Nick Gillespie | February 5, 2006
Expanding nuclear power is only one piece of the energy puzzle. But it is a piece we cannot afford to dismiss.
The reason is clear. Electricity demand is rising -- some say by as much as 50 percent during the next 30 to 50 years.
That's from an op-ed in today's SF Chron by the always-interesting G. Paschal Zachary (author of the wonderful book from a few years back, The Global Me). In "The Case for Nuclear Power," Zachary recounts a youth spent protesting nuclear power plants and catches the reader up on how nuke tech is better, safer, etc. It's well worth reading and is online here [*link fixed finally!].
As is the original Port Huron Statement, put out by Students for a Democratic Society, on this score. It takes nuclear power for granted ("whole cities can easily be powered" by it, even as the authors worry about nuclear weaponry; the full text even argues that "our monster cities...might now be humanized [and] broken into smaller communities, powered by nuclear energy) [updated link].
And so are the remarkable--and generally underreported--accounts of the long-term damage done by Chernobyl, the biggest nuclear accident to date. As the Wash Post glossed last year's authoritative UN study on the matter, the effects "were far less catastrophic than feared."
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Chernobyl was a disaster because they ran that plant like bunch of idiots - it wasn't like they made an honest mistake or anything; it was designed poorly and not properly managed.
Most of the folks I know around here--and I live in
Seattle--agree that nuclear power is a good idea given:
1. Good breeder reactors. Non-breeder reactors do far to much
environmental damage, and they waste most of the uranium they
consume.
2. A good way to dispose of nuclear waste. Chernobyl
notwithstanding, you need to get rid of that stuff on a long-term
basis.
3. Fail-safe reactor design. The idiots in charge of Chernobyl made
mistakes. But a well-designed reactor should completely eliminate
the possibility of a runaway reactor.
A moratorium on nuclear power was pretty much an economic, and
environmental necessity. Perhaps not for as long as it lasted, but
for a long time. Those plants are expensive. Building them with
planned obsolescence--ie not satisfying points 1-3 above--is a dumb
thing to do.
Here's the kind of thing I'd like to see, in a new commercial
reactor:
CAESAR program (UMD)
writeup in the econonimst
Second link in post is still pointing toward "the second me" article instead of the nuke article.
Hmm, content free links and a statement by SDS from 1993? Yep,
that'll surely get nuke plants up and a building again.
It's way more intersting than a real exploration of the completely
subsidized, criminally negligent history of nuke-u-ler power.
And the UN says Chernobyl was not really that bad? As we know, the
conservative faction of libertarians places a lot of faith in the
UN?!?
I'm in favor of nukular energy, but just as devils
advocate...
It isn't comforting to me to dismiss Chernobyl as a risk, because
they were idiots or it was poorly designed. No country appears to
have cornered the market on idiots.
There seems to be abundant evidence that nuclear energy is safe and
useful, however the odd melt down appears to be a significant risk.
Controls, dear libertarians, are inevitable and will continue to
inflate the cost of this form of energy.
Hmm, content free links and a statement by SDS from 1993?
Yep, that'll surely get nuke plants up and a building
again.
In the past few months, there have already been about a dozen
construction and licensing announcements by utilities. Barring an
accident, new nuclear power plants will begin construction around
2010.
It's way more intersting than a real exploration of the
completely subsidized, criminally negligent history of nuke-u-ler
power.
I struggle to think of a power source that has not been heavily
subsidized in the US. Certainly wind and solar would be completely
unfeasible without the massive subsidies they receive. In addition,
the financial burden imposed by government regulation on nuclear
power is staggeringly enormous compared to that of any other source
of energy. It's not immediately obvious to me that nuclear power
would be uneconomical in a stateless society.
As for criminal negligence, coal has already killed what, 18
people or so in the US this year? And that's not even counting the
effects of the air pollution. The US commercial nuclear industry
has never killed a single person, Karen Silkwood conspiracy
theories aside.
And the UN says Chernobyl was not really that bad? As we
know, the conservative faction of libertarians places a lot of
faith in the UN?!?
The UN's findings were based on today's leading mainstream scientific opinions by nuclear, radiological, and health experts. The majority of published research says the same thing. Chernobyl was a horrible disaster, proving the faulty design of the Soviet plants, the shoddy way in which they were run, and the flaws of the Soviet command economy's response to disasters. The people it primarily affected however, were the first responders who put out the fire without realizing what they were being exposed to, and the children in the immediate area who got thyroid cancer. And the flaws of that old Soviet design have nothing to do with the plants that exist in the USA today, which have negative temperature coefficients and containment buildings. And they certainly have nothing to do with the new generation of nuclear power plants that would be built.
I'm a proponent of nuclear power, but we also can't ignore that the "not in my backyard" feelings that most people have regarding nuclear waste that was highlighted in the Yucca Mountain debate a couple years back.
There seems to be abundant evidence that nuclear energy is
safe and useful, however the odd melt down appears to be a
significant risk.
Three Mile Island melted down and no one was injured. Even so, as a
result of TMI, there has been a safety revolution in the American
nuclear power industry. Future accidents are inevitable, but the
same could be said about any other industry in the US, and the
effects of an accident at a US plant would simply not be like
Chernobyl (and definitely nothing like "losing Detroit" or
rendering NYC uninhabitable).
I'm a proponent of nuclear power, but we also can't ignore that
the "not in my backyard" feelings that most people have regarding
nuclear waste that was highlighted in the Yucca Mountain debate a
couple years back.
I agree. Yucca was a politically imposed site, not a
scientifically chosen one. Little did they know back in 1982 that
the Senate minority leader would be from Nevada in 2006, and that
the state would be among the fastest growing. In any case, reports
have said that the Bush administration is going to submit
legislation this year that would switch the USA to a reprocessing
state. If that were done, Yucca would only need to contain
something on the order of 1% of the fuel it is currently slated to
contain. With the leader of the Democrats being firmly opposed to
Yucca, reprocessing is politically feasible.
If the US wants to stick to deep geologic disposal, it should have done as countries in Europe did, and found out what parts of the country want the waste (and the resultant high-tech jobs) before choosing the site.
amazingdrx, the big people are talking now. So why don't you go back to the kiddie table and have some more Kool-Aid, mmkay?
I'm not quite as up on the technology of breeder reactors, how
do they compare with the pebble-bed designs?
From what I've read, the pebble-bed designs are self regulating in
such a way as to make a meltdown impossible.
In any case, reports have said that the Bush administration
is going to submit legislation this year that would switch the USA
to a reprocessing state. If that were done, Yucca would only need
to contain something on the order of 1% of the fuel it is currently
slated to contain.
Wow, I was unaware of that. Reprocessing has the potential to
eliminate many of the concerns about disposal. I'll have to look
into this further. Thanks, phocion.
Uhh yeah geek, real safe. The "pebbles" are tennis ball sized
fuel pellets coated with graphite, the stuff used as a moderator in
the chernobyl reactor.
That's the new "safer" design proposed by advocates for new nukes.
Graphite, essentially coal compressed to a hard ceramic like
substance.
It's the same moderator used in the very first nuclear reactor in
the squash court below the Chicago universty stadium that gave the
scientists working on that reactor nightmares because of it's
flammability.
And their answer to nuclear waste? It's the waste processing
breeder reactor. Which no one is proposing to operate in this new
improved pebble bed design.
Right now their are 68 sites all around the country, including one
right over earthquake fault lines, where used nuclear fuel rods
containing the flammable metal zirconium are stored. If the water
in the pools is drained or removed in another manner (by terrorist
incident for example) 7 to 18 times the radiation released at
Chernobyl will billow into the atmoosphere.
Will the evacuation plans for the population around these potential
disaster areas be as effective as the Katrina evacuation? No one
knows or seems to care.
And since Yucca has been a failed boondoggle, nuclear power utility
companies have sued the feds (over promises to take over waste
storage), for the funds to maintain those storage pools, money
deducted from power bills payed by consumers meant to pay for
nuclear waste disposal and nuke plant decommissioning. Thse funds
are exhausted.
Any other questions? Hehehey. Visit my blog.
I'm not quite as up on the technology of breeder reactors,
how do they compare with the pebble-bed designs?
Breeder reactors are inevitable, because without them I doubt we
have more than a century's worth of readily exploitable nuclear
fuel.
I would say a meltdown is never impossible. Any new design is
scrutinized by hundreds of smart people looking for any flaw that
could lead to a meltdown, but there are limits to the human
imagination, and in addition, some dummy at a utility can always
fake inspections, let crucial parts corrode, or turn off alarms,
etc. And then there are events like 5 independent systems breaking
at the exact same time and so on. The plants are designed so that
meltdown of fuel accidents have an extremely low probability. These
probabilities are calculated in risk assessments that determine how
likely each part of the plant is likely to fail, including the
human component. In modern reactors, damage to the core is about a
1 in 25000 chance per year. Public exposure to medically
significant amounts of radiation is far lower than that. And the
newest reactors greatly exceed the current safety levels.
The proponents of the pebble bed reactor talk a big game, but in
reality theirs is one of many exciting next-generation designs.
There are very high temperature designs, supercritical water
designs, and so on. Pebble bed seems to get the most attention due
to the exotic nature of its fuel. However, it seems likely to me
that the future of nuclear design will be driven by economics. That
means higher efficiency of fuel, which means higher temperatures of
coolant. Pebble bed has that feature, but so do the other designs
in consideration. It's safe to say all these new designs would have
to demonstrate extremely low chances of meltdown before they would
be rolled out.
The nuclear industry knows that, because the public does not trust
things that are "nuclear" or "radioactive", one accident could
destroy their entire industry. This is something not many other
industries have to deal with and results in work that is, in my
opinion, often too conservative.
New nuclear plants will only be built in the faith filled
southland, the gullibility of their evangelical population is
legendary.
Everywhere else legal action by NIMBYs will delay build out
interminably. Making any investment far too risky and pushing costs
way up.
The corporatist friendly corrupt governments of the chemically rich
(terminally polluted) gulf and southern atlantic coast will welcome
nukes.
Then the locals can heat their trailers with nuke-u-ler waste
buried beneath the crawl space.
North Carolina is the first site, already a battle zone for
corporatists, NIMBYs, and environmentalists.
The liability pass given by congress to the nuclear industry is
the main subsidy.
No institutional investor would touch nuk-u-ler power without it.
And no insuruer would ever issue insurance without that pass.
This means that anyone living near a nuclear plant, say within an
exclusion zone of a 50 mile radius, could lose the value of their
property at a moments notice. And on top of that be caught in a
"100 mile parking lot" for days like those trying to evacuate
Katrina were.
In fact how would one ever sell a home or business anywhere near a
nuke-u-ler plant were even one more accident to occur? Any
nuke-u-ler plant!!
Allowing a nuke near your home puts your family and life savings at
uninsurable risk, with any liability for that risk legally voided
by congress.
Big people talk geek, hehey.
Uhh yeah geek, real safe. The "pebbles" are tennis ball
sized fuel pellets coated with graphite, the stuff used as a
moderator in the chernobyl reactor.
New reactors have steel too. Steel was used at Chernobyl.
Scary.
Anyway, there is indeed a difference between having a huge block
of regular graphite that can catch on fire and a thin coating of
pyrolytic coating that melts at 3000 degrees C.
That's the new "safer" design proposed by advocates for new
nukes.
No. Pebble bed gets the most press of new designs, but most
nuclear engineers in the US are betting on other high temperature
designs. In addition, the plants that will be built in a decade's
time will still be Generation III PWRs, like those beginning to be
built around the world today. No radical changes in these new
plants.
If the water in the pools is drained or removed in another
manner (by terrorist incident for example) 7 to 18 times the
radiation released at Chernobyl will billow into the
atmoosphere.
Source? NIRS? Greenpeace?
I did my thesis work on zirconium alloys in nuclear power plants,
though not specifically on the potential for a Zircaloy fire in a
drained spent fuel pool. I do know this:
- Once the fuel has been allowed to decay for five years or so
within the pool, the amount of decay heat is not high enough to
cause a Zircaloy fire even if the fuel is completely
uncovered.
- The NRC calculates the risk of spent fuel being uncovered and
the fuel being ignited
here. 2.2 x 10^-6 per reactor year.
Obviously reprocessing or Yucca Mountain would both serve to
greatly lower this risk.
Will the evacuation plans for the population around these
potential disaster areas be as effective as the Katrina evacuation?
No one knows or seems to care.
Another scare tactic, conflating it with Katrina. Of course people
care and look into the issue carefully as part of their jobs. Would
the mistakes of the Katrina evacuation be repeated? I don't know.
But this is not a proplem unique to nuclear power. if a chemical
plant or oil refinery explodes, evacuations are also only as good
as government planning. And in the case of a nuclear accident, an
evacuation might not always be the prudent choice.
Will the 500 (just in the US alone)or so new nuclear plants
needed to save the earth from global climate change be built in
time, under these conditions?
With new nuke plants coming in at maybe 3 times the cost per watt
of generating capacity of wind or solar? Barring expensive,
interminable legal action, which could easily double that.
But by all means geek, lobby your local utility to put up a plant
right in YOUR backyard!!
And don't forget this, if a waste processing reactor is built near
you, all the waste from the rest of the nation will be shipped
right to you!!! Smell the radioactive metal? That's what those who
died at Chernobyl smelled with their last breath.
That's the smell of jobs, and a vibrant economy.
"...a thin coating of pyrolytic coating that melts at 3000
degrees C."
Thats the "thin candy shell" of silicon carbide on the surface of
the "pebble"?
These nuclear "tennis balls" are being circulated around the
reactor by compressed helium, what if some of them crack
open?
It's an untested technology, are we supposed to just trust the
nuclear industry in this neo-corporate age of industry
self-regulation?
A really telling point in this debate is that Germany, the country
where the pebble bed design was developed, is going to wind and
solar and shuttering ALL their nukes.
phocion, let me just say that I (and probably many others that read this) found your descriptions very informative and, thankfully, devoid of the ad hominems present in other posters comments.
You too phoc, sorry if my attack was too forcefull. But I have
been over this ground repeatedly.
The 7 to 18 times Chernobyl figure was from a government study that
was widely reported, (link on my blog), and alarmingly the release
was from each pool! Some sites have two pools, like Diablo Canyon
over the earthquake fault on the California coast.
http://www.sprol.com/?p=36
...and the effects of an accident at a US plant would simply not
be like Chernobyl (and definitely nothing like "losing Detroit" or
rendering NYC uninhabitable).
It's common knowledge that Detroit is uninhabitable. Give NYC a
couple more years of Bloomberg and it will be completely
uninhabitable too.
A few points:
1) I recall reading an account of a visit to the Chernobyl site
which said that upriver in the same valley there are a huge
hydroelectric dam hat was clearly in desperate need of repairs and
about to re-enact the Johnstown Flood. The Soviets were notoriously
bad about maintaining things, and clumsy with technology generally.
As horrible as Chernobyl was and is I'm far from sure it is an
example of anything other than the dangers of trusting the
State.
2) The history of Environmentalism would tend to suggest that
whatever plans are made to address the energy needs of the populace
the Environmentalists will oppose them. Environmentalists are only
in favor of energy technology if there is little or no chance that
it will be implemented on a wide scale.
3) The problem of nuclear waste disposal is almost purely
political. Baked into glass bricks and stacked in blocks three feet
or so in from the walls of a locked warehouse and the nuclear waste
from power reactors would pose far less hazard to the environment
than the ash and smoke from coal fired plants (which incidentally,
is also radioactive). I own almost eight acres and would happily
host such a warehouse on my land, especially if the government
would pay a reasonable rent and see to my driveway.
"And in the case of a nuclear accident, an evacuation might not
always be the prudent choice."
I agree, stock up on duct tape, plastic, and bibles! Hehey.
(Sorry couldn't resist, you have a great potential career as a
straight man)
" The "pebbles" are tennis ball sized fuel pellets coated
with graphite, the stuff used as a moderator in the chernobyl
reactor.",/i>
Yes, but unlike the chernobyl reactor the graphite isn't piled up
in one big stack without any containment but is individually
packaged in each pebble and surrounded by a hard metal shell. For
the graphite to catch fire. The shell would have to first melt off.
For any significant radiation to escape as a result, hundred of
pebbles would have to be compromised which is fantastically
unlikely. Comparing the risk of pebble-bed reactors to Chernobyl
because they both use a graphite moderator is like comparing the
fire risk of a gas stove in a restaurant to the fire risk of camp
fire in a drought area.
"The liability pass given by congress to the nuclear industry is
the main subsidy. No institutional investor would touch nuk-u-ler
power without it. And no insuruer would ever issue insurance
without that pass."
This is true, but is this unwillingness the result of the insurance
companies assessment of the technical risk involved or does it
result from their assessment of social and political climate? I
argue that it is the latter. Given the utter hysteria that
surrounds nuclear power, no body in their right mind would expect
that they could get any sort of fair civil trial in the event of
even a small accident. Heck, look at the problems that insurance
companies have with mold in houses even though zero scientific
evidence exist that mold presents a health problem.
Nuclear power became a national prestige matter in the 1950's that
resulted in many bad decisions being made. The first generation of
commercial reactors were merely scaled up submarine motors. As a
result they were huge, fussy and expensive. However, bad political
decisions in the past do not reflect on the technology
itself.
"thankfully, devoid of the ad hominems present in other posters
comments."
I agree. Phoc's arguments never sunk to the mob mentality exhibited
in this post.
"amazingdrx, the big people are talking now. So why don't you go
back to the kiddie table and have some more Kool-Aid, mmkay?"
Hehehehehey.
"look at the problems that insurance companies have with mold in
houses even though zero scientific evidence exist that mold
presents a health problem."
True enough, I routinely remove this kind of mold with a spray
bottle filled with vinegar.
But would you wabt a nuclear waste processing reactor in your
backyard? With all the waste from all over the nation shipped into
your area?
What if you ever wanted to sell your home? Why would anyone invest
in property near an uninsurable nuclear facility with a pass on any
liability?
The free market would most likely deem your property worthless.
" The shell would have to first melt off."
Or more likely crack. And one cross leak of helium and outside
atmosphere into the reactor vessel poses a catastrophic risk at the
temperature in these reactors.
And isn't or a bit suspicious that when the waste disposal problem
is brought up nuclear advocates abandon the pebble bed design in
favor of the waste processing water cooled reactors.
I think pebble bed is a technology that will never be developed
past the testing stage, a red herring used by nuclear advocates,
now abandoned by Germany, the country that developed it.
In other words, I've met helmet-wearing kids in special ed who
are more erudite.
You shmuck.
Well geek...
That's a shame.
Now go out and picket your local utility company until they locate
a waste processing reactor behind your house.
Good luck with that.
Off to ski in the wonderfully unpolluted wilderness of northern
wisconsin. Thanks for the discussion here!
This is a great virtual space!
i hate the god damn left. From the article:
We need to encourage the few utilities that are pacesetters in
nuclear power, notably Entergy and Exelon, to build new plants
fast. We need to use tax dollars to make it happen.
So this asshole protested nuke plants for 20 years but now has
changed his mind so now I have to open my wallet and pour my bucks
into his government subsidied guilt correction. Fuck him.
How about giving property rights back to individuals instead.
G. Pascal Zachary you are pure jack ass.
Ok geek, build yourself a mcmansion while you are at it, wink wink, nudge nudge. Hehehey.
I was, uh, one of the authors of the Port Huron Statement.--The
original Port Huron Statement.
Not the compromised second draft.
So the main disadvantage of the pebble-bed reactors is the
increased difficulty in recycling the waste?
Hm. So perhaps the advantage should go to the breeder
reactors.
How are complex are they design and safety wise compared to the
traditional reactors?
Nuclear Power: For When You Absolutely, Positively Need More
Corporate Welfare
- Josh
amazingdrx,
"But would you wabt a nuclear waste processing reactor in your
backyard?""
Based on the proven safety record of the nuclear industry, why not?
Looking at the real world record, my family would be safer located
near a nuclear facility of any kind than near any other kind of
industrial facility.
As to property values, well people used to try to keep various
ethnic minorities from buying property in white areas because many
white people had irrational fears about such minorities. Even
people without prejudices had to face the very real possibility
that their property values, often their major lifetime investment,
would be severely adversely effected if minorities moved in. Does
this somehow mean that whites fears about ethnic minorities were
somehow rational and justified?
The parallel with nuclear power is exact. Property values would be
effected by nuclear facilities due to irrational fears prompted in
large part by the actions of people such as yourself. That does not
mean however, that the technology is in fact dangerously
unmanageable. It merely means that people hold irrational
beliefs.
From the tone of your posting it seems to me that you are one of
those people for whom nuclear power is symbolic of evil
state-capitialism. Your knowledge of, or interest in the actual
technology itself is both minimal and of secondary importance to
its symbolic value in a larger political and social debate.
If none carbon-emitting energy sources were not of such a
potentially critical matter right now, using technology as a
political tool would not be a major problem. However, if
catastrophic global warming is in the cards then people like
yourself are contributing to future megadeaths..
amazingdrx (and others),
I've fixed the "content-free" link to the Chron piece and have also
added a link to the full text of the Port Huron Statement (the
earlier link is only to the introduction), which includes this
atomic revery: "Our monster cities, based historically on the need
for mass labor, might now be humanized, broken into smaller
communities, powered by nuclear energy, arranged according to
community decision." Whole text here.
My apologies if someone already asked (too lazy to read all
posts), but did you spell nuclear incorrectly on purpose,
Nick?
Regards, Andy
"people like yourself are contributing to future
megadeaths.."
Hehehehehey. Spit out my coffee! Good one shannon!!
Thanks nick. Sorry about the "content free" comment. One of my favorites though.
amazingdrx,
It is an attribute of people like you that you believe that your
decisions cannot have consequences that you do not intend. People
like you have already contributed to the deaths of millions by
their war on pesticides in the developing world. Why shouldn't you
be held responsible for deaths caused by your irrational opposition
to nuclear power?
If Global Warming is a major problem then without nuclear power we
will face one of two futures: (1) Humanity will continue to burn
large amounts of fossil fuels resulting in megadeaths from
ecological catastrophe or (2) we will restrict our energy
consumption severely which will make us materially poor which will
result in megadeaths.
Alternative energy sources are never going to be more than boutique
energy sources used in specialized applications. Nuclear power is
the only non-carbon emitting energy source that can provide
significant power on demand. Without it, or without something very
much like it, our civilization will not outlast the century.
Thank you very much for your enlightening comments, phocion. On
the subject of nuclear power, it is gratifying (and, alas, rare) to
hear from someone who actually knows what he's talking about.
Thanks also for the enlightening, clarifying and/or entertaining
comments from MarkP, mac, bago, The wed RINO, Marcvs, mediageek,
bob, C.S.P. Schofield, Shannon Love, joshua corning, The Dude, Wild
Pegasus, Nick Gillespie and Andy.
Have I left out anyone?
No, I see that I have not.
Hyuckyuckyuckyuck.
Shannon, entertaining ann coulter imitation.
But not quite shrill enough, you can do better.
That's called the false dilemna fallacy.
Either nuclear power..or global climate disaster.
Sounds familar..hmmm. Remember Condi's false dilemna argument for
the Iraq War?
Either go to war...or mushroom clouds over US cities.
It's actually worse than sophmoric, because philosophy 101 is
generally a freshman course. Please take advantage of the fine
facilities of your local community college, thanks you.
Have a nice day.
There seems to be more pessimism around here with respect to
renewable alternatives that I feel is warranted. Yes, renewables
(wind, solar, geothermal, tidal, biomass for electricity;
biodiesel, methanol, ethanol, etc, for liquid transport fuel) have
been pie-in-the-sky for decades. There was an obvious reason for
this - they were much more expensive than the petro alternative.
However, it doesn't take a genius to see the trends - renewable
prices are steadily falling, petro prices are steadily rising, and
they are not far from crossing.
For years, there has been a lot of blather concerning these
alternatives by the government, which changes little. But when the
market speaks, people listen. You can see this in Brazil, where
ethanol-powered hybrid cars are now dominating sales. I believe
there is a lot of technology now that is finally on the cusp of
breaking out.
That being said, nuclear should be a big part of the mix. A new
generation of power plants, built in the next ten years, should
last us until the 2040s. By then, renewable alternatives should be
well established and we will need neither petro or nuclear. The
objections to nuclear are nearly all unscientific NIMBY issues and
we should do everything to quash them.
As for the government's role, first is the obvious role of
permitting. NIMBYism is a serious problem. The second is subsidies.
Of course, as libertarians, I presume we generally agree to let the
market sort this mess out. Some people earlier pointed out that
alternatives would not have a chance without subsidies (for now),
but this argument suffers from the obvious flaw that petro receives
all sorts of subsidies, too. In particular, their free dumping of
all their toxic, green-house-effect causing waste in to the
atmosphere is an enormous subsidy. So yes, while a libertarian
should support an end to all subsidies, they should also support a
very strict concept of "polluter pays". We do not have the latter
at the moment.
End subsidies. Force polluters to pay. Then let the market
sort it out.
That's called the false dilemna fallacy.Either nuclear
power..or global climate disaster.
Here is another one you will like. You must breathe oxygen or you
will die. Likewise, an advanced industrial civilization, especially
one that provides a high material standard of living to everyone on
earth, requires large amounts of reliable energy.
It is your utter unwillingness to address this central problem that
makes you appear emotionally immature. If you don't like the
choices presented by a dilemma you merely pretend the dilemma does
not exist. There is always a quick and easy solution if, by golly,
all the greedy people in the world would just act nice and stop it
with all their grand conspiracies.
Barring a currently unforeseen technological breakthrough, at this
point it is nukes or nothing.
Nukes or nothing is an oversimplification. There's a giant
nuclear reactor in the center of the solar system radiating energy
toward our planet. Solar may not be feasible as a sole energy
source, but as technology improves it may become competitive with
unsubsidized nuclear power.
And solar power manifests in more ways than just solar cells and
panels. Biofuels ultimately derive their energy from
photosynthesis. Solar energy evaporates water, it goes to the
clouds, it falls down as rain, it collects in lakes and rivers on
higher ground, and when it passes over a dam it generates power.
And the kinetic energy in wind comes from solar heating of the
air.
I have no illusion that any of these renewables will be enough to
meet all of our needs, but a diversified energy portfolio will make
for a cleaner, more stable world.
Hell, geothermal may even play a modest role. Again, I have no
illusions that geothermal will be more than a niche application,
but in areas where it's feasible, well, a diversified portfolio is
always better. Might as well harness some of the energy from those
nuclear decays in the center of the earth.
Here is why you have a false dilemna on your hands
shannon.
"Is nuclear power necessary? Or will wind and solar be
enough?"
http://amazngdrx.blogharbor.com/blog/_archives/2006/1/25/1721852.html
Enjoy, feel free to grill me afterwards. Thank you for your
cooperation.
Shannon,
Yeah, and if common folks would just quit questing for a higher
standard of living and enjoying the fruits of the economic liberty
that goes by the name of capitalism...
Chad,
"There was an obvious reason for this - they were much more
expensive than the petro alternative."
Actually, the problem is that alternatives energy sources are less
dense (energy provided in a physical space) and less reliable (on
demand) than fossil fuels. There is not a single alternative energy
sources that is superior to petroleum in terms of density and
reliability. People will pay a premium for an energy system that
provides enhanced performance even if it is initially just for spot
applications but no alternative energy source has ever surpassed
this threshold of overall efficiency.
"In particular, their free dumping of all their toxic,
green-house-effect causing waste in to the atmosphere is an
enormous subsidy. So yes, while a libertarian should support an end
to all subsidies, they should also support a very strict concept of
"polluter pays".
While true in theory in practice there is no real world mechanisms
for (1) determining how much CO2 is actually pollution (2)
assessing the cost of such "pollution" and (3) establishing a
market mechanism across the entire planet that will integrate this
cost into the cost of fossil fuels. Any attempt to do so will be
just politically contaminated guess work that will only function in
limited areas at best. We simply do not have the scientific and
political systems to pull off such an ideal system.
I should also note that solar and wind can be considered as complementary energy sources. Both are best suited to collection in wide open spaces, and the wind can blow even when the sun isn't out. Also, I was reading something surprising in an optics journal: A lot of work is being done to develop cheap lenses and mirrors to place over solar cells. I would have thought that such things would have been done long ago, but apparently there are substantial improvements. If you can magnify the sunlight 5x, that's 80% less spent on the photovoltaic. Toss in materials that can cover the UV to IR ranges, put some wind mills on the property as well, and you see some ideas for squeezing the maximum amount of energy out of a property.
"your utter unwillingness to address this central problem that
makes you appear emotionally immature"
Nope, that's my Y chromosome, my youthfull outlook, and an hour and
a half of wilderness aerobics per day.
"I'm high alright, but not on your false drugs." I'm high on my
skis and snowshoes, and a natural world of wonder. Hehey.
"A lot of work is being done to develop cheap lenses and mirrors
to place over solar cells"
Yep thoreau, amd how!! Solar concentrators.
And getting heat to heat/cool buildings as well as electricity from
these systems, it lowers the price per kwh and saves electricity
normally going to run heat and air conditioning.
http://www.worldchanging.com/archives/003127.html
I recommend that everyone read what phocion wrote...I actually learned somthing which is a new thing for me on this comment board.
but i recommend you skip amazingdrx's posts. It
is like somehting M1EK would write but crazy and a million times
dumber....
oh wait that actaully sounds like something I would want to
read...never mind
" the problem is that alternatives energy sources are less dense
(energy provided in a physical space)"
Less dense but getting more dense, the latest battery techology
breakthroughs are aproaching the energy density of liquid
fuels.
"...and less reliable (on demand) than fossil fuels"
These modern batteries, that recharge in minutes, in 100s of
millions of electric cars plugged into the grid would procide a
distributed battery system that could power the frid for days with
no wind or solar input, plenty of time to fire up backups.
"no alternative energy source has ever surpassed this threshold of
overall efficiency."
Wind power from very large scale machines in very windy regions
like the northern midwest great plains is aproaching 2 cents per
kwh.
Next!! No soup for you!!
Well josh. From your link.
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/chronicle/archive/2006/02/05/INGRBH0HFH1.DTL
"We can only push an expansion of nuclear power, which today
supplies 20 percent of America's electricity, as part of a
comprehensive program to limit the production of greenhouse gases,
promote renewable energy sources, and dramatically raise the cost
of burning fossil fuels in automobiles. Expanding nuclear power is
only one piece of the energy puzzle. But it is a piece we cannot
afford to dismiss."
A real pro-nuke tour deforce there buddy. Hehey. You is
smaoort!
Shannon Love: You are right. It is difficult to accurately
access pollution costs. However, the incorrect response to this
uncertainty is to assume those costs are zero, which you seem to be
implying.
For example, I cannot say exactly what a "fair" tax is on a gallon
gasoline - however, I am sure it is much, much greater than the
$.184/gal we are currently paying. $1.00 is probably much closer to
the mark, and that is before you add in the addition taxes for road
building, which should also be included in gas prices.
One way to calculate the gasoline tax would be to look at the amount of money spent thus far on a failed attempt to pump oil from Iraq.
In regard to solar concentrators, the technology seems so simple
that I'm surprised it wasn't done before. The idea of using
secondary optical elements to correct the focus is indeed clever,
but I'm still surprised that it's taken this long for solar
concentrators to get attention.
Last night I looked at the journal article again, and some of the
concentrator schemes could provide 500x enhancement. The optics are
cheap, and the estimated reduction in production costs per area is
more than 80%. If this is combined with successful schemes to use 3
layers of material (absorbing in the IR, UV, and visible) we are
talking about something that may be very competitive.
thoreau, I heard something on the radio about Iceland planning
to go almost completely geothermal. Of course, Iceland has unique
characteristics (well, rare ones, anyway) that make this sort of
option feasible. Still, Iceland's example does show that even a
"minor" energy source can be a major one on a local level.
With energy costs increasing and with heightened concerns about
having a "nondependent" energy source, I expect that the market for
feasible alternatives is about to really break open, at least in
the Western world. I can't help but think that the boom in
materials science (including nanotech) is going to lead to some
sort of breakthrough, too (particularly with solar). And, of
course, there's always fusion. No, really, it's coming next
year.
Incidentally, I'm all for Yucca Mountain, but please, please,
please do not dispose of nuclear waste on the Moon. I have a bad
feeling about that.
Chad,
The free-market works because it accurately communicates
information about the relative tradeoffs of different choices.
Without accurate information, a market mechanism could easily do
more harm than good. Information injected into the market by
politicized guesswork is likely to do more harm than good.
For example, low levels of global warming (
Whoops, something ate my second paragraph in my last post. I don't have time to fix it now.
Thoreau, 3M several years back used their Fresnel lens technology to make films that could act as solar concentrators. The market was so small, however, that they finally gave up pushing it.
"solar concentrators, the technology seems so simple that I'm
surprised it wasn't done before"
That is the result of monopoly control of markets by government
policy favoring powerful corporations.
Obvious solutions invented decades ago like electric cars, solar
cells, wind generators, solar heating/cooling, geothermal heat
pumps are passed over in favor of technology that lines the pockets
of corporatists in and out of government.
And those who are duped by this scamming valiantly defend this
interference in free markets by claiming they are fighting
subsidies for renewable energy on behalf of free markets?
It's a topsy turvy world of corruption and faith based gullibility.
Then science is bought to back the scamming. To first deny the
existence of problems like global climate change, that would be
solved by adopting renewable energy.
And now tout even more heavily subsidized nuclear power to solve
it? These sheople have no shame.
I read in Wired magazine that China is going to mass produce
pebble bed reactors within the next couple of years because of
their huge energy needs.
I guess at least someone thinks they are a good idea.
I, too, would like to thank phocion for their posts on this thread. Very illuminating stuff.
Shannon Love: Yes, politicized, incorrect information is bad.
However, it is unlikely to be worse than no information at all,
which you still seem to be advocating (and isn't that a bit
political?).
We know, for example, that cars emit all sorts of undesirable
chemicals (SOx, NOx, particulates, etc). We have a reasonable idea
what the health and environmental consequences are. We can then
take at least a reasonable guess at what to charge people for the
priveledge of polluting should be. Right now, there is no
environmental tax on gasoline at all. You can quibble about what
the right answer is but the right answer is NOT zero.
As for carbon emissions, there is little disagreement that a carbon
tax of at least $10/ton is economically justified. Some people
argue for much more, however. Again, whatever the right answer is,
it is not zero.
I also echo the kudos for phocion. Very interesting and clearly well-informed comments.
Question for all and sundry:
Opponents of Nuclear Power tend to favor solar power - for the
moment. One does wonder just how fond they are going to be if Solar
ever becomes really popular, and we start paving the southwest
desert with solar farms.
Solar power involves taking energy out of an ongoing dynamic in the
environment, and diverting it for our use. What are the likely side
effects? There have to be SOME; energy isn't free - it comes from
somewhere. Does anybody know? Has anybody other than me even
asked?
C. S. P. Schofield, that is an interesting question. I may be
wrong, but it seems to me that with any form of solar power
collection, you're changing the albedo of the Earth. You're going
to take some portion of solar energy that might otherwise be
reflected back into space as visible light, and convert it into
mechanical energy that will generate waste heat, which is more
likely to be retained within the atmosphere.
That's what the greenhouse effect is, after all -- visible light to
which the atmosphere is transparent is transformed into infrared,
which is mostly blocked by the atmosphere instead of radiating back
into space.
Could widespread use of solar energy contribute to global warming?
(I'm guessing it might, but probably less than burning fossil fuels
already does. And how would it compare to nuclear power, which also
generates waste heat? A lot of it, in fact. But I don't really know
how efficient solar power is.)
Enough space exists on roofs, the solar exposed sides of
buildings, and over parking lots and highways to provide plenty of
solar
power, without any more disturbance of wilderness land. If any more
area is needed, land already devestated by industry, mining, and
chemical agri-bizz farming can be used temporarily and
rehabilitated.
The land space used will be a fraction of that used by the
pipelines,natural gas drilling,oil rigs, refineries, coal mines,
uranium mines, nuclear waste sites, forests, river, lakes ..and on
and .. being destroyed and contaminated by our present energy
systems.
The rest of the electric power needed to replace fossil fuel and
nuclear power can be obtained with small to medium wind power at
homes, buildings, and businsses. And the build out of as many
industrial wind and wave power machines on areas that don't disturb
human activity or damage nature, that are needed. Calculations
indicate a very small anount of surface area on the ocean and high
wind energy areas of the great plains to acomplish this.
Burning 400 years worth of biomass stored as fossil fuel per
year, releasing all that greenhouse gas that traps extra solar
energy, and bringing the power of the sun right down here on earth
with nuclear power; all cause far more global warming than the
small amount of extra energy absorned due to solar power use.
Furthermore wind, wave, and solar power, by halting the emmission
of that 400 years worth of biomass carbon sink per year as CO2,
will stop catastrophic human created global climate change.
Which is caused by extra heating due to greenhouse gases. No need
to wonder, renewable power reverses extra absorbed energy and it's
release from fossil and nuclear energy sources.
http://scientificactivist.blogspot.com/2006/02/nuclear-power-play.html
There is a compromise that I have discovered, after many go arounds
on nuclear power on various venues.
How about letting the nuclear industry build a few waste processing
reactors at Yucca Mountain. The waste needs to be dealt with
anyway.
If they can operate safely, efficiently, and agree to real
regulation instead of industry self regulation, then more plants
can be considered.
The tradition of contamination and corruption in the past
government/industry operation needs to be eliminated before
widespread nuclear power buildout occurs. Trust must be
restored.
Of course this will mean only a few new plants are built in the
next decade. It will be 10 years until they are proven to be safe
and safely and economically operated.
Meanwhile that leaves nuclear fission out of the global climate
change cure for awhile. Hundreds of new plants would need to be
built to have any signifigant effect.
After 10 years of power generation and waste processing, the
lessons learned should be applied to new designs and new nuclear
plants should then compete without subsidies with other clean power
generatinmg technologies on long term cost, including any fuel
requirements and future waste disposal costs.
This is a compromise that environmentalists may be able to live
with, providing subsidies now in place for coal, nuclear, and
fossil fuel power are eliminated.
And a substantial portion of those savings are put into temporary
subsidies for wind, solar,and wave power, large scale electrical
energy storage, geothermal heat pump heating and cooling, and
conversion from internal combustion transportation to battery
electric vehicles.
How about a Prairie National Renewable Energy Conservation Park.
Where 1000s of huge wind plants spin over a renewed prairie filled
with delicious free roaming organic buffalo?
Eat the healthy buffalo meat in lieu of cornfed, unhealthy, feedlot
beef.
Use the wind electricity to stop greenhouse gas emmision and reduce
energy prices and dependence on imported oil.
Enjoy the prairie.
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