2009 11:47:13 AM
5/20/2009 12:03:15 PM
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090525/ap_on_re_as/as_koreas_nuclearnk just tested a nuke
5/25/2009 2:31:59 AM
OBLITERATEEither get world consensus to wipe N. Koreas ass off the map or work shit out. No half way decisions of firm angry diplomacy.Perhaps George FUCKING Dubya should have been more worried about N.Korea instead of wasting our troops, money, and effor for Saddams no show WMD.[Edited on May 25, 2009 at 3:00 AM. Reason : l]
5/25/2009 2:59:51 AM
eh lets keep nuclear arms and nuclear power in separate threads please. Its like linking an article about a hydrogen bomb in a thread about hydrogen cars.That being said, I am a huge supporter of new nuclear plants and reprocessing as well. Also, the other thing to consider when talking about the amount of uranium available to us...it has been my experience that the people trying to say we only have "45"(or any other relatively low number) of years of uranium available are either lying or misconstruing the facts, or both. The biggest thing I see misrepresented is the people who crunch that number down low by basing their calculation off of the "known" uranium supply being the only source used for ALL power generation w/i the US, world, whatever scale they are talking on. And the fact is obviously that that will not be happening anytime soon and honestly shouldn't/won't happen ever anyways. So its a moot point.[Edited on May 25, 2009 at 9:49 AM. Reason : ]
5/25/2009 9:48:05 AM
Additionally, what would be the logical thing to advocate if you're worried about nuclear power sustainability? So we have more than 45 years of Uranium left, fine, but even if we have 300 years of Uranium left, it's not unreasonable to ask our living engineers to use it more efficiently and generate less waste (which IS a problem staring us in the face).Of course there's the advanced fuel cycle, breeder and burner reactors, but people have problem with those too.Or maybe we could just use a proven process that uses existing reactors with no retrofitting, at a price much lower than the advanced fuel cycle, with virtually no proliferation concerns, in a cooperation with (friendly) Canada which would significantly extend the life of our Uranium resources?http://nextbigfuture.com/2009/04/dupic-fuel-cycle-direct-use-of.htmlWhen you get down to it, the only reason we're not reusing the spent fuel is.........actually, there is no reason we're not reusing the spent fuel.[Edited on May 27, 2009 at 9:46 AM. Reason : ]
5/27/2009 9:45:52 AM
5/27/2009 9:48:08 AM
bump
12/29/2011 9:13:56 AM
2 hour long video on Liquid Flouride Thorium Reactorstl;dw (first 5 minutes)
12/29/2011 9:17:13 AM
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liquid_fluoride_thorium_reactor
12/29/2011 9:22:48 AM
Flourine and Flourides are two different things, Peter.
12/29/2011 11:13:51 AM
whether we have 100 years or 1000 years of nuclear material left to use to produce electricity, it's only a short matter of time before we rely 100% on this:
12/29/2011 11:28:35 AM
and at the time that picture was taken, we would have been shivering in the dark, because there would be no electricity
12/29/2011 11:31:07 AM
hahaha
12/29/2011 11:39:49 AM
That picture was taken in the middle of a bright sunny day. Why would we be shivering in the dark?
12/29/2011 11:42:14 AM
752 F...thats hot.we do not run that hot. but we do run at high pressures...
12/29/2011 11:47:44 AM
12/29/2011 1:50:47 PM
get back to me when that shit actually works
12/29/2011 1:54:51 PM
here, give me your hands. let me actually palpate them for you against the surface of the actual panels. then walk over to the battery they charged and hold the + and - terminals and feel the cold voltage send a 12V ever so slight shiver up your spine.i understand no amount of words will ever convince you of the ability of these things, but, hey, not all people have an actual functioning brain.
12/29/2011 2:00:41 PM
way to change the post after I responded to it. the article you originally posted said this:
12/29/2011 2:06:15 PM
12/29/2011 2:14:44 PM
12/29/2011 2:24:11 PM
lol you talk a lotsolar energy > all other forms of energy we currently have
12/29/2011 2:32:09 PM
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/12/23/business/energy-environment/nrc-clears-way-for-new-nuclear-plant-construction.htmlApproval of Reactor Design Clears Path for New Plants
12/29/2011 2:36:48 PM
12/29/2011 2:37:35 PM
Solar won't ever be viable for industrial production.I can see solar eventually replacing practically all consumer electricity though, in most places.The energy industry would fight this tooth and nail, because it would mean people wouldn't be paying a monthly fee to have their electricity managed.[Edited on December 29, 2011 at 2:39 PM. Reason : ]
12/29/2011 2:38:55 PM
12/29/2011 2:40:04 PM
12/29/2011 2:40:37 PM
wouldn't industrial use fall under the 100% that you stated earlier? which is it?[Edited on December 29, 2011 at 2:41 PM. Reason : ]
12/29/2011 2:41:32 PM
^i never said we'd have a solar powered space shuttle dumb-ass, and yes 100% of items that run on conventional electricity can and will be powered through solar sources eventually. again. you, with all the talking. just admit you hate solar and go back to the ron paul thread.[Edited on December 29, 2011 at 2:44 PM. Reason : ,]
12/29/2011 2:43:38 PM
I was hoping this would be about fusion. *sigh*
12/29/2011 2:46:02 PM
^It's better. I don't think you watched the video, pack_bryan.[Edited on December 29, 2011 at 2:47 PM. Reason : -]
12/29/2011 2:47:06 PM
^ nope . but i did read a wiki entry on it real quick.can you condense the 5 min segment or find a shorter vid? if not i'll watch it later when i've got the bandwidth.
12/29/2011 2:51:08 PM
Just wait and watch the first 5 minutes when you get a chance. You'll want to watch the rest of it.
12/29/2011 2:55:54 PM
12/29/2011 2:58:44 PM
5^likewise.
12/29/2011 2:59:28 PM
believe me. i'm itching to watch. and i've been extremely tempted to build one of these before in my basement: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f0FHZCYCoXY
12/29/2011 3:00:09 PM
12/29/2011 3:01:45 PM
12/29/2011 3:02:07 PM
^ good read^^ sure man. i update my statement to read... "it's only a short matter of time before we rely 99.9992237478372362% on [solar]"
12/29/2011 3:05:37 PM
12/29/2011 3:06:36 PM