2/27/2009 6:25:52 PM
60 years of science doesn't mean anything. Obama says its no good, so its no good.
2/27/2009 6:30:51 PM
2/27/2009 6:35:18 PM
2/27/2009 6:46:19 PM
^ Even if true, which I would have to verify, none of that removes his credentials. Right or wrong, he is an expert on the subject.Also, people should know that France and other countries using lots of nuclear power have problems with waste disposal. See the English Channel controversy. It's not just us backwards Americans. [Edited on February 27, 2009 at 6:59 PM. Reason : Americans]
2/27/2009 6:54:44 PM
omg, all of these problems with the French nuclear problem are the same problems we face here. That would be people like you.
2/27/2009 7:13:08 PM
^ Again, that's a political reality. It doesn't matter if we're all knuckle-dragging primitivists. Unless public assessment of the dangers of fission power changes suddenly and dramatically, there's no way it can save us from global warming. You're simply not going be able to find the money and support for enough plants to accomplish anything significant. Remember, fission in the country relies on government insurance. Investors worry that their asset could turn into a huge liability overnight.[Edited on February 27, 2009 at 7:22 PM. Reason : liability]
2/27/2009 7:20:51 PM
regardless of how you feel about nuclear energy and all of the various theories about its storage and decay, doesnt it seem ridiculous to expose the government to billions in damages when we cant afford to wipe our own asses?
2/27/2009 7:58:27 PM
Whether Yucca mountain was suitable or not will probably be debated inconslusively ad nauseum... but I look at it from this standpoint:They have spent 22 years and $9 billion and not one gram of nuclear waste is stored there, way I see it it was a 'count your losses and dump the whole idea' move because they could just as easily spend another 2 decades and a 10-figure dollar some and still not be ready. Sunk cost theory, cut your losses and run, this project was a sinkhole.For the record, I am very much for Nuclear Power, as well as recycling waste. I think a better approach would be to make smaller, decentralized, storage areas, not just one *BIG* one. Best not to put all your eggs in one basket, and the cost of the projects wouldn't be too terrible.The caskets seem good enough to store it in, no reason why each reactor can't develop its own small storage facility off-site, somewhere in the local BFE. Throw it in the caskets and lock it up, but don't throw away the key, one day that 'waste' might be profitable to recycle or in 100years we will have a better permanent solution to the waste problem.
2/27/2009 8:47:35 PM
i just want to make sure that everyone knows that after the spent fuel sits in the pool for a bit it is moved to concrete canisters that sit on a concrete pad exposed to the elements with no fucking problem at every fucking nuclear power planthell, one of the sample problems in the new SCALE (SCALE6) is concrete casks on a concrete padwe know so much about this particular situation, that it is used as a fucking validation problem to ensure that you have complied the software correctlyjust want to throw that out thereit is profitable to recycle the waste right nowyucca mtn is appropriate because the water table is the farthest that it can possibly be from the casks at any location in the usyou stupid fucking greenies and your god damn lack of any fucking education and your god damn feel good measures that dont help the current socioeconomic problemits not like we have monkeys working on this fucking projectits the same thing with the assault weapon ban, it is meaningless because the features banned have nothing to do with the lethality of the weaponhere is a link http://www.ornl.gov/info/ornlreview/rev26-34/text/colmain.htmlthat describes how coal fired plant actually have a larger radioactive footprint than nuclear power
[Edited on February 27, 2009 at 10:58 PM. Reason :
2/27/2009 10:51:05 PM
2/28/2009 1:36:16 AM
2/28/2009 9:31:19 AM
^I used to not know that either.It doesn't make a difference at this point, anyway. Even if the greenies and the NIMBY's and the rest of the uneducated masses did finally pull their heads out of their asses, we wouldn't be able to build enough nuclear plants in a reasonable time span to be able to keep up with current energy needs (the numbers I've seen indicate a 1GW nuclear plant per day for the next forty years, and that's assuming that we somehow cut our energy consumption in half). The nuclear industry has been stalled for far too long. So oddly enough, they've already won.And here's a link for a good discussion about nuclear energy: http://bbs.stardestroyer.net/viewtopic.php?f=5&t=131305
2/28/2009 10:11:34 AM
^ That is absurd. Your numbers are rediculous. There is no way that U.S. electricity consumption is going to grow that absurdly fast. 1 GW per day would double U.S. electricity nameplate capacity in less than three years. And this would fail to take into account the continuing output gains at existing plants due to improving efficiency.
2/28/2009 12:07:43 PM
My company had quite a few contractors at this project...they were told the day of inauguration they would be let go soon. Way to keep jerbs Obama.
2/28/2009 12:30:26 PM
2/28/2009 2:02:19 PM
2/28/2009 2:06:36 PM
exactly, though. Geologically, it's a hell of a lot safer than anywhere else we have that shit stored right now. I'm totally with you on the reprocessing facet, though. Of course, I'm a bit biased, since I work at SRS, but still. We already do reprocessing right now. We fucking KNOW how to do it. No sense in not doing it full scale.
2/28/2009 2:25:40 PM
This isn't a bad move. My geology teacher from many semesters ago said this place is right on a fault line and if an earthquake ever happened the town of Las Vegas would glow.
2/28/2009 3:04:55 PM
Your geology teacher obviously does seem to know a whole lot about how we actually store waste packages, then. Perhaps he should stick to geology.
2/28/2009 3:08:51 PM
really this thread is getting pwnt by DrSteve
2/28/2009 3:52:44 PM
2/28/2009 5:29:18 PM
2/28/2009 5:32:52 PM
2/28/2009 6:06:41 PM
^^ A multiplicity of other options exist, though they may take a while to get off the ground. Geothermal, space solar, hydrokinetic in the ocean, kite-style wind, and so on.
2/28/2009 6:08:33 PM
2/28/2009 6:14:21 PM
2/28/2009 6:21:09 PM
2/28/2009 7:19:39 PM
isnt one of biggest arguments against wind energy is how inconsistent it is? based on that, how could it ever be a viable option until we learn how to store the generated energy effectively and distribute it effectively from the middle of nowhere (great plains) to the coasts?
2/28/2009 7:33:07 PM
^ Yes, that's a problem. The kite-style generator accesses steadier winds higher in the atmosphere, but you would still want a backup plan. For more information on the real cost of nuclear power, see the following report. From 1947 through 1999, fission received $145.4 billion subsidies while wind and solar got $5.7 billion. Because of the capital-intensive nature of nuclear power, looking at only the current cost or subsidy per unit of energy produced slants the numbers. http://www.citizen.org/documents/FatalFlawsSummary.pdf
2/28/2009 7:46:04 PM
[Edited on February 28, 2009 at 9:25 PM. Reason :
2/28/2009 9:11:57 PM
2/28/2009 9:27:05 PM
^^ A few extra units, okay. But what about new nuclear plants? If they're such a great idea, where's the investment? Renewables continue to get private funding.^ I don't know if that'll be problem in the near future. Eventually, sure. Beaming solar power from space, for example, creates obvious issues. But we should be able to use the technology responsibly.[Edited on February 28, 2009 at 9:32 PM. Reason : near future]
2/28/2009 9:28:31 PM
you know why there is no investment in nuclear? Because every time one is proposed, there are about a billion and a half lawsuits against the company. If we could end these frivolous lawsuits, there would be more investment, because then the plant COULD be profitable without sinking tens of billions of dollars into lawyers before a single kW of energy is produced. The fact is that the safety record of the US nuclear industry is fairly good. The worst event you can even mention was practically nothing in its own right. In fact, the safety of the reactors was practically proven in that episode. But no, the anti-nuke fucktards have to scream and cry every time someone even thinks of the word "nuclear"
2/28/2009 9:42:25 PM
[Edited on February 28, 2009 at 10:01 PM. Reason :
2/28/2009 9:52:49 PM
2/28/2009 10:43:28 PM
2/28/2009 11:01:23 PM
waste disposal is only an issue because of the lack of correct information and how scary people think it is, we can get all the bad stuff out and reduce the amount of material that has to be mined (we are starting to go in circles in this thread)the licensing procedure has been changed so that there will be no delays this time around. once you get a site license (valid for 30 years), you combine that with an approved design, then there is a 3 year review and all that is left is constructionthe reason that utilities are building new units on current sites is because they can avoid having to find a new site, all they have to do is combine that current valid site license with an approved designgone are the days of building the unit to 98% and getting approval, that was the bulk of the delaysthere are already a few designs that are approved (westinghouse ap 1000, ge hitachi nuclear's new bwr) regardless, i dont see anything other than coal, hydro, or nuclear providing base load for the next 50 years, the energy demands are just too great and i think that we are going to have to agree to disagree
2/28/2009 11:04:37 PM
2/28/2009 11:33:25 PM
2/28/2009 11:34:50 PM
2/28/2009 11:39:32 PM
2/28/2009 11:57:06 PM
Nationalize energy. Be ready for agressive clean-ups and other works with a new civilian uniformed service just for Environmental stuff. I'm such a communist.
3/1/2009 12:19:32 AM
^ Can the rest of us continue to import our energy from other countries freely after you wreck the energy sector and make America entirely dependent upon foreign energy?
3/1/2009 10:31:38 AM
3/1/2009 11:13:49 AM
3/1/2009 12:07:11 PM
Yes We Can raise utility costs on the middle class to here before unseen levels.I love the comments in this thread of an almost worshipful nature towards Chu.Chu is a physicist not a magician. And besides this is entirely about politics, it has nothing to do with finding a real solution. Chu is just a token scientist.Why would a democrat want to find a solution anyhow? Solving peoples problems doesn't make them depend on you.[Edited on March 1, 2009 at 1:41 PM. Reason : .n]
3/1/2009 1:40:40 PM
http://Chernobyltruth.ytmnd.com/
3/1/2009 1:45:22 PM
3/1/2009 11:02:04 PM
lol, did someone really post a pic of 3 Mile Island as an argument against nuclear energy? Talk about the most hyped up incident ever.
3/1/2009 11:06:49 PM