Slashdot is powered by your submissions, so send in your scoop

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
United States Earth Government Power

Nuclear Energy: The Good News and the Bad News In the EPA Clean Energy Plan 121

Lasrick writes: Peter Bradford explains what the EPA's new Clean Power Plan has in store for nuclear energy. He provides an excellent explanation of the details of the plan, and how the nuclear industry benefits (or doesn't). "The competitive position of all new low-carbon electricity sources will improve relative to fossil fuels. New reactors (including the five under construction) and expansions of existing plants will count toward state compliance with the plan's requirements as new sources of low-carbon energy. Existing reactors, however, must sink or swim on their own prospective economic performance—the final plan includes no special carbon-reduction credits to help them."
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Nuclear Energy: The Good News and the Bad News In the EPA Clean Energy Plan

Comments Filter:
  • by Anonymous Coward

    Bow to my royalty!

  • Oh boy... Nuclear! (Score:5, Interesting)

    by FlyHelicopters ( 1540845 ) on Friday September 25, 2015 @04:46PM (#50601131)

    3 points...

    1. I believe that nuclear energy must be part of our nation's power supply. Wind and solar should as well, but they alone won't do it, we need nuclear to get off coal, oil, and natural gas.

    2. I believe that anyone running a nuclear plant needs to be responsible for the total end to end costs of it, from site prep to site clean when the place is shut down.

    3. I believe we must repeal the restrictions and bans on various types of reactors. We need new designs, the ability to build breeder reactors, run them on plutonium, and develop newer safer designs.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

    Nuclear waste is a concern, but keep in mind that waste that is highly radioactive generally has a short half-life and waste that is long lasting is generally not very radioactive to begin with, or isn't after a short while.

    ---

    As a side note, I'm always reluctant to say "more government anything", however it is possible that nuclear reactors are just not something that for-profit companies should run, since the temptation to shortcut safety is always present. The US Navy has used nuclear power for years with very few problems, perhaps we should simply have the Navy run our reactors and sell the power.

    • by Todd Palin ( 1402501 ) on Friday September 25, 2015 @04:58PM (#50601183)

      Your item two is in serious conflict with item one. How can nuclear energy be part of our nations power supply if the industry is responsible for the total end costs. The article explains that at a cost of 19 cents/kwh no one will build any nuclear power plant since solar and wind can be built for much less. So, really, if nuclear isn't subsidized, it isn't going to happen.

      Nuclear power has always depended on subsidies and it can't survive without those subsidies. It is just too expensive and it seems unlikely that there will be any serious change in the economic arena.

      • by FlyHelicopters ( 1540845 ) on Friday September 25, 2015 @05:14PM (#50601291)

        The question I would ask in response is why is nuclear so expensive?

        At its core, it shouldn't be. It is simply heat decay of radioactive materials heating a liquid to run steam turbines, it is simple stuff in concept, but seems to be insanely expensive in practice. One of the challenges is that we have never allowed economies of scale into nuclear, every plant is a one-off build and they are spaced too far apart to really develop. It is like hand building cars vs. Ford's assembly line. Wind and solar are made on assembly lines, so it is hard to compare them. Get nuclear up to 50% of the world's power generation and it may well get cheap.

        The other issue is that if price alone determined what we build, then coal, oil, and natural gas would continue to make sense.

        Finally, keep in mind that we like a dependable power grid. Wind and solar vary from place to place, and while the idea of "the wind is always blowing somewhere" sounds nice, it often isn't blowing where you need it.

        We would need a whole new power grid to really make wind and solar work like people want it to, and that would change the economics of both options.

        • by Todd Palin ( 1402501 ) on Friday September 25, 2015 @05:33PM (#50601415)

          A whole new power grid is probably where we are headed. Tesla is cranking up its battery business precisely for this reason. If every home had a car or two with a battery that could be tapped for grid supplementation, the grid can be very dependable. And don't forget at least part of the US has huge hydro plants that can be kicked in when needed to balance the grid to demand. The barriers here are only political. The timeline to make these changes makes the timeline for nuclear power seem positively glacial.

          A new nuclear power plant takes decades to plan and construct. Wind and solar can be implemented in a few years, depending on the scale of the individual project. Why would we subsidize a nuclear plant that would take decades when we can have new wind or solar up and running in a few years?

          • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

            If every home had a car or two with a battery that could be tapped for grid supplementation

            That is a MASSIVE 'IF"... And you're assuming I WANT my car battery to take wear and tear to balance the grid...

            The barriers here are only political.

            You may have a different idea of what "only" means than I do... those are some of the biggest barriers that exist, they don't go away just because you wave your hand and say "politics be gone!".

            A new nuclear power plant takes decades to plan and construct.

            Then perhaps that is the problem that needs fixing. We designed, invented, built, and used nuclear power and weapons from scratch in less time than it takes to build one plant. When no one knew how to u

            • by Todd Palin ( 1402501 ) on Friday September 25, 2015 @08:57PM (#50602265)

              Not a massive "if" at all. Here is how it works. You buy an electric car and keep it plugged in. You charge it when energy costs are low, and SELL electricity back to the grid when rates are high. This is assuming you want to make some spare cash while your car is parked. Most cars will be out driving during at least part of the daylight hours when solar power is being generated. As the sun goes down the car can sell some of its leftover power while demand is still high but solar power is unavailable. The battery will be recharged later in the night when demand for power is down but power is still being generated by fixed output sources like coal, nuclear, and geothermal plants.

              No one is forced to participate. If you want to make some cash you sign up for this. If you imagine even half of the electric cars participating in this program, you have a massive power storage grid. And there are more electric cars being built every day.

              Second, the political barriers in the power grid involve power companies cooperating to maintain power availability. This isn't an insurmountable problem. This is really different from the political issues that surround the construction of nuclear plants.

              • Here is how it works. You buy an electric car and keep it plugged in. You charge it when energy costs are low, and SELL electricity back to the grid when rates are high.

                My power rates are the same, 24/7.

                And there are more electric cars being built every day.

                Yes, but the number is a rounding error and will remain so for a long time. Longer than we'd want to wait for such a system.

                • OK, this is the politics thing I mentioned earlier. Your power rates shouldn't be the same 24/7 since the electric utility pays a vastly different rate for power depending on supply and demand. If they passed these changes on to you, there would be incentives for you to make choices that would be beneficial to the operation of the power grid so that it would require less peak generating capacity, i.e. fewer power plants. If you had variable power rates you could save money by doing laundry in the late eve

                  • Your power rates shouldn't be the same 24/7 since the electric utility pays a vastly different rate for power depending on supply and demand.

                    Are you so sure about that?

                    • Yes. Electricity is bought and sold in long term contracts and short term spot markets with a full range of future markets and price hedging. The spot market for peak power on a hot summer day occasionally exceeds the retail price that fixed rate consumers pay. The prices vary yearly to hourly. Some contracts are for peak power for five minutes. Check this out for a primer in electricity markets.
                      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

                    • Are you sure that is how it works... where *I* live...

                      Maybe I should have been more specific...

          • Large nuclear does take time. If using small reactors that are the same size as the majority of our coal plants (100 mw), these would fast and safe to install.
        • The question I would ask in response is why is nuclear so expensive?

          Because they can't increase capacity because they can't build new plants because of the anti-nuke people, and so they are forced to maintain and run old plants and verify their safety to the NRC (which costs a lot). Nuclear would be cheap generation except for this.

          • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

            Nonsense. There is great opposition to wind farms, solar farms, solar thermal collectors, coal plants, gas plants and frakking. Yet they all get done.

            If NIMBYs and a few protesters really could stop all this stuff we would have no energy at all. The lawsuits and protests are a tiny, tiny fraction of the cost of a plant costing many billions of dollars to build, and even more to operate over its lifetime.

            Maybe you should go and protest against the anti-nuke people, see how much difference it makes.

            • That's because every change to a nuclear plant requires an act of congress. I'm serious.

              In 2011-2012, ASME re-defined SA105 rolled steel. Arbitrarily, and the change was nonsensical. Millions of dollars worth of steel being used in in construction of Vogtle was suddenly no longer useable, and the design requirements for aspects of the plant required SA105 steel that was no longer possible to forge.

              Vendors requested deviation to a superior steel to meet the delivery requirements, but WEC had to get congre

              • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

                Maybe it's just impossible to have a well regulated and low cost nuclear industry. Certainly no country in the world can claim to have both of those things.

        • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

          The question I would ask in response is why is nuclear so expensive?

          It costs a lot to build, but proved cost effective over time. Existing plants are very economical, we need to keep them going and not let market shifting policies force them out.

          Cost of Exiting Generation - IEA REPORT – 2015

          http://www.google.com/url?sa=t... [google.com]

          EXISTING NUCLEAR: $50/MWH
          EXISTING WIND : VARIES BETWEEN 45 and 140 $/MWH
          EXISTING SOLAR: VARIES BETWEEN 150 and 300 $MWH

          • by MrL0G1C ( 867445 )

            A very disingenuous post - taking the cost from the middle of the nuclear life-cycle.

            $50 for nuclear does not include initial costs and quite likely also omits some waste storage costs and is hugely optimistic about decommissioning costs. The $50 is for power stations that are roughly 30 years old and so have paid off their construction costs and haven't yet hit the age where increasing maintenance costs makes them prohibitively expensive. Some nuclear power stations apply to extend their licenses and then

            • I like how you go out and find worst case numbers for nuke, best case numbers for solar and wind, and then compare them. I used one credible source, with same case numbers for all.

              Waste and decommissioning costs are most certainly included in the levelized per MWH costs I presented.

              Please, in the future, be consistent with your inputs and how you use them.
              • by MrL0G1C ( 867445 )

                No new nuclear power station can supply energy at $50 per MW, that's pure fantasy.

                The numbers I linked for renewables are based on agreed contracts.

                Show the evidence for $50. You can't.

        • "We would need a whole new power grid to really make wind and solar work like people want it to"

          This is a really significant factor. Utilities propose building a 'smart grid' to accommodate large amounts of renewables, while at the same time adding long-neglected protection against EMP and solar storms. The first component of Smart Grid is the 'smart meter' which continuously monitors load and reports it electronically. Right now my town is embroiled in controversy over installation of smart meters, because

          • ^ That of course requires that South Dakota is connected to Arizona...

            The whole nation isn't one power grid. Texas is the simple example, being almost, but not quite totally cut off from the rest of the nation...

            • That's the plan for Smart Grid. The idea is to have as many different fluctuating sources on the same grid as possible, so that power can be wheeled over short periods o time from one place to the other as demand and supply both fluctuate. The big dream of renewable enthusiasts is that at any moment there will always be enough power coming from somewhere to meet the demand. Control of your major appliances through smart meters is a way of adjusting the demand when necessary.

              • Control of your major appliances through smart meters is a way of adjusting the demand when necessary.

                And this is where that dream goes sideways...

                I have no interest in the grid, or someone else, deciding when my washer and dryer run, when my hot water is on or off, etc.

                The cost to power them today is trivial, I'm not interested in giving up what I have, which is reliable 24/7 power that allows me to turn on anything I want, any time I want.

                Ask any mother with kids who has 5 loads of laundry to do on Monday during the day while the kids are at school, and she'll tell you the same thing.

        • We would need a whole new power grid...

          old idea [geni.org]...

        • The question I would ask in response is why is nuclear so expensive?

          At its core, it shouldn't be. ...

          The situation you have with power plants is that turbine costs are pretty much the same per watt -- whether you run steam, burn natural gas, run water (e.g. hydro), or have the wind turn it. Yes, there are quite a bit of engineering differences in the details, but everything in modern power production is pretty optimized so you end up with costs in the same general range. Now you can't run uranium (or coal) through a turbine, so you need a separate stage to heat the water (or working fluid of your choice)

      • by Mr D from 63 ( 3395377 ) on Friday September 25, 2015 @06:09PM (#50601561)
        All power sources have gotten subsidies over the years, mainly because abundant low cost energy is seen a central to a thriving economy. Nuclear has received a lot of subsidies, but has also produce huge amounts of clean air power in return. If you calculated in on a per MWH basis, no energy source has ever been subsidized nearly as heavily as solar and wind are. Its not even close. And that includes estimating future generation from installed sources. If you would give nuclear 1/3 of what solar and wind are getting on a per MWH basis, there would be a rush to get going.

        Levelized cost projections from a credible, objective source can be found here: http://www.eia.gov/forecasts/a... [eia.gov]

        Of course, there is value in being consistent and dispatchable rather than variable and non-dispatchable that is not reflected in these numbers, nor are the cost of overcapacity required if were were to be fully wind and solar based. What is included in the levelized cost for nuclear is waste disposal and decommissioning, just in case you were wondering.
        • That is wrong. Nuke, coal, fossil fuels have been subsidized since they started. And when each was started, they were much larger subsidies than wind or solar.
          • Coal and nuclear have generated much more power as well. Like I said, calculate on a per MWH basis and it is not even close. Solar and Wind get much more.
            • Coal and nuclear have generated much more power as well. Like I said, calculate on a per MWH basis and it is not even close.

              Be sure to calculate in the costs of cleanup of coal, which would be basically infinite because we know of no way to get all those radioactives released back into the coal plants. And we can find plants out of compliance with emissions as fast as we can pay people to check them.

        • That oil, gas and coal still get subsidies is almost unbelievable to me! All the talk of alternative energy, and instead of taking away those subsidies they just give higher ones to renewable energy. It would save governments a lot more money if they reduced those subsidies and cut off the polluting ones.

          The bigger problem with Nuclear though, is that they are the only industry that is being held accountable for long term waste. In Canada we have lots and lots of tailings ponds from all sorts of minin
        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          Problem is the levelized cost tells you nothing about the future cost of building new capacity. As you point out, nuclear is only cheap because of the massive subsidy, but governments have realized that it isn't worth it. France went all out with nuclear and it became a welfare programme for EDF and its shareholders. Same in the US, the promises of cheap energy when the technology matured in return for the free money didn't pan out, the subsidies dried up and were shifted to other technologies that needed d

          • No, I did not point out nuclear is only cheap because of subsidy. In fact, I point out that on a per MWH basis, solar and wind get much greater subsidies than nuclear ever has or will get. But if you look at the IEA levelized cost projections report issued in 2015, which do not include subsidies and therefore are good numbers, you'll see nuclear fares quite well even for new designs.

            You can make your rhetorical claims, but the fact that nuclear has given the US its greatest source of carbon free generati
            • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

              Nuclear gets far, far more subsidy than renewables. Unlimited liability instead l insurance for free is pretty much unmatched, except perhaps for the externalised cost of coal paid for by taxes.

              • Have you ever tried calculating on a per MWH basis. You will be surprised. No energy source has ever seen subsidies like solar and wind are getting on that basis.

                Also, as for as taxpayer funded, nuclear returns and has returned more tax revenue per subsidy dollar. From local property taxes, to wages, to procurement sales taxes, more money comes back to the US taxpayer than is spent. For solar, a large chuck goes straight to Asia to pay for the panels. Wind isn't as bad in that regard, but is still tax ne
              • Let me help you get past your misconceptions and introduce some hard reality regarding subsidies;

                http://www.dailykos.com/story/... [dailykos.com]

                2013 Subsidies per MWh
                Nuclear: $2.10 per Mwh
                Solar: $580.64 per Mwh
                Wind: $35.37 per Mwh


                And on top of that, Nuclear is returning more back via taxes than it is taking in.
      • So you are saying that a company shouldn't be responsible for it's actions.

        Nuclear power does require specialized clean up. if the industry can't clean up after itself why should it be the government's job to do so?

        That is why I don't understand republicans. you preach responsibility but when it is your turn to be responsible you run away like cowards and ask someone else to do it. If you really want to be responsible for your actions then you have to take full responsibility.

      • The article explains that at a cost of 19 cents/kwh no one will build any nuclear power plant since solar and wind can be built for much less. So, really, if nuclear isn't subsidized, it isn't going to happen.

        The 19 cents/kWh is for a new 1600 MW (net) plant [wikipedia.org] planned in Virginia, which is expected to cost $19 billion.

        San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station units 2 and 3 were built for about $10.3 billion [eia.gov] in 2015 dollars, and generated 2x1075 MW = 2150 MW (net). It was decommissioned in 2012 after 29 year

    • But Nuclear! (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Irate Engineer ( 2814313 ) on Friday September 25, 2015 @05:13PM (#50601285)

      The problem right now is that people don't want to see new, safer, more efficient nuclear plants being built, because they're nuclear!

      Unfortunately, it means that they spend their time protesting right outside the gates of older, creaky, less safe and more expensive nuclear plants that the operators would actually love to shut down so they could build and operate the newer, safer, more efficient designs.

      Believe it or not, the folks that actually live near and work at nuclear plants have more than a passing interest in safe nuclear power, and don't want their kids glowing after dark any more than any other parent. I know, it's crazy, but it's true!

      If these people could get their heads out of their asses they might realize that, if nuclear energy must be utilized, that allowing newer, safer plant designs to be built would be the smartest path. Though I'm afraid clear and logical thinking isn't a strong point of the anti-nuclear crowd.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        The problem right now is that people don't want to see new, safer, more efficient nuclear plants being built, because they're nuclear!

        Actually, I've been finding it quite the opposite: Almost everyone I talk to, liberal, conservative, green, libertarian; is okay with nuclear power. The ONLY place I see any sort of significant anti-nuclear sentiment is in the NEWS - pundits, demagogues, op-eds, "journalist" blog posts, and so forth. The few people I've spoken with who didn't like nuclear, changed their minds after I explained what radiation is, how it works, and showed them actual numbers on deaths caused by nuclear in comparison to other

        • Now who the hell modded this Insightful post down? Paid shills, I suppose. I've just burned my last mod point, otherwise I would mod up.
      • by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Friday September 25, 2015 @06:59PM (#50601821)
        the problem is that we live in a world where businesses are not held accountable for their actions. Look at VW. Their CEO resigns and gets a 30 million golden parachute. Look at GM and Toyota. Token fines that aren't even a fraction of their annual profits for something that deaths were linked to. Christ, look at Fukushima. Just the idea that some of the people responsible might get indicted is historical and even there it's only happening because of a bizarre loophole the 1% forgot to close. It's the old "Don't spill the blood of kings" crap.

        If you want to have a gov't run nuke plant then fine. Take the profit motive out of it. But I wouldn't even trust that because sooner or later a bunch of those free market yabos are gonna want to hand it of to a private contractor in the name of efficiency. Until you can tell me how to stop that or make it more profitable for the plants to be safe than dangerous in the _short_ term then I won't trust nukes.
        • by Irate Engineer ( 2814313 ) on Friday September 25, 2015 @08:07PM (#50602099)

          Until you can tell me how to stop that or make it more profitable for the plants to be safe than dangerous in the _short_ term then I won't trust nukes.

          This is EXACTLY the problem, summed up in your own words. You don't trust "nukes" and so won't let them shut down old plants and build new plants in a timely fashion that WOULD allow them to be more profitable and much safer generators!

          What you don't get is that safety IS the biggest cost driver in nuclear generation. Operators would really, really like to build and operate reliable and safe plants because that would increase their profits in addition to being the right thing to do. But they can't because people "don't trust nukes". That attitude puts the operators in an impossible position.

          • You don't trust "nukes" and so won't let them shut down old plants and build new plants in a timely fashion that WOULD allow them to be more profitable and much safer generators!

            They still don't have a plan to deal with their waste. If I just stack my trash up, the county will come along and haul it away, and bill me for the disposal costs. If I do it repeatedly they'll probably charge me with something, too. Show me the waste disposal plan, which would be part of any responsible nuclear plant proposal.

          • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

            New reactors won't fix the management, regulatory, legal and human problems.

            Realistically, no commercial company would ever agree to the measures required. No company could afford the liability. Again, new designs won't fix this.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Hanford is calling, they want to talk to you about you opinion on nuclear waste and its halflife

  • by phantomfive ( 622387 ) on Friday September 25, 2015 @04:47PM (#50601137) Journal
    According to the article, the bonuses to nuclear are enough to help, but not enough to actually convince someone to built a reactor:

    "Only buckets of money from taxpayers and customers can lead to new reactor construction. The Clean Power Plan contains no such buckets."

    This quote from later in the the article is priceless (and a little horrifying):

    “Nuclear power requires obedience. Demand what you really need. Just look at Donald Trump. What can possibly go wrong?”

    Not sure what to think of it.

    • “Nuclear power requires obedience. Demand what you really need. Just look at Donald Trump. What can possibly go wrong?”

      Not sure what to think of it.

      May 2016

      (Atlanta) Thousands were horrified today as Donald Trump's newest Trump Tower, built on the outskirts of the Atlanta Metro Area, was subjected to low levels of radiation from a minor ventilation breach at a recently-completed nuclear power plant. The breach, which released levels of radiation normally considered harmless, caused Trump's hair to mutate into a separate organism during a rally at the new high-rise. Experts are baffled at how this could have happened, but on

  • by turkeydance ( 1266624 ) on Friday September 25, 2015 @05:02PM (#50601207)
    so should every power source. it works or it doesn't. on its own.
    • by FlyHelicopters ( 1540845 ) on Friday September 25, 2015 @05:16PM (#50601313)

      While that sounds nice, the issue there would be, "then we should build lots and lots of natural gas and coal power plants, since they cost less than solar and wind do.

      I live in Texas, we make more wind power than any other state. We have the right to buy our power from any of dozens of different companies.

      Wind power costs more than coal power does, when you get the bill. Maybe it shouldn't, but it does.

      • While that sounds nice, the issue there would be, "then we should build lots and lots of natural gas and coal power plants, since they cost less than solar and wind do.

        NG and coal only cost less if they are able to externalize the cost of the pollution they produce including the cost of anthropogenic global warming from the greenhouse gases they emit. If they're going to stand on their own that cost has to be included.

        • NG and coal only cost less if they are able to externalize the cost of the pollution they produce including the cost of anthropogenic global warming from the greenhouse gases they emit. If they're going to stand on their own that cost has to be included.

          Maybe, that is a debatable point...

          AGW is still not settled (it really isn't, if it was, there wouldn't be debates about it). There is no doubt that the climate is getting warmer, but you can't tell me what percentage is caused by mankind.

          Putting that issue aside, the question then becomes, what is that cost? Any price you put on it is simply made up.

          Then you also need to do the same, add in the cost of producing the solar panels and wind turbines, which isn't very green either. Probably less than coal a

          • AGW is still not settled (it really isn't, if it was, there wouldn't be debates about it). There is no doubt that the climate is getting warmer, but you can't tell me what percentage is caused by mankind.

            There is practically no debate about the basics of AGW in the scientific circles that study climate. The basics include that CO2 is a greenhouse gas, that more CO2 in the atmosphere will cause warming and that humans are the primary cause of the rise in CO2 levels. All known natural forcings of climate when added together indicate that we should be in a slight cooling trend so it's likely that the percentage caused by human caused increases in greenhouse gases are responsible for more than 100% of the war

            • Risk management principles say that if there's a possibility of higher risk it's worth spending more to try and avoid it.

              I would agree with that...

              But the question then becomes... how much more?

              That becomes a political issue, not a science issue...

          • Putting that issue aside, the question then becomes, what is that cost? Any price you put on it is simply made up.

            Actually its quite simple. The cost of sequestering the carbon dioxide produced along with the energy. (Which could fluctuate with market/technology). In other words, the extra cost should be the same cost to clean up the extra pollution produced. Otherwise the polluter is being subsidized by a price paid by others.

            Say you compare bio-diesel with regular diesel, bio-diesel would be expected to cost more in dollars because it involved removing CO2 from the atomosphere. To be comparable with regular

            • Actually its quite simple. The cost of sequestering the carbon dioxide produced along with the energy.

              That sure sounds simple, but you know that isn't going to happen...

              We just don't like where these numbers lead and no one wants to penalize their country by acting responsible while everyone else just pollutes the world to their economic advantage.

              At the end of the day, none of this matters unless you figure out how to apply it to the whole world, because only half of the planet doing it right doesn't really help.

    • so should every power source. it works or it doesn't. on its own.

      How about offshore wind in the U.S.? That was killed off by a handful of billionaires with lawyers who didn't want to see wind turbines out on the horizon from their beach front property. The technology is well established and is very cost effective in Europe, pumping out tens of gigawatts of power, but offshore wind got cock-blocked in the U.S. by a few rich children who don't really didn't give a damn about U.S. jobs, energy independence, or the environment.

      The best thing a government can do is ensure pro

  • Where are they building new reactors? Last I heard all new development in the us was halted after fukushima.

    • Re:Where? (from TFA) (Score:5, Informative)

      by willworkforbeer ( 924558 ) on Friday September 25, 2015 @05:24PM (#50601379)
      "The four reactors being built in Georgia and South Carolina were supposed to demonstrate that new construction techniques and a new licensing process had finally brought nuclear plant cost overruns and construction delays under control, but they have shown the reverse. Construction of the fifth new US reactor, Watts Bar Unit 2 in Tennessee, began in 1973."
      • I had to look this up, because I was wondering how the heck it would take 40+ years to finish building a nuclear reactor. Apparently, the construction was started in 1973 but halted in 1988, then restarted in 2006 again. It's very close to completion - either end of this year or early next year.

        Sort of sad that we're just now opening a reactor with state-of-the-art 1970's technology here in 2015.

        • by sims 2 ( 994794 )

          So it's new but still not quite new? :(

          There have been much better designs made since the 1970's I keep thinking someone will build one somewhere..

          • I had the opportunity to go and see a talk by Dr. Charles Till, he was the director of the Argonne National Laboratory West, and developed the Integral Fast Reactor. A great speaker and very passionate about his work there. I could hear the frustration in his voice still when he talked about their work being shut down during the Clinton Administration, and this talk was in 2013, many years after. I was extremely impressed with how far he pushed everyone to go to actually BREAK their reactor, he wanted ne
  • Found no mention of terms "thorium" or "molten salt reactor". Pity.
  • I live eight miles from a nuke that is at sea level with a rising sea and disappearing beaches. It makes me wonder what kind of hell closing that plant and cleaning it out will be. Meanwhile in Miami they also have a nuclear plant that rising seas will effect. So just how does Miami evacuate 2 million people permanently.
  • I like the fact that the 'old' reactors do not get any kind of credit. The incentive should be for newer, better designed reactors. The one that makes the most sense economically (for a lot of different reasons) are Thorium based reactors, especially LFTR designs. The problem with Uranium and Plutonium based power plants is you NEED a breeder reactor to fuel them. Th based designs can breed their own fuel and are orders of magnitude safer. Changing the rules on classification of the handling of nuclear

Think of it! With VLSI we can pack 100 ENIACs in 1 sq. cm.!

Working...