World Nuclear University Launched 381
nuke-alwin writes "The first meeting of the 'academic council' of the newly-launched World Nuclear University (WNU) was held in the UK last week. The mission of the WNU is to strengthen the international community of people and institutions to guide and further develop nuclear power and many other nuclear applications (in agriculture, medicine, environmental protection). As workers in the nuclear industry are aging, organisations have started Young Generation Networks such as the YGN of the British Nuclear Energy Society. The WNU is a further recognition that the nuclear industry needs to educate a new generation of workers, so that nuclear power can continue to provide electricity without the production of greenhouse gases."
Nuclear Power is the future (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Nuclear Power is the future (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Nuclear Power is the future (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Nuclear Power is the future (Score:5, Interesting)
What's wrong with abandoned salt mines? It may not be perfect, but it's a heck of a lot better than steels drums sitting around. Or what about encasing the waste in ceramic nodules and dumping them into the Marianas trench? Digging mile long shafts into geologically stable granite mountains?
Europe's using a heck of a lot of nuclear power. Probably ten times what the US is using. What do they do with it?
Re:Nuclear Power is the future (Score:3, Interesting)
Anybody who has actually looked at how bad coal plants are for the environment and human health must realize what a joke the "dangers" of nuclear power are.
Re:Nuclear Power is the future (Score:3, Informative)
Europe's using a heck of a lot of nuclear power. Probably ten times what the US is using. What do they do with it?
We use it again [bbc.co.uk].
Re:Nuclear Power is the future (Score:5, Informative)
It's very simple. You reprocess the fuel to recover the usefull stuff out of it. Some of the U235 wasn't used up, so you can save that. Some of the U238 absorbed neutrons and turned into Pu239 and Pu240, which can also be used. Plus there's a smattering of other useful heavy isotopes, some of which (potentially of the Platinum group) would be useful to isolate and sell.
The problem is that you are creating Plutonium, which is bad on the grounds of nuclear proliferation. Although, the Plutonium produced isn't actually too useful for nuclear warheads anyways because the Pu240 contaminates the warhead-friendly Pu239.
The remaining stuff is generally not suitable for reactor usage but is occasionally reactive. It looks like you might be able to make it either a net-gain or, at least, not a substantial waste of energy, to bombard it with neutrons so that it will decay much faster.
The fun thing is that, once the nasty stuff that's very radioactive has had a chance to decay, you are talking about stuff that is actually less radioactive than the source rock. Even without reprocessing, you are talking about storing the stuff for maybe a thousand years.
The problem is that it's a bad word because we're trying to get all of the little countries of the world to *not* have nukes, and one of the good ways to do this is to build some reactors, put in rods of U238, and then isolate out some Pu239 before the Pu239 has a chance to absorb another neutron and become Pu240. Somebody got the bright idea that if nobody had access to a reprocessing plant that they'd never be able to get enough Plutonium to make a bomb. It's really kinda dumb and just makes us further beholden to the oil and coal reserves.
The problem is that there's so many whackos of every variety (including overzealous environmentalists) who oppose nuclear power, every single move, even it's a really good idea, is heavily argued about.
Re:Nuclear Power is the future (Score:2)
Instead, it always about Yucca Mountain vs. storing it on-site. Personally, I live too close to Yucca Mountain and would like to see it's demise. Of course, my state would probably be next down the list for storage. This stems from some indians that want to nuclear store waste on their land. But their plan is to have it be in the open, above ground.
But then, I don't see why the states with no nuclear p
Re:Nuclear Power is the future (Score:2)
If people would actually look at the facts, it's different, but congressmen and other policy makers are not known for any in-depth research not provided by a lobbyist.
But the second somebody starts talking about reprocessing plants, somebody will invoke the Plutonium
Re:Nuclear Power is the future (Score:3, Insightful)
You're hardly "at the mercy of nature" with solar and tidal power. The movements of Sun, earth and moon tend to be somewhat predictable. Even windpower is fairly consistent over longer periods of time.
Furthermore I'd hesitate to call nuclear energy 'clean'. It maybe so at the actual power station site, but the production of the fuel rods (digging up and enriching uranium) and the actual power station both require a lot of clean-up.
Finnally being confident that a solution will be found seems a rather dan
Re:Nuclear Power is the future (Score:2)
Or better yet, replace fuel pebbles. There is a design called a "pebble-bed modular reactor" that looks promising (granted, IANANP -- my main experience with nuclear power is playing Three Mile Island on the Apple II and Chernobyl on the Commodore 64). One of the nifty things about the "pebbles" is that they're coated with a thick layer of ceramic that can withstand very high temperatures. The idea is that t
Re:Nuclear Power is the future (Score:5, Interesting)
I think the biggest problem with these technologies is that they take up very large areas. This is fundamental limitation; if we want to get large amounts of energy from solar cells and wind power we have to give up large areas for these purposes.
As a friend of the environment, I would much rather use such areas for wildlife/ national parks and take the energy from nuclear plants.
It is too bad the environmental movement is so dogmatic; they get these ideas that certain things are Bad, and at that point no science or rational comparisons can make them change their mind. It does not matter if that there has been tremendous development of nuclear technology in terms of efficiency/ security/ waste.
It seems like GM is facing the same issues. Instead of discussing intresting tradeoffs suchs as herbicedes/ GM/ larger areas for cultivation the enviroment lobby is completely fanatic.
It too bad, because the issues they argue about are really important.
Tor
Re:Nuclear Power is the future (Score:4, Insightful)
>I think the biggest problem with these technologies is that they take up very large areas.
There are a variety of problems associated with so-called "clean" energy sources. Unpredictability and size are certainly two. Another problem is that they often aren't environmentally friendly. Most people are aware of the damage caused by hydro-electric dams, but similar effects come from all natural sources. Tidal power obviously affects currents and erosion. Even solar and wind power on large scale will affect weather patterns and climate in addition to the effects of their sheer size.
Basically, you can't just extract energy from the environment (technically, move it, since it isn't being destroyed) without affecting the natural sinks for that energy. True, fossil fuels and nuclear add to the net energy (since they were stored in the ground), so perhaps they are worse in that sense. There's really no solution that doesn't cause some harm.
Re:Nuclear Power is the future (Score:2)
Certainly there are, but there is one problem that non-renewable sources suffer from that is an absolute show-stopper: they aren't renewable. Eventually we will run out of coal, oil, and plutonium. When that happens, we'll either have successfully switched to renewable enery sources, or we'll have to go back to living in caves. I prefer the former.
Re:Nuclear Power is the future (Score:5, Insightful)
1) Yes, you are at the mercy of nature. Let's get some facts straight for the mis-information givers. To begin with, the two largest problems facing solar power is that for one, the farther you are away from the equator, the less solar power you can produce. Most of the US in not on the Equator. Secondly, solar power production is directly related cloud cover, among other factors. Building a solar powered facility in Wisconsin, where I live, never pays off. At night, you need energy storage, and that is a whole other issue. Some states it may work, but 90% of the rest of the US...it doesn't.
2) Now, wind power does not take up large amounts of space. What you don't understand is that the actual footprint of a wind turbine is only around 100-150 square feet. A wind turbine is generally 50-100 meters tall. The taller the wind turbine, the more power it can produce (on flat land like Iowa, Nebraska, etc.) Wind turbines are always built based on worse case scenario wind shear conditions at a design height. Wind turbines do not speed up or slow down, since the generator has a naturally occuring electrical braking action (think Eddy Current braking) and is built to worse case scenario wind shear conditions for minimum operation. The real problem, at least in Iowa where I have done utility studies for the IDNR (Iowa Department of Natural Resources) is that a lot of birds get killed flying to into these huge wind turbine farms and animal activities/tree huggers try to get them shut down. Apparently, the tree huggers want their cake and eat it too. Idiots.
For a great example of wind power helping out on a massive scale is look at Denmark. They are currently working on converting 90% of their entire COUNTRY to using solely wind power. How are they doing this? Simple. They are building large wind farms far out into the ocean and using constant ocean winds to power the wind turbines. Is it working? YES. Here is an internet link to check this out for yourselves
http://www.windpower.org/en/core.htm
Now, the idea has been presented in the United States by several MAJOR utility companies in recent years. The response they have gotten? "We don't want hundreds of wind turbines blocking our view of the ocean."
You want renewable energy? You change the piss poor, "I only care about me and my pretty ocean view and my pretty birdies, but SAVE THE EARTH and give me FREE CLEAN POWER" Of course, only the US seems to care about points #1 and #2.
PS-According to a multi-year study in Denmark on their ocean wind turbine farm and birds? Guess what, after a couple of years, the birds learned to fly around the wind turbine farm. Gee, figure that.
Re:Nuclear Power is the future (Score:2)
Nuclear power's time has passed (Score:3, Insightful)
What about the decline in fossil fuels and gree
Re:Nuclear Power is the future (Score:4, Insightful)
Folks, pay no attention to the radioactive waste. Nothing to see here.
We repeat: Pay no attention to the radioactive waste. Move along...
Folks...errr...we might need to slightly modify our previous "emission-free, clean" statements. The statements are still true, but for a slightly smaller value of "true" than we'd used originally.
All right folks, we'll level with you. There are a few by-products that are created by our nuclear power plants, and they're what you might describe as "incredibly hazardous". But remember, a watermelon can also be very hazardous if you try to swallow it whole. Just want to keep things in perspective here.
However, the good news is that these clean, non-emissive, watermelon-like by-products will be around for thousands of years, so there's ample time to study them, and we're sure that technology will someday be able to deal with them. Until that time arrives, we'll just be...ummm...well, kind of shoving it in a hole in the ground.
Here, look at the monkey. Look at the silly monkey!
Sanity at last! (Score:2)
Some people think that there's an issue with waste and nuclear weapons and terrorists and things. But remember:
Nukes don't kill people. People kill people.
Cheerio....
Re:Nuclear Power is the future (Score:2)
Re:Nuclear Power is the future (Score:2, Insightful)
I'm not convinced. The half-life of radioactive waste that comes from nuclear power plants is measured in hundreds of thousands of years. What are you going to do with it? Put it in the ground along a fault line or in an active volcano [google.com] like Bush is doing? Or how about put it somewhere where the US isn't likely do start a 'shock and awe' campagin. And then you have to consider problems like meteors and sabbotage
Re:Nuclear Power is the future (Score:2)
YOU want to shoot it into the Sun. Exactly how many rockets do you remember exploding on launch? What do you think would happen if a rocket loaded with radioactive material exploded in the atmosophere?
YOU may live near uranium mines and worry about when the oil runs out, but I lived 20 miles downrange from where they lauch the rockets (Cape Canaveral, FL) for years. I was a h
Re:Nuclear Power is the future (Score:2)
This is the first thing I thought of. There is not an infinite supply of Uranium, I remember reading that in documents describing how much estimated total power was available from non-renewable resources in the 90's. IIRC (and I probably do not) it was something like 50-100 years for oil, 100 years for nuclear, and 2-40
Your name's FUD. Elmer FUD. (Score:5, Interesting)
There are some long-lived isotopes in the mix, but we're fairly good at separating isotopes from each other. There is no reason we couldn't filter those out (e.g. Tc-99 [epa.gov]) and package them for multi-million-year disposal. The beauty is that the hot isotopes are short-lived, and the long-lived isotopes aren't hot.
100% safe... to sit next to. You know, like blocks of lead and sealed vials of mercury? Just don't take any internally.It might interest you to know that good old stable arsenic is a serious problem in parts of Asia. Turns out that the wonderful high-tech (not) invention of tube wells for drinking water allowed the over-pumping of aquifers, which let air into them. The air oxidized the formerly-stable arsenic, which became soluble in the water and came up via the wells. Now people across large parts of India have chronic arsenic poisoning. I can't think of any problem with Yucca Mountain affecting so many people or so large an area.
Yeah, someone is bound to lay claim to the world's oceans and all their dissolved uranium, and all the world's thorium while they're at it. And every bit of granite on the planet, and all the coal ash (the uranium in granite gives it more potential energy than coal, and the U and Th in coal ash has more energy potential than the carbon in the coal). I've got nothing against renewables, just badly-thought-out renewables. So what are you doing to support Bryan Roberts and his gyromill generators?Re:Nuclear Power is the future (Score:2)
But..huh? wait...
You said: There is the issue of disposing nuclear waste, but I'm confident that issue will also be dealt with as technology advances.
Err, so the presence of dangerous waste means it's NOT clean. I mean, "clean energy source" means the production of the energy creates some form of pollution. Erk. Do you work in marketing?
Re:Nuclear Power is the future (Score:2)
There are four big risks with nuclear power: accidents, waste disposal, terrorist attacks and weapons proliferation. People tend to argue over the first two issues, but they may actually the most manageable. The other two risks are so bad that it's a no-brainer that you don't want hundreds of nuclear power plants sprinkled about in dozens of countries.
Terrorist threats mean that I don't want a nuke plant anywher
Re:Nuclear Power is the future (Score:2, Insightful)
Nuclear power is horrendously expensive. There is this myth that nuclear power is cheap... let me remind readers that the UK Govt had to bail out the British nuclear industry to the tune of 500m recently, [i]just to keep plan
Re:Nuclear Power is the future (Score:2, Funny)
See, that's how it works on
Re:Nuclear Power is the future (Score:2)
Uh... in the very long term (think millennia as a lower bound), you are right, but short term, long half life isotopes are converted into a lot of much shorter half life isotopes so you are getting a lot more radiation sooner.
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Nuclear Power is the future (Score:2)
Dear Sirs, (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Dear Sirs, (Score:2)
Misc. Saddam Hussein Henchman: We are ready to start the nuclear weapons project, Sir! [vigorously salutes]
Generalissimo Saddam:Forget about it, cancel it. [calmly, while getting blown by a knockout Filipina]
Misc. Saddam Hussein Henchman: What do you mean, Sir! We need them to fend off the infidel Americans! [incredulous]
Generalissimo Saddam:We don't need them. They already think we have them. Just buy a few aluminum cylinders and krytrons every now and then to keep them guessing. [moments befo
Dear Non-Nuke scientist, (Score:2, Interesting)
What you won't read in the article... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:What you won't read in the article... (Score:2)
Re:What you won't read in the article... (Score:2)
VA Linux HQ is already being raided by the NSA as we speak.
I guess Taco got clubbed over the head after modding down the guys in black uniforms with the MP5s with "-1, Overrated."
interesting choice of words in headline. (Score:5, Funny)
Just what the world needs (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Just what the world needs (Score:2)
Of course not. Radium kegger at my house, pass it on, dude!
Re:Just what the world needs (Score:2)
Many American and European universities already have small reactors and dangerous radioactive material. I have never heard of an incident where anybody got hurt.
Tor
Great... (Score:2, Funny)
Job Availability? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Job Availability? (Score:2)
Re:Job Availability? (Score:2)
Re:Job Availability? (Score:2)
Re:Job Availability? (Score:2)
Uranium in the atmosphere (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Uranium in the atmosphere (Score:2, Informative)
Obligatory Simpsons reference (Score:5, Funny)
Homer: Uh, excuse me, Professor Brainiac, but I worked in a nuclear power plant for ten years, and, uh, I think I know how a proton accelerator works.
Prof: Well, please, come down and show us.
Homer: All right, I will.
Everyone abandons the glowing green building. Homer walks out, glowing green himself.
Homer: [to meltdown men] In there, guys.
Men: Thanks, Homer.
-- Homer Goes to College [snpp.com]
Auction (Score:5, Funny)
Visit my Ebay listings for lead jock straps, helmets and surplus radioactive materials.
It is a double edged sword (Score:5, Funny)
I am extremely concerned about this nuclear school and what it means for our national securitization. We must not misunderestimatify the potential for doing both good and evil that this nuclear school provides. We must keep tabs on it to make sure that the nuclear knowledge does not fall into the wrong hands and remains in the control of Americans for the good of America.
Thank you and God bless America.
When is the US going to grow up? (Score:5, Informative)
We have enough power generation capacity sitting in nuclear waste cooldown pools to run all of our nuclear power plants for several decades... we just have to refine it.
Re:When is the US going to grow up? (Score:2)
Re:When is the US going to grow up? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:When is the US going to grow up? (Score:2, Interesting)
For a technological advance example, TRIGA [ga.com] nuclear plants *cannot* melt down. Can't. Go ahead and pull out all of the control rods... the fuel itself dampens the neutrons and the reactor shuts down.
For a non-technological development, you'd think we'd want to reduce our reliance on a, shall we say, less-than-stable-region [worldnetdaily.com].
One would think that the altered political and technological realities of our world would lead to a resurgence in non-fossil power (similar to the 70s when rising oil prices
Re:When is the US going to grow up? (Score:2)
Sellafield 2 [american.edu]
You see, I'm perfectly aware that nuclear energy has some advantages; unfortunately it's a dangerous beast to handle that requires large long term investments. Whenever there's lots of money involved, MBAs start the pissing contest against the "foolish" "overly cautious" scientists (that could they themselves make grave mistakes) over who holds the purse. Then invariably the shit hits the fan and when that happens it's not like in chem industry where at most a
Recycling program in full swing! (Score:2)
Re:When is the US going to grow up? (Score:2)
You can blame Jimmy Carter [gnxp.com] for the fact that we're not doing that. (Why nothing has been done since 1981 to rescind that executive order is a valid question.)
Re:When is the US going to grow up? (Score:2, Informative)
> When is the US going to grow up and recycle and refine spent uranium
"Breeder" reactors breed plutonium as the second-generation fuel.
It's quite difficult to build an amateur nuclear weapon from
reactor-grade enriched uranium.
It's much easier to build an amateur nuclear weapon from
refined plutonium.
Thoughtful people everywhere have serious concerns about producing
large quantities of refined plutonium, because they think that
it may in the end prove difficult to keep it completel
Re:When is the US going to grow up? (Score:2, Informative)
always astounding (Score:2, Interesting)
Yay! It's environmentally friendly! None of those nasty greenhouse gases, no sir! Just waste that is very chemically toxic, emits powerful high-energy radiation, and has a half-life measured in millenia. And as an added bonus, it costs billions and billions of dollars!
Re:always astounding (Score:2)
If you took all the nuclear waste produced ever, it would only cover a football field five metres deep.
Of the 360 mrem that the average person is exposed to every year,
Re:always astounding (Score:2)
I don't know if you are correct or not, but Kids, don't do this at home. The resulting meltdown would create a vast blob of extremely hot molten "nuclear waste" that will burn through the ground sending aerosolized debris with an extremely high "nuclear waste" content into the atmosphere. Since it is very hot, some of it reaches a high altitude. When the blob hits the water table, there will be a vast ste
Re:always astounding (Score:2)
you do knwo that he didn't propose putting it in a football field, only used it as an example, right?
perhaps you should direct your frustation towards the government and try to make it so they continue to properly dispose of the waste.
Re:always astounding (Score:2)
Re:always astounding (Score:4, Informative)
You know, this is probably the most misunderstood aspect of nuclear reactors. Everybody is convinced that nuclear waste is so dangerous and that it is the worst thing that can happen to the environment because the radioactive nuclei won't stabilize for thousands of years.
The thing is, nuclear waste is composed of fission products, which are a lot of different things. There are short-lived isotopes, medium-lived isotopes, and long-lived isotopes. The long-lived isotopes that everybody likes to make a big deal about are only a percentage of the total waste (I don't remember the actual number, but I think it is something like 20%). Furthermore, you can observe an interesting trend if you look at a chart of the nuclides. The high-energy betas and gammas tend to come from short-lived and medium-lived isotopes. Long-lived isotopes tend to emit weak betas and alphas.
So what does this mean? It means nuclear waste becomes a lot "safer" after several decades (long enough for the short and medium-lived isotopes to stabilize). Then the longer-lived isotopes that remain suddenly become a lot easier to dispose of. Better yet, if those long-lived isotopes happen to be fissile, they can be recycled into new fuel and then they don't have to be disposed of period. Also, if you could separate the short, medium, and long-lived isotopes initially, the short-lived could be kept in a facility until they stabilize, the long-lived could be recycled, and then the only waste that you actually have to worry about disposing of are the medium-lived isotopes.
Personally, I don't think nuclear power is the perfect solution to every solution, but it is a good solution to many problems. If people would get over the stigma on radiation (leftover from the cold war) and come up with a good way to deal with nuclear waste, nuclear power would be a much better solution than the many gas and oil burning power plants we currently have in the US. And that's not to say that power-generating is the only good function for a nuclear reactor. A lot of really good science can be done with them that can't be done with anything else.
Re:always astounding (Score:2)
The CO2 would last forever if it were isolated. Howver, we're talking about CO2 *in the atmosphere*. This CO2 does have a half life as natural processes chemically convert it and sequester the carbon back in the earth.
There are a large number of complex pathways in the planet's carbon cycle, but the net overall effect is that within a certain time (IIRC, hundreds of years maybe?) half of the excess CO2 ends up in sediment
What is being produced? (Score:2)
Instead of greenhouse gases nuclear power produces radioactive wastet that will be dangerous for tens of thousands of years.
atoms for peace (Score:3, Interesting)
And funny it was held in the uk, where the nuclear program has finally been scrapped as the government has admitted that it is bankrupt with huge liabilities. Not technically scrapped as they will run a few plants for a bit, but none will ever be built again, and the entire uk nuclear indusrty is going to be turned into a cleanup operation. Which given their historical record will still be a disaster. Parts of Sellafield could still go critical because of the amount of nuclear material that has never been cleaned up properly.
Re:atoms for peace (Score:2)
bankrupt:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/nuclear/ar t icle/0,2763,1 007746,00.html
On Wednesday, the European commission decided to mount an in-depth probe into state aid for British Energy, the near-insolvent nuclear operator that almost sank into administration last September, losing 4.3bn in 2002. The EU's
Nuclear Convocation (Score:5, Funny)
LOLx2 Need More Nuclear Workers (Score:2)
This is a false shortage. The reason for
Re:LOLx2 Need More Nuclear Workers (Score:5, Interesting)
And the waste solutions.
Re:LOLx2 Need More Nuclear Workers (Score:2)
That would be great! Let me know when that works out will ya? Of course, I'll have probably died and gone to hell by then, but at least I'll be able to go ice-skating. Until then, I don't think I'll be a big nuclear power fan.
Re:LOLx2 Need More Nuclear Workers (Score:2)
I had a manager that was on a nuclear submarine, and he said when he got out of the Navy, he started interviewing with employers in the Nuclear Industry, becuase people tend to "go with what they know."
After a couple interviews, he actually had the interviewer tell him to look into another industry, because the NRC was not in the business of renewing any licenses for power plants, and these things are only commisioned for 50 years.
Call it heresay if you want, but when were some of
Are you sure it doesn't stand for... (Score:5, Funny)
I would prefer to take the classes online (Score:2)
Political costs (Score:2)
Iran (Score:2)
Nuclear power for our future (Score:5, Informative)
The countries that have used nuclear power effectively have set up a program where they designed and certified a one, two, or a small handful of reactors. Then the built from those same reactors over and over and over again. Given that the amount of engineering man-hours in a nuclear reactor is staggeringly huge, this is a far more cost efficient than the US model where every nuclear power plant is a custom job.
Incidents are bound to occur in any sufficiently complex system. Due to safety conscious design, incidents in western commercial nuclear power plants are virtually never hazardous to the public. But it would be far better for a pump to fail prematurely at one plant, and have a message go out to 50 other plants to check that pump, rather than have every plant discover problems on their own.
Spent fuel reprocessing is probably a good idea too. It will reduce the amount of waste and also limit the amount of uranium mining. I recall that I once read that mine accidents dwarf every other cause of "commercial nuclear power" related deaths combined. If the remaining waste is glass-encapsulated and stored, it should be very stable and be cause for very little concern.
Finally, Americans must understand that every power generation technique has some impact. Fossil fuel plants likely contribute to tens of thousands of deaths each year - from mining/drilling operations, accidents transporting the product, people breathing the waste. Solar manufacturing exposes workers to fair numbers of toxic and hazardous chemicals. Hydroelectric plants have substantial envrinmental impact. Wind power is unsteady and kills birds. When these factors are all taken into account nuclear power looks fairly good on balance.
In the long run, I believe that a system of a large number of modern nuclear power plants built form a small number of designs should be operated as our "baseline" electrical energy source. The reactors will be supllemented with a system of solar, wind, and gas-turbine plants to accomodate peak demand. This system will minimize the impact on our environment, provide a high level of safety, and provid ethe power we need to grow.
Re:Nuclear power for our future (Score:3, Informative)
This [greenenergyohio.org], this [currykerlinger.com], and this [ceert.org] indicate otherwise. The statement that "Wind power...kills birds" presumably means "Wind power kills quite a lot of birds." No one would argue that wind turbines have killed a nonzero number of birds in the past, but the kill rate for wind turbines seems vastly dwarfed by the kill rates for other man-made structures... like regular b
WNU (Score:3, Funny)
A few thoughts on nuclear power (Score:5, Insightful)
A. Caird
B.S. Nuc. Eng. 1993 U. of Michigan
M.S. Nuc. Eng. 1996 U. of Michigan
(but I've never worked as a nuclear engineer; IT jobs are available in nearly every city in the world, computational reactor design jobs are not)
Take it for what it's worth.
No Private Company will insure a Nuke Plant (Score:2)
I can believe that hot fusion might be developed into a practical power source(The Farnsworth Fusor [wikipedia.org] might actually be made to work). We have yet to see fission plants really stand on their own without various indirect subsidies from government.
"Environmental protection" (Score:2)
Great idea! Nobody is going to fuck with Mother Nature once she's packing nukes!
Here I could make a crack about how that might just make Bush attack the environment even more, but I'm not above that.
Run for cover! (Score:3, Funny)
This giant University will destroy us all!
T-minus 15 minutes 'till impact!
Not a bad idea. (Score:4, Interesting)
Perhaps now, this will provide the United States with an impetus to standardize on a reactor plant design. If the Federal Government approached nuclear power with the same notions as the U.S. Navy, perhaps we would see a greater role for nuclear power in our society. It is markedly more easy to design, develop, and implement a reactor plant design that can be certified; than it is to have to certify each individual reactor plant design. The U.S. Navy (and possibly other world Navies) certify a small number of designs and fabricators so that an inspection is all that is required. Example: The reactor system made by GE or Westinghouse has been certified by the Navy's nuclear regulatory authority and can be built immediately upon order from the Navy. A simple inspection and sea-trial are all that is required to validate its functionality. There is not a requirement that the design for that reactor be submitted for approval for each build, as the design has already been approved.
This is contrary to the public power generating stations. Each reactor and plant design must be submitted for review prior to the plant being built. It would be far wiser and more efficient to have the appropriate regulatory agency(s) (FERC, NRC, AEC...it changes) approve a set of reactor plant designs and their respective fabricators/construction agencies before a plant is needed. Example: A nuclear power plant design for 1000Mw, 500Mw, etc... has been approved for build by the appropriate agencies. Reliant Energy needs to expand its capacity to provide power by 500Mw in the next 3 years. Reliant has simply to consult the regulatory agencies list of approved design/fabricators to determine what they could build. The plant can be built immediately or as soon as possible and would only require inspections and testing, and would not require a design submission. This could shave off years of wait time for Reliant, and reduce the costs of electricity to consumers.
Biomass (Score:3, Informative)
Plus you can make gas, oil, alcohol, paper, etc. out of a lot of it. Take hemp [google.com] or algae [tve.org] for instance.
Rocky Mountain Institute (Score:3, Informative)
Economically, none of the existing ones have ever turned a profit without generous government assistance. I humbly submit an interesting organizations' website to this discussion: The Rocky Mountain Institute [rmi.org]. They are a think tank on environmental and energy issues, which strives not to have a particular agenda, but only to base their analyses on proven science and solid economic reasoning. They don't lobby governments, and most of their recommendations are squarely aimed at industries.
Also, the notion that solar energy generation could never provide enough energy without taking up too much space is absurd. A back of the envelope calculation shows that a desert installation of mirrors focused on heating towers (working prototypes exist) or photovoltaics with today's available efficiencies, can do the job. The USA's electricity demand could be met with an installation the size of Rhode Island.
Readers of The Industrial Physicist [aip.org] will also recall from a recent article (and discussion in the letters to the editor [aip.org]) that we are not limited to Earth-based generation. Within decades, we could be placing photovoltaic installation on the moon, and beaming the energy to stations on the Earth's surface by focussed microwaves.
Re:The solution to everything (Score:2)
props to whoever can point out what this is from :p
Re:greenhouse gasses? (Score:2)
Great advances have been made in reactor safety since Chernobyl, Sellafield and 3-mile Island. One promising development is the Pebble Bed Reactor. Certain folks don't seem to think [tmia.com] it's very safe (yet), but even a worst-case catastrophic failure would contaminate a much smaller area.
It's the approach of the anti-nuclear lobby that I despise. Instead of promoting research to see if and how these re
Re:greenhouse gasses? (Score:2)
Re:greenhouse gasses? (Score:3, Interesting)
Never mind that modern designs such as the Pebble Bed Modular Reactor don't use water as the coolant (it uses helium, which is inert, and does not absorb neutrons), so you don't have to worry about radioactive steam getting out, or a steam explosion, or the coolant changing AT ALL except for it's heat...
Never mind that als
Re:greenhouse gasses? (Score:2)
Re:greenhouse gasses? (Score:2)
4) Profit!!!
To be honest, PGE has put some of these windmill things out in Eastern Oregon, and man are they an eyesore! I'd rather have one cooling tower on a river somewhere than fields upon fields of fans sticking up 50 feet in the air puree-ing birds...
Re:Just a brief read. (Score:2)
Look at the big picture (Score:2)
Let's take the oil situation that you mentioned. George Bush, in his infinite wisdom, has decided that it's a good idea to satisfy America's insatiable thirst for oil by drilling for more in the Alaskan wilderness. It's a bit like dealing with a leaky roof by
Re:As older workers are aging.... (Score:2)
Re:Stop financing weapons research (Score:3, Interesting)
IIRC, the solar and wind numbers you quoted are after large government subsidies of their own. I just googled for examples and found a site [solar-tec.com] offering on-grid solar systems in California with 50% of the costs offset by state government rebates and tax credits.
Taking this into account, solar might be costed at 16 to 40 cents per kwh. Nuclear's 13-18 cents looks like it might be competative. And that is not taking into account how stupidly inefficient