• ImplyingImplications@lemmy.ca
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    7 months ago

    Unfortunately this is an unpopular opinion and the other comments in the thread prove the average person thinks a nuclear power plant produces deadly products. It is literally thousands of times better for the environment than coal and gas plants. Replacing all coal and gas plants with nuclear energy would have an immediate positive impact on the environment. We also don’t need to keep them forever. Eventually they’d be replaced with renewables.

    Kurzgesagt video

  • RememberTheApollo_@lemmy.world
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    7 months ago

    There are plenty of environmentalists with binary thought patterns. If they can’t have the perfect system now, they’d rather let it all burn.

    • Cryophilia@lemmy.world
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      7 months ago

      Not limited to environmentalists

      glares at Lemmy doomers, vote splitters, and “revolutionaries”

      • Nudding@lemmy.world
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        6 months ago

        Ice free Arctic by 2025

        “Yeah we can probably still pull out of this nose dive by consuming MORE power”

        • The utterly deranged.
  • IchNichtenLichten@lemmy.world
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    7 months ago

    I’m not sure if that’s an unpopular opinion so much as a completely incorrect one.

    The simple truth is that nuclear is fucking expensive and takes a long time to build.

    Renewables and storage are much cheaper and take way less time to start producing energy.

    Given this, why would you be in favor of nuclear? Please don’t try and tell me about base load (not needed), SMRs (even more expensive) or fusion (not going to happen in our lifetimes)

    • NaibofTabr@infosec.pub
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      7 months ago

      Given this, why would you be in favor of nuclear? Please don’t try and tell me about base load (not needed), SMRs (even more expensive) or fusion (not going to happen in our lifetimes)

      Peak-load scaling. The major advantage that fossil fuel generators have is that you can spin them up faster to react to higher demand. You can’t do that with solar or wind, but you can with nuclear.

      If we had grid-scale storage solutions, dealing with peak load would be easier but it’s still more cost effective to build pumped hydro storage than large battery arrays. Most electric grids have to produce electricity on-demand which means they have to be highly responsive.

      We don’t have good grid-scale storage yet. We need demand-responsive energy production. Fission is better than burning coal.

      • IchNichtenLichten@lemmy.world
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        7 months ago

        You can’t do that with solar or wind, but you can with nuclear.

        That’s why I said renewables and storage. There are lots of storage technologies such as pumped hydro and various kinds of battery that can react very quickly to increased demand. You categorically cannot do that with nuclear, where did you learn this?

        Firstly, nuclear needs to run 24/7 as it’s not economically feasible to do anything else given how much these things cost. Secondly, you’re still heating water to create steam to drive turbines to generate electricity. All of that takes time to ramp up and means that nuclear is not used to generate in response to increased demand.

        • NaibofTabr@infosec.pub
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          7 months ago

          […] react very quickly to increased demand. You categorically cannot do that with nuclear, where did you learn this?

          This is not correct.

          A Brief Survey of Load-Following Capabilities in Modern Nuclear Power Plants

          Load-following NPPs in France claim power output ramps as much as 5%/min if necessary, though typical ramps are kept below 1.5%/min.

          Certain French NPPs routinely decrease power output 50% at night.

          It’s true that load-following is mostly not done with nuclear in the US, but this is policy/common practice/habit, not a technical limitation of nuclear power plants.

          Also, I mentioned pumped hydro storage to point out specifically that battery technology really isn’t effective enough yet. It still doesn’t scale well, it’s too expensive for large grids.

          • IchNichtenLichten@lemmy.world
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            7 months ago

            This is not correct.

            It is, you just proved it yourself:

            “typical ramps are kept below 1.5%/min.”

            Compare that with batteries or pumped hydro.

            • NaibofTabr@infosec.pub
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              7 months ago

              That’s plenty fast enough for a power grid.

              1.5% of 900MW is 13.5MW. That’s plenty of power output scaling per minute.

              • IchNichtenLichten@lemmy.world
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                7 months ago

                I think you’re getting peaker plants, e.g gas fired confused with load following.

                Nuclear plants are not used as peaker plants. you incorrectly stated that they are.

                • MaxMalRichtig@discuss.tchncs.de
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                  6 months ago

                  It’s a shame that you’re being voted down here, even though your points are actually more on the factual side. Well, that’s probably the fate of those who “dare” to say something against nuclear. Even if everyone else demonstrably doesn’t have a clue about the subject: They’re still bashing it. It’s just good that downvotes on Lemmy don’t really matter.

        • mranachi@aussie.zone
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          7 months ago

          Yes, but your assertion that renewable is cheaper completely ignored the cost of grid scale energy storage suitable to remove fossil fuel generation.

    • stratoscaster@lemmy.world
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      7 months ago

      To be fair, solar and wind are dependent on wind availability and solar availability year-round. Nuclear is buildable nearly anywhere. There are a lot of places other options aren’t as possible or efficient.

            • MaxMalRichtig@discuss.tchncs.de
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              6 months ago

              Even large scale nuclear plants are not economically viable without huge subsidies. Small scale reactors are even less cost effective. I haven’t really seen any of them “in the wild” except for research reactors or something like that.

    • ExFed@lemm.ee
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      7 months ago

      nuclear is fucking expensive and takes a long time to build

      So what? Cost is relative to supply, demand, and political willpower. Also, I suspect it’s much cheaper than carbon recapture.

      Given this, why would you be in favor of nuclear?

      I think you’ve lost the point entirely. The question is “what do we need to effectively generate electricity without fossil fuels?” Nuclear is one such answer. Heaven forbid we encourage the development of more than one thing at a time.

      • IchNichtenLichten@lemmy.world
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        7 months ago

        Cost is relative to supply, demand, and political willpower.

        Cost is cost and with new nuclear you can add on a fair chunk to whatever amount is quoted because they often go way over budget.

        Given renewables and storage is cheaper, why would you want to piss money away?

        Heaven forbid we encourage the development of more than one thing at a time.

        We’re been developing nuclear for 70 years. In that time it’s not got cheaper, in fact the opposite has happened. Time to let go.

        • ExFed@lemm.ee
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          7 months ago

          Cost is cost … [in 70 years] it’s not got cheaper, in fact the opposite has happened.

          I suppose you must still think a loaf of bread still costs the same it did 70 years ago, too. Prices are malleable thanks to the free market … and government subsidies. Why would anyone be so anti-nuclear when it’s another valuable tool for displacing fossil fuels? Are you shilling for the oil and gas industry?

          • IchNichtenLichten@lemmy.world
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            7 months ago

            Are you shilling for the oil and gas industry?

            There it is.

            If I was a fossil fuel lobbyist I’d be pushing new nuclear hard. I could argue that we should continue to burn coal and gas while we make the leap to nuclear … in 10-15 year’s time. No, let’s make that 20 years of more environmental destruction.

            Hey, wait. Are you shilling for the fossil fuel industry?

            • ExFed@lemm.ee
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              7 months ago

              No, let’s make that 20 years of more environmental destruction.

              Okay, hold up. Just take a minute here to breathe. Nobody’s arguing against renewables. They, just like nuclear power, are a part of a healthy, diverse mix of technologies which will help displace fossil fuels. That’s the whole point: get rid of fossil fuels where we can in whatever way we can.

              make the leap to nuclear … in 10-15 year’s time

              We already did. 70 years ago. Then the fossil fuel industry successfully replaced existing nuclear generators with coal-fired plants.

              If I was a fossil fuel lobbyist I’d be pushing new nuclear hard.

              Are you seriously arguing that fossil fuel lobbyists do the exact opposite of what fossil fuel lobbyists have been recorded doing? In other words, are you trying to argue for a proven falsehood?

              If so, we have a term for that: alternative facts. Go try and deceive someone else.

              • IchNichtenLichten@lemmy.world
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                7 months ago

                All your sophistry, ignorance, and rudeness aside, you’ve yet to make a single compelling argument for nuclear.

                I think we’re done here.

  • AA5B@lemmy.world
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    7 months ago

    Logical fallacy: “you can’t claim to support $GENERAL_AREA and be anti-$MY_SPECIFIC_THING at the same time “? I’m sure there’s a name for that type of fallacy

    • Jimmyeatsausage@lemmy.world
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      7 months ago

      No True Scotsman: defending an ingroup by excluding members that don’t agree with a particular stance. A subset of the Appeal to Purity fallacy, which argues that someone doesn’t do enough or have enough of some attribute to be included in a group. Other examples (deliberately inflammatory to cause a knee-jerk reaction to show how easy it is to fall into these things) would be “You can’t be a good person and support Donald Trump for Persident” or “You can’t support Palestine and still vote for Biden.”

      I don’t agree with OPs statement, but I do agree with their sentiment. Nuclear energy is one of the best options available from an environmental standpoint to meet our baseline energy needs and supplement grids using non-persistant renewable loke wind and solar.

      • AA5B@lemmy.world
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        7 months ago

        Thanks. I like to think I’m an advocate for the environment but disagree with both the statement and the intent.

        Nuclear fission has some nice properties we could use, but as an ideal. However the industry has also demonstrated it to be expensive and too long to build. It’s not practical

        Renewables have some weaknesses we don’t entirely know how to fill yet. Storage is in infancy: great for stabilization but still trying to grow. However we’re not at the point where those weaknesses matter yet. The fastest and cheapest approach is to build out renewables and storage as much as possible, while continuing to develop more scalable storage or Fusion, or figure out how to make fission practical again, or simply how to minimize use of gas peaker plants

        How high a percentage of renewables can we get, with current storage technology and still have a reliable grid? Let’s find out, plus that’s the amount of time where we need to decide on a more complete answer. We’re (US) not even close to that point, and easily have more than a decade at current rates before we do.

        Edit: another answer is we no longer have time for nuclear. Given the history of how long it takes to build nuclear power plants, and our current emissions/climate change, we can’t afford to wait the decades it would take to build those out. Renewables can make an impact immediately

          • AA5B@lemmy.world
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            6 months ago

            Maybe, and we should certainly continue to look for that breakthrough. However, renewables can be built out now, are lowest cost, most immediate impact: we need to be building these out as fast as possible

            At some point we’ll have diminishing returns with stability and might change our approach, but let’s get to that point as fast as we cab

        • IchNichtenLichten@lemmy.world
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          6 months ago

          I mostly agree but it’s also important to look at updating the grid so power can be moved around using high voltage DC transmission.

          We’ve got reliable solar in the Southern US, and massive potential for wind offshore and in the prairie states. If we can route power to where it’s needed that decreases the need to store it.

          • AA5B@lemmy.world
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            6 months ago

            We’re running into that up in the northeast too. Massachusetts had big plans to buy Canadian hydro, but can’t get the transmission lines built to get it here

  • blady_blah@lemmy.world
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    6 months ago

    It’s not that this is an unpopular opinion, but rather that it’s a dumb opinion. You’re defining things one way and someone else can define them a different way. You can both define what an environmentalist is differently and that will affect the result of your question. If you’re insisting that you own the definition of an “environmentalist” then you’re being dumb.

    In fact, I agree with the unstated premise of your statement. I think the risks of nuclear waste and a nuclear meltdown are much less than the risks of global warming and therefore nuclear power is good for the environment. However it is also a perfectly valid opinion that we should just reduce our energy usage and reduce global warming in that manner. I think it’s unrealistic, but it’s possible if we had the desire to do that as a collective. It is a valid opinion to be on that side of the fence. I think it’s the less pragmatic approach, but I’ve known many people who are hippy environmentalists and it’s still a valid position.

  • Bytemeister@lemmy.world
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    7 months ago

    You can claim anything you want.

    Also, nuclear power has a huge environmental impact, it just offsets that impact by generating a fuckton of electricity.

    In an idea world, we would look to make existing devices more efficient, and use them more responsibly rather than just generate more power to offset those losses.

  • Nakedmole@lemmy.world
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    7 months ago

    Environmental and Health Consequences of Uranium Mining

    Tailing deposits can cause landslides, air contamination, and wildlife exposure. Uranium tailings contain small particles that are picked up and transported by the wind. The radioactive particulates in the air can be concentrated enough to cause health issues including lung cancer and kidney disease. [6] These particles also contaminate soil and water. Furthermore, growing piles of mining debris become unstable and can result in fatal landslides, such as the 1966 landslide of Aberfan, which resulted in the death of 144 people. [7] Tailing ponds pose serious hazards to the environment as well through leaks, in which underground water becomes contaminated with heavy metals. [5] This can lead to the pollution of lakes and rivers. Local ecosystems, too, are harmed and destroyed by waste piles and ponds. Rain can interact with tailings and introduce sulfuric acid in aquatic ecosystems, similar to in-situ leaching. Wildlife exposure can also occur directly through interaction with tailing ponds. In particular, waterfowl often land and use tailing ponds, resulting in dire consequences. In 2008, 1600 ducks flew into a tailing pond and died in Alberta, Canada. [8] Evidently, the repercussions of uranium mining are far-reaching. Certain groups of people, however, are at greater risk of exposure to associated hazards.

    The United States has a history of environmental inequity in which people of color and low-income communities are disproportionately subjected to environmental risks and consequent health hazards. Uranium mining is no different. Navajo Nation land, for example, is littered with tailing piles, and the United States Environmental Protection Agency has mapped 521 abandoned uranium mines on the reservation. [5,9] In this regard, uranium mining serves as an avenue for continued environmental racism, and the issue demands close examination and public awareness.

    Source: http://large.stanford.edu/courses/2021/ph241/radzyminski2/

  • GONADS125@feddit.de
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    7 months ago

    Nicely done OP. This is the best post I’ve seen on this community on lemmy.

    Also amusing how many ignorant and uneducated people are calling your take/nuclear energy “stupid” simply because they don’t understand it.

    “Nuclear = bad” is about as far as their level of thinking goes…

    • SendMePhotos@lemmy.world
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      7 months ago

      Nuclear waste = bad because we don’t currently have a proper way to dispose of it. We bury it in a container with hopes that we’ll find a way in the future.

      • Buglefingers@lemmy.world
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        7 months ago

        IIRC we have 2 solutions 1 is what we currently use and the second is more or less the best but a tad expensive so we don’t. (This is for the highly radioactive waste that has long decay and makes up about 1-3% of waste, the stuff we “worry” about)

        The former is we mix the radioactive material with glass, ceramic, and concrete into large pieces and just leave em. Standing next to them you actually receive more radiation from the sun and they cannot be recovered into usable material because of how they are melted and mixed together.

        The latter is more or less the same, but we dig, on site, an L shaped bore into the ground a long way into the earths crust where it can be stored indefinitely, is not recoverable, and can keep a site running for it’s entire lifetime without filling the hole. You then fill in the hole at end of life and done. No harm to people, environment, or earth. Basically a DGR (Deep Geological Repository)

        • WolfhoundRO@lemmy.world
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          7 months ago

          And we can think about a 3rd and actually ship the materials in rockets and space them. Throwing them beyond Earth SOI would prevent accumulating garbage in orbit

          • Tlaloc_Temporal@lemmy.ca
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            6 months ago

            That’s a lot of risk of spreading high-level radioactive materials across large areas of earth. Rockets explode sometimes, and even the RTGs many probes use required special attention to rocket reliability. Moving tonnes of material like that wouod be an inevitable disaster with current rocket reliability and abort systems.

            Or we could put it in a hole.

      • Nakedmole@lemmy.world
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        7 months ago

        There is this crazy new trend called renewables. Also, please quote the part where I supported fossil fuels.

    • revelrous@sopuli.xyz
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      7 months ago

      It’s not as toxic as coal. It is only that you are used to those effects. It’s also a safer industry to work in. Technically safer even than wind and solar last I looked. I wouldn’t treat it as a permanent solution. But it could keep the lights on while we pivot to renewables.

      • Nakedmole@lemmy.world
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        7 months ago

        I wouldn’t treat it as a permanent solution. But it could keep the lights on while we pivot to renewables.

        Agreed, that´s the compromise I would propose too.

        • revelrous@sopuli.xyz
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          7 months ago

          I know some people in nuclear power and get in arguments with them all the time about this. (they’re not big fans of renewables. shocker.) But they’re right that renewables just aren’t ready to take over yet. Where I’d say we need to fund renewable research and development—they are deadset it’s a waste of money. But fossil fuels have got to go. I think it’d be for the best if no one was ever comfortable with nuclear but I just don’t see another alternative that works with how quickly we are killing the planet. 🤷‍♂️

      • Nakedmole@lemmy.world
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        7 months ago

        The guy is obviously an advertiser/influencer working for the nuclear industry, which makes his opinion on the topic irrelevant.

        • Tayb@lemmy.world
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          7 months ago

          “Obvously…” /s

          Or, when you run the numbers yourself, you realize that it’s about as dangerous as offshore wind turbines are to birds and fish. Which is to say, not very, but a lot of extremely dumb people still parrot it.

          • Nakedmole@lemmy.world
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            7 months ago

            Stop pretending. It is obvious that the guy is a pro nuclear advertiser. Anyone can see that in a 5 minute google search.

    • amzd@kbin.social
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      7 months ago

      Burning coal creates more radioactive waste but with nuclear power it’s contained instead of combusted into the air we breathe.

      Still not a fan of nuclear, mainly because I think it takes quite long to build compared to the timeframe we have for fixing climate change, although I’ve seen some articles that it’s supposed to be faster now than the past 10 years.

      • Nakedmole@lemmy.world
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        6 months ago

        Burning coal creates more radioactive waste but with nuclear power it’s contained instead of combusted into the air we breathe.

        Fortunately, opposing nuclear power does not mean supporting fossil fuels.

        Still not a fan of nuclear, mainly because I think it takes quite long to build compared to the timeframe we have for fixing climate change

        Agreed, that is another good argument against nuklear.

    • dustyData@lemmy.world
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      7 months ago

      You drank the Kool-aid and asked for seconds didn’t you?

      It’s impressive to see the massive power of oil-industry-paid propaganda.

      • Nakedmole@lemmy.world
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        7 months ago

        Please quote the part where I supported fossil fuels. I am pro renewables, not pro fossil.

        • dustyData@lemmy.world
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          7 months ago

          I never said you supported fossil fuels. Please point to the part where I said or implied such a thing.

          I’m affirming that the notion that “nuclear waste is incredibly toxic” is false and it’s a propaganda piece that was inserted into popular culture by the oil industry who paid to make the idea mainstream. Nuclear waste is not inherently any more toxic than standing outside under the sun. But you repeated that because you were brainwashed by the propaganda, that the oil industry paid for to disseminate in pop culture.

          • Nakedmole@lemmy.world
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            7 months ago

            Nuclear waste is not inherently any more toxic than standing outside under the sun.

            Nuclear waste contains Plutonium and that is only one of several highly toxic substances it contains. Are you seriously trying to tell me Plutonium is not extremely toxic?

            But you repeated that because you were brainwashed by the propaganda, that the oil industry paid for to disseminate in pop culture.

            Both, the nuclear and the fossil lobby have spread disinformation systematically, you are a good example for the pro nuclear propaganda. I on the other hand reject both, fossil and nuclear because both are harmful.

            • dustyData@lemmy.world
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              7 months ago

              There’s a qualitative difference between the fact “Plutonium is toxic“ and the propaganda piece “nuclear waste is toxic”. The first is an statement of truth about a chemical element, the second is an attempt to halt rational thinking. Nuclear waste is depleted fuel encased in concrete. You can stand next to it without any ill consequence to your health and it is not toxic. Unless you actively try to break into it, you won’t be harmed anymore than standing under the sun.

              But seeing the way you reacted to some other person showing evidence, with the construction of an ugly ad-hominem attack and the equivalent of a child sticking fingers in their ears and singing. I would not be wasting any more electricity on you. You say pro-nuclear propaganda, as if both positive and negative propaganda aren’t nuances to take into account. That truth can lie at the core of propaganda, and that the best propaganda is the one that doesn’t have to lie to make its point. While still regurgitating and supporting negative propaganda based on scientific falsehoods that goes against your own self-proclaimed principles and goals.

  • I don’t know enough about the technology to have strong opinions on this. I was opposed to nuclear because I thought, what would we do with all the nuclear waste?

    And then somebody pointed out to me that apparently all the nuclear waste product in the world could fit into the area the size of one football field. Okay, I thought, that doesn’t seem too hard to keep contained.

    But then I got to thinking about it and that can’t possibly make any sense. It’s not just the spent nuclear material, it’s miles of radioactive plumbing, tons of hardware, sheet metal, asbestos (still?), etc., all irradiated, all toxic to life. So now I’m on the fence again.

    • masquenox@lemmy.world
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      6 months ago

      could fit into the area the size of one football field.

      The problem with that is that they haven’t even managed to responsibly handle even that.

    • Tlaloc_Temporal@lemmy.ca
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      6 months ago

      All of the irradiated equipment can’t leach into groundwater though, and it’s never as radioactive as the fuel itself. It’s not safe to dump in a normal landfill obviously, but simply burying it usually fine.

    • RememberTheApollo_@lemmy.world
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      7 months ago

      This is accurate, however we can’t sacrifice good enough for the perfect we don’t have yet. I get there is no solution that lasts longer than a temporary one, but environmentally, nuclear absolutely should be implemented.

      • MaxMalRichtig@discuss.tchncs.de
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        7 months ago

        OK. Are we on the same page, that we need to abolish fossil energy ASAP?

        And: How much (in % of global energy production) should be covered by nuclear power in your opinion?

        • RememberTheApollo_@lemmy.world
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          7 months ago

          Yep. Fossil fuels need to disappear yesterday.

          Your second question is way, way out of my league. All I can toss out there as a guess is enough nuclear power to cover the gaps in demand vs ebb and flow of natural systems like sun and wind, maybe plus a little for contingency.

          • MaxMalRichtig@discuss.tchncs.de
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            7 months ago

            Your second question is way, way out of my league

            Hats off to you for being so honest and admitting this.

            enough nuclear power to cover the gaps in demand

            OK, please correct me if I haven’t understood you correctly, but you mean: “We should basically utilize natural systems energy (sun, wind, water, …) completely and turn off and on nuclear plants “on demand” to cover the peaks/gaps in demand.” Did I get that right?

            • RememberTheApollo_@lemmy.world
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              7 months ago

              Pretty much, yeah; but again, out of my league. I don’t think nuclear can be just “turned off”, but in the context of this discussion whatever the minimum output is to keep them operating, and then power up to cover whatever output is needed to cover low wind, overcast, night, etc.

              I’ll offer this also - and again I have no real scientific knowledge to back it up, but possibly this could be sorted out with some digging - that I think batteries should also be used to help buffer power output swings, but I also think that the environmental impact of batteries and their manufacturing need to be balanced against the same for nuclear power. It’s going to take a lot of batteries to buffer an entire power grid vs a relative few nuclear plants.

              • MaxMalRichtig@discuss.tchncs.de
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                7 months ago

                Pretty much

                OK, cool.

                What you are describing is called “load following”. Different power plants have different capabilities of doing this. E.g. coal plants (or other thermal plants) are pretty bad at this while e.g. gas turbines can be turned on/off very quickly to buffer out short peaks of fluctuations. Power plants get categorized into different groups: e.g. Base Load plants or Peak Load plants. Base load is basically the load that is “always need to be supplied” and everything else is modulated on top of that.

                To do effective load following, you would NOT want base load plants.

                To categorize power plants we need to look at 2 different things: the technical capability to do “load following” with a plant - and the economical viability of throttling the power output of a plant.

                Nuclear power plants have extremely high investment costs and a greater proportion of fixed costs (e.g. for personnel) while having very low variable costs, as nuclear plants are not really “using up more/less fuel” during their operation. That means: The cost of nuclear power plants is pretty much constant over time - no matter if they are producing more or less power, but you only get an return on invest if you output power.

                That is why nuclear power plants are normally used as base load power plants, as their economic viability goes pretty bad when you do (extensive) load following with them. However, they have at least some technical capabilities of being operated in a (slower) load following mode.

                When we add in the fact, that there was probably not a single nuclear power plant, yet, that was economically viable without huge subsidies and the mere costs of keeping the radioactive waste products safe FOREVER are enormous, investors/plant owners don’t really like the idea of “throttling” their plants as they will be loosing money.

                That is why - if you have a great amount of base load power plants in your grid - you tend to turn off the generators that are easy to regulate but hard to calculate: Wind & Solar. That’s why a high percentage of nuclear power in your energy mix will PREVENT the utilization of true renewable energy sources, making them a less viable investment.

                This is one of the reasons why I asked about the percentage of “needed nuclear power” in the beginning. Different percentages of these plants will have different effects on the entire energy production system and it’s trajectory.

                So I am coming back to my original question. And there is not right or wrong answer, just a gut feeling: How much nuclear do we need to make this work? Our current energy mix (primary energy consumption) consists globally roughly of 75% fossil energy and 4% nuclear. So do you think we will need to replace the 75% fossils with nuclear by 1:1? Or maybe 1:2 and fill the rest with Wind/Solar? Or do we keep the current 4%? Really, it’s about your gut feeling about what you think will be necessary. From that point on, we can then further explore the general viability and consequences of nuclear power in the grid.

                It’s going to take a lot of batteries to buffer an entire power grid

                The beauty of it is: You wouldn’t really need to do this - but I’m getting ahead of myself. This a different rabbit hole that I don’t think is needed to be explored right now.

                But just a short pointers:

                • By controlling and deferring energy consumption in a “smart” way, you can match up the demand with the volatile supply (e.g. of Wind/Solar) pretty well.
                • In energy systems, we have other types of energy storing systems that are bigger, cheaper and more reliable than the ones we know from “consumer electronics” - e.g. Pumped-storage hydroelectricity
                • RememberTheApollo_@lemmy.world
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                  7 months ago

                  Well I think I just got jumped. You had a well prepared answer, however I’ll offer my unprepared thoughts in return.

                  You kinda skipped past battery and other storage tech and the negatives associated with them, particularly the environmental issues inherent in battery production and recycling, and sorta handwaved in the general direction of alternative sources like pumped-up hydro. I’m a big believer in working with what we have now, there are far, far too many issues exacerbated by the premise that Science Will Save Us via some future solution or construction. The proverbial can keeps getting kicked down the road to do something about the issues immediately with the excuse that technology will jump in and save the day before it’s too late. People love the ideas behind some solutions, but can never seem to get them sufficiently well built to meet the professed goal. Ideas are great, but if we don’t have it now it’s technically already too late.

                  And that segues into nuclear. It is not a perfect solution. However it is a known tech, and an effective one. Nuclear waste is at the top of the issues I though of when I mentioned it, however that issue can be somewhat ameliorated if the US gets around to reprocessing the waste which is currently hindered by a non-proliferation treaty. We can argue costs and all that about nuclear operations, but at what point do we say that the enemy of good enough is constantly looking for perfection while sitting on our hands?

                  Summed up: Yes, there are alternatives. Many are conceptual and have never been implemented, or at least not on a large scale. They need to be implemented yesterday and not just viewed through hopeful rose-tinted glasses. Nuclear may not be the best solution, but it is known, available, and can do the job.

  • HactaiiMiju@lemmynsfw.com
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    7 months ago

    If you care about not having the environment be poisoned by nuclear waste for tens of thousands of years, then you kinda have to.