Nuclear Safety Push To Be Softened After US Objections 224
mdsolar writes with news that the U.S. objects to a proposal to amend the Convention on Nuclear Safety put forward by Switzerland. The United States looks set to succeed in watering down a proposal for tougher legal standards aimed at boosting global nuclear safety, according to senior diplomats. Diplomatic wrangling will come to a head at a 77-nation meeting in Vienna next month that threatens to expose divisions over required safety standards and the cost of meeting them, four years after the Fukushima disaster in Japan. Switzerland has put forward a proposal to amend the Convention on Nuclear Safety (CNS), arguing stricter standards could help avoid a repeat of Fukushima, where an earthquake and tsunami sparked triple nuclear meltdowns, forced more than 160,000 people to flee nearby towns and contaminated water, food and air.
Site selection (Score:2, Insightful)
The first thing would be tougher rules for nuclear site selection.
While it restricts the allowed area for a nuclear site, there'd be almost no additional cost for the site construction and maintenance (unless it's a really remote location). This would already help a lot.
The real disaster (Score:2, Insightful)
Switzerland has put forward a proposal to amend the Convention on Nuclear Safety (CNS), arguing stricter standards could help avoid a repeat of Fukushima, where an earthquake and tsunami sparked triple nuclear meltdowns, forced more than 160,000 people to flee nearby towns and contaminated water, food and air.
How convenient it is to conflate the blame for mass suffering from the tsunami with the nuclear event.
Many people have bought into the myth that the nuclear event at Fukushima was a human disaster of epic proportion, ignoring the real disaster which was the tsunami, and by doing so giving a big middle finder to those victims. Many people along the coast of Japan, well outside the Fukushima zone, are still struggling and displaced. They've lost loved ones and their homes. Many will not be able to rebuild
Re:The real disaster (Score:5, Informative)
How convenient it is to conflate the blame for mass suffering from the tsunami with the nuclear event.
Pretty convenient when you put the nuclear power plants right next to the sea and near a huge crustal rift.
not a single human has suffered any health impact due to radioactive releases from the accident
Holy shit are you unfactual.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/R... [wikipedia.org]
Also, the impact was minimized BECAUSE THEY EVACUATED THE SITE.
Downwind, it's a shit storm too.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/R... [wikipedia.org]
Again, minimized because of avoidance/restrictions.
Sounds like 'not a single human has suffered any health impact' to you?
Re:The real disaster (Score:5, Informative)
http://link.springer.com/artic... [springer.com]
http://www.reuters.com/article... [reuters.com]
http://blogs.scientificamerica... [scientificamerican.com]
http://news.discovery.com/eart... [discovery.com]
http://www.insidescience.org/c... [insidescience.org]
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Since you are obviously cherry-picking your sources again (which I have pointed out to you before), let me add some recent sources from highly respected journals about the risk of low-dose radiation. Ofcourse, according to Mr. D. all these journals just publish pseudo-science. Reminds me of the old joke with the wrong-way driver.
"... First, it is clear that we have now passed a watershed in our field, where it is no longer tenable to claim that CT risks are "too low to be detectable and may be non-existent"
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We estimate an additional 130 ... cancer-related mortalities. ... Radiation exposure to workers at the plant is projected to result in 2 to 12 morbidities.
Even if these estimates prove to be correct (and so far there is little indication they will), when compared to the 16,000 killed in the flooding, this bears out OP's original observation:
Many people have bought into the myth that the nuclear event at Fukushima was a human disaster of epic proportion, ignoring the real disaster which was the tsunami, and by doing so giving a big middle finder to those victims ...
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So, citing a bunch of studies that based prediction on the old, inaccurate model is really of no help.
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It's actually far worse than that. The exposure measured by dosimeters and other equipment deployed at the time is only part of the story. The real problem is material that has bio-accumulated and is now inside people. Inside the body there is no flesh or skin to block the radiation, so it damages the DNA of organs directly and causes cancer.
It is going to be years before we see the real effect of this, but Chernobyl is already providing some evidence.
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http://nuclearradiophobia.blog... [blogspot.com]
The conservative LNT model works OK for risk management, but it is known to be inaccurate for risk assessment. There just has been no real impetus to develop an accurate model adn it is quite a difficulat thing to accomplish as the real rates of negative health impact are so low they have a hard time getting a statistical basis, and the conservative
Re:The real disaster (Score:5, Insightful)
Sounds like 'not a single human has suffered any health impact' to you?
He means no direct impact. No radiation poisoning or excess cancers observed. The biggest health effect are psychological, e.g. people displaced from their homes.
In the context of 20,000 dead from the tsunami, and zero from radiation poisoning (there were 29 at Chernobyl) , the media is making way too much fuss about the radiation, don't you think?
Two worker deaths from heart attack have been blamed on overheating while wearing radiation suits.
A big fear was thyroid cancer from iodine, but that has not materialised. Some models still predict a small increase in cases in future.
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So where's that health impact you claimed? Who got sick?
Re:The real disaster (no radiation injuries) (Score:4, Informative)
Citing link and screaming "radiation!" (Score:3)
So far all death and heavy injuries were related to mechanical incidents, not radiations. Even your wiki article shows it to be so. There is a projected increase of cancer, but it is relatively low compared to other environmental effect (like living near a coal plant).
As for the evacuation it was a *precaution*. The fact is, the measured radiation were actually lower than in some part of the world where people live on regular basis, like people living in granitic area (for example france : macif ce
Re:The real disaster (Score:5, Insightful)
The reality is that continued reliance on fossil fuel results in spreading uranium (through coal fly ash) and and CO2 (all fossil fuels) and none of the (so called) clean power sources like wind and solar can provide a steady baseline of energy
Nuclear is the method to get us through the next 50 years without continuing with to increase the production of greenhouse gases, fear mongering over nuclear pollution (uranium from coal fly ash produces more annually than the accidents that you mentions) only drives us deeper into dependence on fossil fuels
Is it s tough choice? Yes, but getting emotional over the scary work 'nuclear' does not make a better decision
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The average person doesn't respond to appeals to logic. Otherwise we'd be walking, bicycling, and taking public transit instead, just from an economic point of view. And people would have a lot less garbage to haul out on garbage day because they'd recycle. And we'd be admitting that we went over the tipping point in the 70s. And nobody should have more than 1 or 2 children. And many more would be telecommuting. And the Tea Party wouldn't exist. And Sarah Palin wouldn't be on anyone's radar.
Unfortunately,
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People can't heat themselves at night with negawatts. When power prices rise the the most vulnerable like the poor and the old are the first to die.
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Would you rather people started burning wood and coal again in urban communities with all the air pollution issues that this causes?
Also not everyone has a boiler in their house. For those people which do not, they quite often just to not have the disposable income to invest in a long term heating solution with a high installation cost like that, so they use an electric heater instead. They are living month by month if not week by week.
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The average person doesn't respond to appeals to logic. Otherwise we'd be walking, bicycling, and taking public transit instead
right, because I can ride a bike, or walk 15 miles up a mountain on my way to work everyday....
Or you would have more incentive to move closer to work. Or telecommute. Or take a different job. Or demand better public transit.
And people would have a lot less garbage to haul out on garbage day because they'd recycle.
are there really people out there not recylcing more than in the past? Everywhere I have lived i nthe past 15 years has had recycling and garbage pickup on the same day. its not that hard to put plastic in a different bin than trash.
You can put your recyclables in the bin any day of the week, but that doesn't stop people from throwing their recyclables in the garbage instead. We have a no-presort recycling system, so it's not like glass goes in one, paper in another, plastic in yet another. Should be easy enough, but I've talked to a few of my neighbors and they simply don't recycle.
And we'd be admitting that we went over the tipping point in the 70s.
tipping point concerning what? oil??? blame the environmentalists 100% on that one, they were the ones blocking the installation of new nuke plants, which would have us on less oil today if we could have done so
No, the tipping point w
Coal kills people in different ways (Score:2)
Don't take my word for it. Use your brain. Think of what coal is made of. Fossil vegetable matter with less than 10% sand mixed in, and what do you personally know about beach sand? Is it mostly iron? Is it mostly lead? Is it mostly gold? Is it mostly silica with the heavy stuff not carrying far? How about the radioactive carbon? Is th
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I think that you are mistaken
http://www.scientificamerican.... [scientificamerican.com]
The Uranium is in the coal, it has been there for millions of years and can you explain why it would magically disappear just because the material is being burned?
FTA
"According to the National Council on Radiation Protection and Measurements (NCRP), the average radioactivity per short ton of coal is 17,100 millicuries/4,000,000 tons, or 0.00427 millicuries/ton. This figure can be used to calculate the average expected radioactivity release from c
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They reprinted shit from an Oak Ridge newsletter written by a middle manager who has published a lot of fiction and NASCAR stuff but no scientific papers. For extra laughs track down the online copy of that newsletter and make sure you read as far as the "OMG terrorists!" bit.
That's not what I said (Score:2)
The heavy stuff goes in the bottom ash. The very light stuff goes in the fly ash. It doesn't "magically disappear", it just doesn't magically melt below it's melting point and end up with small drops of molten silicate blowing in the hot flue gasses. So the heavy stuff that doesn't melt falls out the bottom and we call it "bottom ash" in a lot of places.
Is that making sense?
For the next step with fly ash consider s
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Well, a quick Google search shows you wrong - there is well-documented research into the amount of radioactivity in coal plant emissions. As an example, USGS: http://pubs.usgs.gov/fs/1997/fs163-97/FS-163-97.html [usgs.gov]
EPA: http://www.epa.gov/radiation/tenorm/coalandcoalash.html [epa.gov]
and others.
Is it an issue? The released radioactivity from a coal plant is up to 100 times that of a nuclear power plant - but those emissions are so ludicrously low that you can treat it as (100 * 0) = 0. There really isn't a health issu
Not wrong at all (Score:2)
http://pubs.usgs.gov/fs/1997/fs163-97/FS-163-97.html
Background radiation exists, so neither you, your lunch or fly ash is non-radioactive in large enough sample sizes and small enough intensities. However calling this, or a banana grove, or a statue of Lincoln, radioactive waste when it's less so than the contents of a typical childrens sandpit is very misleading.
Divide by zero error (Score:2)
Divide by zero error.
Pick any number up to infinity because a perfectly designed nuclear plant is going to be letting out zero on paper. Real plants are a different story with their contents ending up somewhere eventually, hopefully with the waste well managed. Unless there is an actual plant name on such claims it's best to assume that it's the imaginary perfect one instead of a real one that had spills into the
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"Nobody has EVER found that radioactive fly ash despite looking since the 1970s."
http://www.world-nuclear-news.... [world-nuclear-news.org]
Nobody has EVER found what the Chinese are developing the capability to MINE?
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Damn right. People should watch Cool It (2010) by Bjørn Lomborg. There are many cheaper solutions to prevent climate change than Luddite energy conservation, solar+wind+biomass+geothermal only future. Heck those people have trouble even with big hydro power (insane).
The reality is those defending a nuclear free future have an complete agenda 99% of the population would never approve, they hide they full agenda behind climate change. Building more nuclear power in the world is the only certain way to fu
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> And BTW Olkiluoto absurd costs might indicate Areva's EPR design is too expensive
Every reactor under construction in "the west" is over budget.
I believe that statement is true at all times in the last 50 years.
> but we should way 2 more years when the first EPR installation in China enters operation
Sure, because we all trust Chinese bookkeeping on construction projects. Especially after Sichuan. Or Banqiao.
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Safety is important but there are broader safety considerations. For example, tighten up nuclear safety too much and we increase the death rate due to more use of fossil fuels and the associated health effects of the pollution.
It is notable that TMI wasn't getting lucky. Ultimately the safety measures worked and they got the reactor shut down without loss of containment. The other reactor on the site continued to operate for years after. It did show us some deficiencies which are addressed in newer designs
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We weren't lucky. Scenarios equal to Chernobyl are impossible to conjure with any Gen III nuclear reactor, and pretty impossible with Gen II reactors with safety updates post TMI. You really need to study up on nuclear reactor construction, safety characteristics instead of accepting anti nuclear propaganda created by Green Peace, Dr Hellen Caldicott and gang, they are only interested in facts if they go their way (maybe you are too). All existing western nuclear designs couldn't meltdown like Chernobyl. He
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> your negligently operated nuclear power plant blows up and destroys my house that's criminal negligent
I'm sure you'll feel completely satisfied by their eventual 3-year suspended sentence when you're living in a tent.
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I would think it is reasonable enough to require that some negative thing happens to someone's health to call it a health impact. That's not moving the goalposts, that's going by the definitions of the words.
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The proposal was to make containment of radioactive material and avoiding off-site contamination in an accident a legally binding agreement
http://www-ns.iaea.org/downloa... [iaea.org] (bottom of page 15)
The actual wording includes the term 'shall', which in a regulatory sense is a pretty absolute statement, it ends with the statement, "these objectives also shall be applied at existing plants"
So, any nuclear operator in the planet would be out of legal compliance if they have any existing nuclear plant that 'may' pres
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That's an absolutely utterly stupidly trivial amount.
Re: The real disaster (Score:2)
Re: The real disaster (Score:3)
For your information, I actually worked for several months at the former Chernobyl power plant (we were installing ultrasonic monitoring devices to prepare for eventual construction of the new sarcophagus).
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workers who stepped in the water at Fukushima sustained significant radiation burns.
http://www.theguardian.com/wor... [theguardian.com]
There are safer ways to work around these exposed cores but in some ways Fukushima is worse than Chernobyl. The workers who tunnelled under Chernobyl and laid concrete to stop further core intrusion into ground water avoided the more severe problem that now occurs at Fukushima.
The total exposed core material and the use of MOX also make the total expelled radiation greater at Fukushima, just
Re: The real disaster (Score:2)
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http://news.discovery.com/eart... [discovery.com]
Re: The real disaster (Score:2)
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It is a very small impact scale compared to the greater tragedy of t
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> and by doing so giving a big middle finder to those victims
Like you're giving a big middle finger to the 160,000 people forced out of their perfectly good homes by Fukushima.
I'm not sure I would be so quick to ignore their suffering just to make a point.
> Do you trust those that are more driven by their agenda than human compassion?
You should definitely be asking yourself that very question.
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The first thing should be you properly study the subject before opining. There is way to much improperly informed people talking like they know what they are talking about. Site selection is about building new nuclear reactors. Both AP1000, ESBWR and a few other nuclear designs are able to safely survive total loss of power (no generators, no electricity supply from the grid, reactor shutdown) without any risk of meltdown.
Most anti nuclear people have been brainwashed with incorrect information about nuclea
Regulation, more regulation, only lawyers win (Score:5, Insightful)
Correct me if I'm wrong, but wasn't fukushima's nuclear plant already breaking Japan's law? Why would then more regulation even help the problem? Enforcing current regulations on older plants should take priority over more red tape and bureaucracy.
Re:Regulation, more regulation, only lawyers win (Score:5, Interesting)
They need to find a way to keep stupid people from running the plants. Fukushima's problems were severe, but the meltdowns were all preventable. That's the dirty little secret that Japan doesn't talk about. Any competent nuclear plant operator could have shut down Fukushima safely.
Re:Regulation, more regulation, only lawyers win (Score:5, Insightful)
A big part of the Fukushima's problems were cultural. A Japanese tendency towards social order and not questioning superiors let bad decisions worsen the situation.
Only reason it didn't go Chernobyl was the plant manager, Masao Yoshida, chose to disobey direct orders and continued to pump in sea water (his superiors told them to stop and pull out which would have led to a complete meltdown)
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Re:Regulation, more regulation, only lawyers win (Score:5, Informative)
You do realize that it takes a while for cancer to be fatal, right? Generally years.
From the time my grandmother was diagnosed with cancer until her death was less than a month. She had had it for far longer, of course.
Most high level officials/employees in Japan are incredibly old.
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You can contract, be diagnosed and die from cancer in less than 3 months in a normal situation - it entirely depends on how aggressive the cancer is.
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Yes, but the aggressive cancers are usually also the easiest to treat.
Besides, claiming somebody died of cancer is akin to claiming somebody died of 'sickness'. There are many types of cancer, some can be traced back to exposure of bad habits (asbestos, smoking) while others appear to be completely random. Since Paradide Pete did not mention which kind of cancer, we still don't know anything. Remember though that about 30% of all people die of some sort of cancer, most of them of unknown cause.
Now if you ca
Cultural? (Score:3)
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Only reason it didn't go Chernobyl was
No, it didn't go Chernobyl because it couldn't, regardless of what anyone did or failed to do. The Fukushima Daini plant reactors are all BWRs, utilizing a negative void coefficient. The original RBMK-1000 reactor design used at Chernobyl used a void coefficient of 4.7ß. The physics of the reactor designs are entirely different and while the situation at Fukushima Daini was terrible and nearly every possible human error in both planning and operation was committed, it was also about as bad as it can ge
Re: Regulation, more regulation, only lawyers win (Score:2)
Re:Regulation, more regulation, only lawyers win (Score:5, Insightful)
What really worries people in Japan is that previously undiscovered problems keep coming to light at existing plants, now that proper checks are being done. Any trust that existed has proven to have been misplaced.
To be fair, some of the issues could not have been discovered when the plants were built. Equipment to find fault lines like the ones discovered recently did not exist in the 1980s. That just makes it worse though, because it demonstrates how even now we are discovering new issues and improving our understanding of the environment.
When the consequences of an accident are so severe being 99% sure it's okay isn't enough to gamble on. Of around 450 commercial electricity producing reactors 6 have melted down catastrophically. That's a 1.33% failure rate, and doesn't include all the other serious problems at nuclear plants. It's no wonder nuclear plants can't get commercial insurance.
Re:Regulation, more regulation, only lawyers win (Score:5, Interesting)
If you went to build anything these days with 1970s era thinking, 1970s era technology and 1970s era safety standards you would be denied commercial insurance.
The problem is not that the numbers look bad, its that the numbers are horrendously skewed compared with knowledge of nuclear power generation. It's like saying cars are incredible death traps and thus refusing to build new cars with crumple zones, seat belts, and air bags.
The process / power industry has evolved, the designs have evolved, but nothing has been built. So any statistics you use about x number of meltdowns out of x reactors basically need to be adjusted for 1970s era thinking. And we did a lot of mistakes back then across all industries.
I reject the notion that if you built a nuclear reactor now that is has a 1.33% of catastrophic meltdown over 40 years.
Design evolves in contact with reality (Score:2)
The US nuclear lobby gave up on doin
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Insurance doesn't work like that. It's not just the risk of a failure, it's the cost. Even if you could get the risk down to 0.1% or less the cost of a meltdown could still be in the hundreds of billions of Euros/dollars range. In fact the potential cost is something of an unknown, because no-one can say yet what the long term consequences at Fukushima will be and therefore what the long term costs will be.
No commercial insurer is going to write a blank cheque, and even a cheque for hundreds of billions is
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So tell us how you cool a BWR
Depressurize. Core spray with fire trucks and sea water. Stop when temps drop enough to protect the zirc alloy cladding.
Big clouds of slightly radioactive steam for a couple days. No fuel damage.
containment vent system failure
Pure fiction. They prevented over pressure throughout the incident by manual venting.
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First thing to do is to get some new generators in. Get the power back on.
Re: Regulation, more regulation, only lawyers win (Score:2)
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So what you are saying is they should create new regulations that would apply current laws for new reactors to already existing nuclear reactors and where those reactors can not be upgraded they be safely shut down ;D.
Who has a financial interest in this one then? (Score:4, Insightful)
I can't think of a reason ANYONE would want the nuclear power generation industry to be less safe than it possibly could be, except where it meant that designs with potential flaws & faults would be blocked from sale to countries requiring lowest possible cost nuclear power. Blocking increased safety simply sounds like someone wants their income protected.
If current regulatory practices means that there are ways of getting round safety, then they MUST be rewritten and/or extended. Anything less I consider a dereliction of duty to the people who would live near nuclear plants.
Re:Who has a financial interest in this one then? (Score:5, Insightful)
I can't think of a reason ANYONE would want the nuclear power generation industry to be less safe than it possibly could be
I can think of a reason: Perfect safety costs infinity dollars.
Real life involves tradeoffs. There are no perfect solutions.
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That's not a contradiction at all.
The fact of the matter is, just because somebody says they are adding a new onerous task for safety, doesn't mean it actually nets you safety, or that it's reasonable.
Remember, cars kill far more people than nuclear power, even if you take the most insane exaggerations as the deaths from nuclear power throughout history, which implies that cars are, in aggregate, much more dangerous than nuclear power is, in aggregate.
The safest thing we could do is outlaw cars and aggressi
Re:Who has a financial interest in this one then? (Score:4, Interesting)
I can't think of a reason ANYONE would want the nuclear power generation industry to be less safe than it possibly could be,
How about this one: where the increased 'safety' would mostly be theater and cost so much that it would raise the expense of the already known to be far safer nuclear power plants to the point that people burn more coal, which is known to kill hundreds of thousands a year from mining accidents and pollution. That's before you get into global warming.
Germany's building coal power plants to replace their nuclear and satisfy additional demand(presumably at night).
two more reasons. It kills people, and it kills pe (Score:4, Interesting)
Others have already pointed out two reasons. One, making it a billion times safer than carrots also makes it cost a million times as much as it already does, and two, if it's more costly than coal, people will just burn coal instead. I'd like to point out two more reasons.
Suppose you make $60,000. You can only spend that $60,000 once. If you pay $100 more on your electric bill to make your power even more safe, that's $100 you don't have to spend on having your car a bit safer - two more airbags, perhaps. Spending your safety budget on the wrong things gets people killed, because any money from your pay check that ends up paying for safer energy is money that can't be used for traffic safety, food safety, etc. So the way to have the safest LIFE is to spend your safety budget where it does the most good, which probably isn't energy related.
Secondly, have you ever worked at a place that makes you change your password monthly? Pretty much everyone there increments their password, so all passwords end with two digits. Ever seen a highway with a speed limit posted that's clearly much too low? Everyone ends up speeding, but by vastly varying amounts since there's no reasonable guidance on how fast you should be going. Excessive rules are counterproductive because they just get people in the habit of ignoring the rules. If you wnt people to follow the rules, you need a) rules that are reasonable and b) people who understand why the rules they are handed are reasonable.
So the proper set of safety rules, the most effective are:
Carefully selected for maximum effect per cost, keeping the safety budget in mind.
Reasonable to follow.
Well explained, so people understand WHY they are reasonable rules that should be followed.
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This is a pretty facile assessment. The safest possible approach would be to ban the plants entirely. Once you dismiss that, then it's a trade-off.
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The problem is that no insurer will insure a nuclear plant, so governments have to take the liability on themselves. Essentially nuclear operators get subsidised free insurance, so where are normally a commercial insurer would require high standards the government has to and the government is vulnerable to lobbying (bribes) and other shenanigans.
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It's probably not a simple "increase safety" vs. "don't increase safety." The specifics matter. Were the safety measures actually going to be helpful? Or would it just create more bureaucracy to wade through and just make it harder to build more power plants?
Re: Who has a financial interest in this one then? (Score:2)
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Or, and I know this is crazy talk, we could stop pursuing radically asymmetric safety standards. Let's require all new coal plants to be as safe or safer than new nuclear plants (even just in regards to toxic and radioactive waste) before further increasing nuclear safety standards. That should make nuclear *far* more cost competitive.
It would probably also help if we made executives *personally* legally responsible for accidents, at least those due at least partially to negligence. Make sure the folks a
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Oh, and what punishments have been inflicted on the CEO of BP for the billions of dollars of economic and environmental damage done by the gulf oil well disaster? Last I saw he was still obscenely wealthy and walking around free. Hell, the corporation wasn't even required to clean up the damage other than the really obvious surface spill. They even got away with making the damage much, much worse by adding highly toxic solvents to hide more of the oil underwater.
Shrug, yawn. Have you read it? (Score:5, Insightful)
The Convention on Nuclear Safety (CNS) [iaea.org] is a treaty-ish pile of broad and anti-specific foofy diplo-language. Its purpose is not to share or agree on a single iota of practical knowledge, though over time a tiny bit might creep into it. It exists to permit and encourage the ratification of itself by as many parties as possible, and in this, it is like those "bad luck if you do not forward me" chain letters.
The Swiss proposal said in effect, stop all the music and implement every feature ever conceived to make new plant designs safer, to every existing plant. Somehow. Even if it is redundant and absurd. The whole kitchen sink. They cannot be bothered with specifics, that is not the game being played. Signing on to every broad recommendation would be a direct insult to our own NRC, which does not dabble in such diplomatic newspeak, preferring to assess actual risk, look at each site, mandate practical and specific engineering guidelines, evaluate what has been done.
See INFCIRC/449 [iaea.org] and Add.2 [iaea.org] and Add.3 [iaea.org] and Add.4 [iaea.org] and Swiss Amendment [iaea.org].
This stuff was written by people from another planet. It was probably leaked from Planet X which is orbiting with the Earth directly behind the Sun. Planet X is just like ours only its United Nations truly runs everything. That is why they send UFOs to abduct an engineer every now and then, to keep their shit from falling apart. Then we send one of our own (out of Hangar 19) to bring 'em back. Maybe we got the wrong one back, one of their 'senior diplomats' instead.
In it you will find some vague things that sound like good ideas. You're supposed to imagine that this is a world where people do not apply common sense unless they are acting directly on the recommendations of a multi-national NGO.
The compromise statement now says basically, "New nuclear power plants should be designed and constructed with the objective of preventing accidents, and minimizing off-site contamination in case of accidents. Reasonably achievable safety improvements identified at existing plants during... safety assessments should be oriented to these objectives and be implemented in a timely manner."
Engineers should not be afraid to stand up and express their anger when they are insulted. This is an insult. We lose an essential part of our human self-respect and tenacity when insults like this go unanswered. Governance of the world should not be bestowed upon folks who cannot be bothered to delve into detail. Regardless, some people will be comforted by the mere presence of the CNS, they're the people who distrust corporations and their own government, to find solace in the flowery language of international diplomacy even though there is little substance in it.
Basically, this organization-thing was spawned in 1994 and went to sleep. Fukushima woke it up, and they've been running in little circles ever since to come up with a timely response. The response has finally arrived and is on the table in early 2015. This is the kind of time frame you can expect if you pursue world governance.
Meanwhile, the United States Nuclear Power industry and its associated regulatory body NRC hit the ground running in 2011, assessing the disaster and lessons learned from Fukushima. If you are expecting me to elaborate on them and think there is something to be learned from every earthly experience you wil
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Not sure what exactly it was that got you riled up like that. Of course it is held in broad strokes, and of course it's the job of the national nuclear safety institutions to come up with, implement and oversee the guidelines and rules. It's the lowest common denominator everyone can (or should be able to) agree upon. That's how these things work.
The amendment states:
"Nuclear power plants shall be designed and constructed with the objectives of preventing accidents and, should an accident occur, mitigating
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Signing on to every broad recommendation would be a direct insult to our own NRC, which does not dabble in such diplomatic newspeak, preferring to assess actual risk, look at each site, mandate practical and specific engineering guidelines, evaluate what has been done.
I wonder if you know something I don't.
You should dig up a 2011 Associated Press article about tritium leaks at nuclear plants across the country.
Or maybe read about the Vermont Yankee nuclear plant which was so plagued by problems that it was finally shut down.
Heck, a quick google search for 'NRC regulatory capture' will kick back plenty of examples that you can use to reevaluate your position.
The way we have operated nuclear plants in the US is sound. The safety record shows it,
Well, now I'm pretty sure you don't know what you're talking about.
The safety record is public, go look at it.
The
Re: (Score:2)
You should dig up a 2011 Associated Press article about tritium leaks at nuclear plants across the country.
Since tritium has to be ingested and its half-life is short, I thought this wasn't a risk for humans.
Hell, there have been 2 nuclear plants that SCRAMed recently.
One on Christmas and the other last week, during the big north east blizzard.
Wasn't it shutdown because the powerline were gone and they could not "export" electricity out of the plant? That's how I read it anyway.
Re: Shrug, yawn. Have you read it? (Score:2, Insightful)
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Pressed for time this morning... but may I suggest a commentary and analysis of the failure modes of Fukushima reactors and fuel pool#4?
Fukushima âoeMelt Throughsâ: Fact or Fiction? [hiroshimasyndrome.com]
Fukushima Unit 4 Spent Fuel Pool [hiroshimasyndrome.com]
Fukushima Fear Uncertainty and Doubt [hiroshimasyndrome.com]
The torus is a known weak point in any boiling reactor design. Triple-redundancy is our best approach right now. High pressure operation, what can you do?
Truth is, I never set out to 'defend' light water reactors at all. I got into this to push for a r
Re: Shrug, yawn. Have you read it? (Score:2)
Re: Shrug, yawn. Have you read it? (Score:2)
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Yes the chemistry is hard, otherwise all reprocessing facilities would dissolve their stuff in molten salt at the entrance. But you don't need to reprocess just to get rid of neutron poisons. Just let it sit and wait for about a month and the poisons will have decayed into non poisonous products.
And solar can not provide all the energy we need, unless you redefine 'need' and 'we' and leave the rest of humanity to die of starvation. Add to that some nasty phenomenons called weather and seasons.
The reason we
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I read the proposal and it seems sensible. What they are saying is that best practice should be done everywhere, and that all plants should be brought up to a high baseline spec so that in the event of problems people are not looking for schematics and trying to figure out what the best course of action for reactor type A with hack B and upgrade C at location D.
We learned NOTHING from Fukushima.
Because there was nothing to learn.
We learned that hubris is the biggest danger. Same with Chernobyl. People thought they knew what they were doing. They thought that safety rules wer
Use France as a prototype? (Score:4, Insightful)
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Just thinking about reports on earthquakes and flooding is expensive as the press and locals do read the reports and ask more difficult questions.
The need for pressure-venting flaps and what role they could have or how they would work when needed?
The costs of parts, the ability to fit, look after and even buy quality parts is the main issue in the US.
The site
I grew up next to this one (Score:2)
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It's funny this sort of thing can happen when the nuke shills keep telling you that there's so many safety nets and inspections and regulations that nothing could ever possibly go wrong.
I personally think that it is probably possible to build a safe reactor, but there's no accounting for the human factor. That, and the unsolved waste problem. We here in Germany are also slowly realizing that nuclear power isn't quite as cheap as we've been told, now that waste disposal as well as decommissioning costs of pl
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Yes, previous designs had drawbacks, but if you paint everyone pro nuclear energy as 'shill', I don't think it is any use to argue with you. You will not convince me, nor will my arguments convince you.
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Nothing bad actually happened. No one was killed or injured.
So much safer than your gas and steel industies
http://www.al.com/news/birming... [al.com]
http://blog.al.com/spotnews/20... [al.com]
http://www.bizjournals.com/pit... [bizjournals.com]
http://blog.al.com/live/2013/0... [al.com]
Maybe the current regs are too strict (Score:2)
Nuclear is currently the safest energy source (measure in deaths per KWh http://www.forbes.com/sites/ja... [forbes.com] ). Even in the worst combination of things going wrong, the harm to people is small, while there are hundreds of fatal accidents in the fossil fuel industry each year (search for something like 'gas explosion' on google news).
Imagine if cars were held to the same standards as nuclear power plants. You'd need to get crash rates below 1 in 100 million user years. Make sure that even in the worst crash im
Re:I don't know about the US government's stance.. (Score:4, Insightful)
Exactly. Th problem is generally that the existing laws are ignored in the name of profits, becasue all the *individuals* calling the shots benefit from corporate profits, but suffer no penalties for corporate malfeasance. We could fix that.
To start with, how about we make CEOs personally responsible for any and all negligence that occurs on their watch? Start with liquidating their assets, with no "trust fund" safe harbors permitted, as ill gotten gains. And then proceed to criminal penalties.
Re: I don't know about the US government's stance. (Score:2)
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There is a difference between normal imperfections, and gross willful negligence such as caused the Fukushima disaster, the BP gulf oil spill, etc, etc, etc.
Re: yep (Score:3)
Your government is what sucks not you. Actually it us not the administration itself, but your lobby driven ggovernment.
Its the same shit which has been established by the EU through EU commission.
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It's actually greed (of money/power/prestige/etc). Individuals, governments, corporations.