Outstanding Covers
- black321 - May 28, 2023 - 9:25pm
Wordle - daily game
- islander - May 28, 2023 - 9:24pm
What Did You Do Today?
- KurtfromLaQuinta - May 28, 2023 - 8:56pm
Eversolo DMP-A6 streamer and RP?
- William - May 28, 2023 - 8:36pm
MQA in administration
- William - May 28, 2023 - 8:27pm
Stream stopping at promo
- William - May 28, 2023 - 8:18pm
Come join us in Eureka!
- William - May 28, 2023 - 8:16pm
Ukraine
- kcar - May 28, 2023 - 6:21pm
Mixtape Culture Club
- KurtfromLaQuinta - May 28, 2023 - 4:38pm
Radio Paradise Comments
- GeneP59 - May 28, 2023 - 3:30pm
What's your favorite quote?
- maryte - May 28, 2023 - 9:12am
Counting with Pictures
- Proclivities - May 28, 2023 - 4:59am
Ask for a tea
- DaveInSaoMiguel - May 28, 2023 - 3:29am
Graphic designers, ho's!
- Manbird - May 27, 2023 - 5:43pm
Lyrics that are stuck in your head today...
- ScottN - May 27, 2023 - 5:28pm
THREE WORDS
- oldviolin - May 27, 2023 - 12:52pm
FOUR WORDS
- oldviolin - May 27, 2023 - 11:42am
ONE WORD
- oldviolin - May 27, 2023 - 11:30am
TWO WORDS
- oldviolin - May 27, 2023 - 11:28am
Things You Thought Today
- Steely_D - May 27, 2023 - 8:34am
China
- miamizsun - May 27, 2023 - 8:04am
Animal Resistance
- Red_Dragon - May 27, 2023 - 7:46am
Little known information...maybe even facts
- miamizsun - May 27, 2023 - 7:24am
Guns
- Red_Dragon - May 27, 2023 - 6:57am
RightWingNutZ
- kcar - May 26, 2023 - 8:09pm
You're welcome, manbird.
- Bill_J - May 26, 2023 - 6:00pm
In My Room
- KurtfromLaQuinta - May 26, 2023 - 4:17pm
The Lincoln quote ... wasn't from Lincoln
- Proclivities - May 26, 2023 - 1:19pm
Live Music
- Steely_D - May 26, 2023 - 10:51am
It seemed like a good idea at the time
- Red_Dragon - May 26, 2023 - 10:35am
Nuclear power - saviour or scourge?
- miamizsun - May 26, 2023 - 8:31am
A Picture paints a thousand words
- Proclivities - May 26, 2023 - 8:00am
The Daily complaint forum, Please complain or be Happy
- sunybuny - May 26, 2023 - 7:08am
Gas or Electric?
- ColdMiser - May 26, 2023 - 6:19am
Need help - anyone got a copy of Aristotle's Politics?
- lily34 - May 26, 2023 - 5:48am
Republican Party
- westslope - May 26, 2023 - 2:30am
• • • The Once-a-Day • • •
- oldviolin - May 25, 2023 - 1:50pm
Word Association - temporary
- oldviolin - May 25, 2023 - 1:34pm
Florida
- R_P - May 25, 2023 - 11:22am
USA! USA! USA!
- R_P - May 25, 2023 - 11:17am
Today in History
- Red_Dragon - May 25, 2023 - 10:27am
What's playing
- lily34 - May 25, 2023 - 9:17am
BRING OUT YOUR DEAD
- oldviolin - May 25, 2023 - 9:15am
What the hell OV?
- oldviolin - May 25, 2023 - 9:03am
Happy Birthday!
- lily34 - May 25, 2023 - 8:40am
NASA & other news from space
- miamizsun - May 25, 2023 - 7:51am
The Obituary Page
- lily34 - May 25, 2023 - 5:17am
Musky Mythology
- rgio - May 25, 2023 - 4:49am
Canada
- Red_Dragon - May 24, 2023 - 6:38pm
What Makes You Laugh?
- Red_Dragon - May 24, 2023 - 4:49pm
What Are You Grateful For?
- Antigone - May 24, 2023 - 4:06pm
Fascism In America
- rgio - May 24, 2023 - 1:56pm
Graphic designers, ho!
- RedTopFireBelow - May 24, 2023 - 12:43pm
LeftWingNutZ
- Proclivities - May 24, 2023 - 10:29am
260,000 Posts in one thread?
- oldviolin - May 24, 2023 - 10:19am
Annoying stuff. not things that piss you off, just annoyi...
- GeneP59 - May 24, 2023 - 8:16am
Manbird's Episiotomy Stitch Licking Clinic - KEEP OUT
- miamizsun - May 24, 2023 - 5:22am
Questions.
- oldviolin - May 23, 2023 - 7:59pm
Name My Band
- oldviolin - May 23, 2023 - 7:58pm
mood
- oldviolin - May 23, 2023 - 7:57pm
Museum Of Bad Album Covers
- oldviolin - May 23, 2023 - 2:55pm
Baseball, anyone?
- Proclivities - May 23, 2023 - 12:19pm
Talk Behind Their Backs Forum
- NoEnzLefttoSplit - May 23, 2023 - 11:40am
What The Hell Buddy?
- oldviolin - May 23, 2023 - 10:53am
Floyd forum
- kurtster - May 22, 2023 - 7:26pm
Country Up The Bumpkin
- KurtfromLaQuinta - May 22, 2023 - 4:31pm
Eclectic Sound-Drops
- oldviolin - May 22, 2023 - 1:58pm
Quick! I need a chicken...
- oldviolin - May 22, 2023 - 1:24pm
One Partying State - Wyoming News
- Beez - May 22, 2023 - 10:29am
Play the Blues
- thisbody - May 22, 2023 - 9:30am
Classical Music
- thisbody - May 22, 2023 - 9:16am
Jazz
- thisbody - May 22, 2023 - 9:06am
Climate Change
- westslope - May 22, 2023 - 12:52am
Australia has Disappeared
- haresfur - May 22, 2023 - 12:32am
Living in America
- oldviolin - May 21, 2023 - 7:44pm
|
Index »
Radio Paradise/General »
General Discussion »
Nuclear power - saviour or scourge?
|
Page: Previous 1, 2, 3 ... 24, 25, 26 |
dionysius

Location: The People's Republic of Austin Gender:  
|
Posted:
Dec 7, 2009 - 10:44am |
|
Lazy8 wrote: dionysius wrote:Fission reactors, even the fast breeders, will inevitably leave us with the problem of what to do with the waste. And they'll leave us with that problem for a very, very long time. That's not the kind of legacy I'd like to leave to our great-great-great...great-great-great-grandchildren. They're even puzzling about how to label such dangerous waste storage sites, since few people in ten thousand years are likely to know English. (And this is assuming the best case scenario, that humans and human civilization is still around then.) I don't think that fission is the way forwards.
However, fusion nuclear energy may indeed be the magic bullet. Very safe. Little or no waste problem, and the fuel? You're soaking in it. Limitless cheap electricity, which may be the rub, capitalism-wise. The private energy sector is never going to pour billions and billions into the R&D necessary to develop fusion energy, because the net return would be so low. This would take a huge public investment, then, and a big public effort is likely to generate opposition from those who are married to the old carbon and fission industries, because fusion would put them out of business. Politics will never end.
Fusion is not the 200 mpg carburetor bought up and embargoed by evilgreedy running dog capitalist oil companies. It hasn't happened because it's really really hard. And if it does happen those evilgreedy running dogs left holding the petroleum bag will indeed be out of business...motivating them to get on board when it becomes feasible and/or find something else to do with all that oil. Exxon-Mobile's shareholders don't care how it makes money. The public sectors of many countries have already poured billions into fusion research and have next to nothing to show for it. Maybe they never will. We can't count on a technology that may not even be possible. The problem of storing fission waste isn't nearly as difficult a technical problem as it is a political problem. We know how to build, run, and fuel fission reactors. If fusion comes along we can stop building them, but that's a decision I'd like to make with the lights on. The rewards of a successful R&D effort towards commercially viable fusion would indeed be very great (some of that research is going on right here at UT Austin). But the economics of this R&D still just don't make sense for private utilities and energy companies. Exxon-Mobil and BP would just not be making the same kind of record profits selling ultracheap fusion kilowatts than it would selling post-peak oil to the carbon junkie market. Why throw their money after it. when the public sector is doing the work for them? As one might expect, the international public/university consortium ITER in France are out front in fusion research, and might have something online by 2050. Still a wait, but within the lifetimes of many now living. This will change the game entirely. And I'm astonished to see that you think storage of fission waste is mostly political. Even finding the right geology to store waste for millennia and millennia is a challenge, and it will remain a poisonous reminder of our short-sightedness into a distant future we can't even imagine. This would be like stepping on landmines left by the Sumerians, only over an even greater timeline.
|
|
(former member)


|
Posted:
Dec 7, 2009 - 10:38am |
|
|
|
Lazy8

Location: The Gallatin Valley of Montana Gender:  
|
Posted:
Dec 7, 2009 - 10:28am |
|
dionysius wrote:Fission reactors, even the fast breeders, will inevitably leave us with the problem of what to do with the waste. And they'll leave us with that problem for a very, very long time. That's not the kind of legacy I'd like to leave to our great-great-great...great-great-great-grandchildren. They're even puzzling about how to label such dangerous waste storage sites, since few people in ten thousand years are likely to know English. (And this is assuming the best case scenario, that humans and human civilization is still around then.) I don't think that fission is the way forwards.
However, fusion nuclear energy may indeed be the magic bullet. Very safe. Little or no waste problem, and the fuel? You're soaking in it. Limitless cheap electricity, which may be the rub, capitalism-wise. The private energy sector is never going to pour billions and billions into the R&D necessary to develop fusion energy, because the net return would be so low. This would take a huge public investment, then, and a big public effort is likely to generate opposition from those who are married to the old carbon and fission industries, because fusion would put them out of business. Politics will never end.
Fusion is not the 200 mpg carburetor bought up and embargoed by evilgreedy running dog capitalist oil companies. It hasn't happened because it's really really hard. And if it does happen those evilgreedy running dogs left holding the petroleum bag will indeed be out of business...motivating them to get on board when it becomes feasible and/or find something else to do with all that oil. Exxon-Mobile's shareholders don't care how it makes money. The public sectors of many countries have already poured billions into fusion research and have next to nothing to show for it. Maybe they never will. We can't count on a technology that may not even be possible. The problem of storing fission waste isn't nearly as difficult a technical problem as it is a political problem. We know how to build, run, and fuel fission reactors. If fusion comes along we can stop building them, but that's a decision I'd like to make with the lights on.
|
|
dionysius

Location: The People's Republic of Austin Gender:  
|
Posted:
Dec 7, 2009 - 10:05am |
|
MrsHobieJoe wrote:I need to read the article but simply put my heart says no, my head says yes so I have to go with the rational argument. Therefore I'm for it- I also don't have any baggage on this one- I wasn't sufficiently interested in the 1980s to be in CND or anything like that.
It would be difficult to accomplish our planned reduction in CO2 without nuclear (although it sometimes seems like we can't accomplish anything on climate change without everyone GOING nuclear).
Fission reactors, even the fast breeders, will inevitably leave us with the problem of what to do with the waste. And they'll leave us with that problem for a very, very long time. That's not the kind of legacy I'd like to leave to our great-great-great...great-great-great-grandchildren. They're even puzzling about how to label such dangerous waste storage sites, since few people in ten thousand years are likely to know English. (And this is assuming the best case scenario, that humans and human civilization is still around then.) I don't think that fission is the way forwards. However, fusion nuclear energy may indeed be the magic bullet. Very safe. Little or no waste problem, and the fuel? You're soaking in it. Limitless cheap electricity, which may be the rub, capitalism-wise. The private energy sector is never going to pour billions and billions into the R&D necessary to develop fusion energy, because the net return would be so low. This would take a huge public investment, then, and a big public effort is likely to generate opposition from those who are married to the old carbon and fission industries, because fusion would put them out of business. Politics will never end.
|
|
MrsHobieJoe

Location: somewhere in Europe Gender:  
|
Posted:
Dec 7, 2009 - 9:48am |
|
I need to read the article but simply put my heart says no, my head says yes so I have to go with the rational argument. Therefore I'm for it- I also don't have any baggage on this one- I wasn't sufficiently interested in the 1980s to be in CND or anything like that.
It would be difficult to accomplish our planned reduction in CO2 without nuclear (although it sometimes seems like we can't accomplish anything on climate change without everyone GOING nuclear).
|
|
Lazy8

Location: The Gallatin Valley of Montana Gender:  
|
Posted:
Dec 7, 2009 - 9:17am |
|
islander wrote:I think we have led a parallel life. The director of my engineering program arranged for us to frequently tour and learn about power generation at Coors (they make a lot more than just beer). He was one of the first that I heard frequently espouse the "too many people" problem. He also said Nuclear is the only way we will be able to power the future. I always thought he was 15% old crank (he was), but he was right on most topics - this one included.
The technology problems are minor, it is the political, embedded business and PR problems that need to be overcome. We still need to conserve and do everything possible to be responsible stewards of the planet. But most people aren't going to make the necessary changes until we hit the catastrophe point in the story arc. Given that reality, I think we should do as much as possible to push that point out and make it as mild as possible. Nuclear is a big way to keep us viable along that path.
I haven't read beaker's link yet, but look at Europe: Small, standardized nuclear installations are the norm and are working.
I went to school across the road from General Atomic, and some of the profs consulted there. In one class one of the club presidents announced that a plant tour was available for those interested, and a protester showed up that day to disrupt the announcement. She didn't want us to go. Who knows, maybe we'd be bitten by radioactive insects and develop inappropriate super powers or something. Call me crazy, but I'm one of those people who think that if you feel passionately about something you should actually understand it, that is understand the science as well as the politics. Before you grab pitchforks and torches and storm the castle of the evil Dr. Frankenstein. At that time this was clearly a minority view, and probably still is. People who don't know an alpha particle from the alphabet have led the angry mobs. We have to get past that. As they finally admit that the oil and coal won't hold out forever, that solar and wind will meet only a tiny fraction of our needs, and that most of us aren't willing to live like the Unabomber maybe they can tell themselves that the technology has matured and it's different now. It isn't, not that much. They were wrong then and if they march down the same path they'll be wrong again. If we had built and operated nuclear power plants on the scale that France did back then we probably wouldn't be having the greenhouse gas debate we are now, or at least we'd face much less draconian steps to mitigate the effects.
|
|
islander

Location: Seattle Gender:  
|
Posted:
Dec 7, 2009 - 8:25am |
|
cc_rider wrote:In college we had a prof. who was a big fan of nuclear power. He taught a number of thermodynamics courses: tough stuff, and the basis for the mechanical engineering profession (steam engines, anyone?) We toured a number of local facilities, including the nuclear reactor at UT. Betcha didn't know there was one, huh? No matter. We knew he was grandstanding for nuclear power, but none of us felt any particular compunction about its feasibility. Yeah, it's a complicated problem, but hey, you ever been inside ANY power plant? It'll give 'rocket science' a run.
I think nuclear power in some form is the only way to sustain the kind of energy consumption we have, particularly as developing countries ramp up their per capita usage. I do not believe the technical hurdles are insurmountable. The political and societal hurdles are far less tractable, however.
I think we have led a parallel life. The director of my engineering program arranged for us to frequently tour and learn about power generation at Coors (they make a lot more than just beer). He was one of the first that I heard frequently espouse the "too many people" problem. He also said Nuclear is the only way we will be able to power the future. I always thought he was 15% old crank (he was), but he was right on most topics - this one included. The technology problems are minor, it is the political, embedded business and PR problems that need to be overcome. We still need to conserve and do everything possible to be responsible stewards of the planet. But most people aren't going to make the necessary changes until we hit the catastrophe point in the story arc. Given that reality, I think we should do as much as possible to push that point out and make it as mild as possible. Nuclear is a big way to keep us viable along that path. I haven't read beaker's link yet, but look at Europe: Small, standardized nuclear installations are the norm and are working.
|
|
cc_rider

Location: Bastrop Gender:  
|
Posted:
Dec 7, 2009 - 8:13am |
|
In college we had a prof. who was a big fan of nuclear power. He taught a number of thermodynamics courses: tough stuff, and the basis for the mechanical engineering profession (steam engines, anyone?) We toured a number of local facilities, including the nuclear reactor at UT. Betcha didn't know there was one, huh? No matter. We knew he was grandstanding for nuclear power, but none of us felt any particular compunction about its feasibility. Yeah, it's a complicated problem, but hey, you ever been inside ANY power plant? It'll give 'rocket science' a run.
I think nuclear power in some form is the only way to sustain the kind of energy consumption we have, particularly as developing countries ramp up their per capita usage. I do not believe the technical hurdles are insurmountable. The political and societal hurdles are far less tractable, however.
|
|
|