US Panel Extends Nuclear Power Tax Credit (thehill.com) 259
Slashdot reader mdsolar quotes The Hill:
The House Ways and Means Committee voted Wednesday to remove a key deadline for a nuclear power plant tax credit... The credit was first enacted in 2005 to spur construction of new nuclear plants, but it has gone completely unused because no new plants have come online since then...
It would likely benefit two reactors under construction at Southern Co.'s Vogtle Electric Generating Plant in Georgia and another two at Virgil C. Summer Nuclear Generating Station in South Carolina. Both projects are at risk of missing the 2020 deadline... "When Congress passed the 2005 act, it could not have contemplated the effort it would take to get a nuclear plant designed and licensed," said representative Tom Rice (R-S.C.).
Although one Democrat criticized the extension by arguing that nuclear power "does better in a socialist economy than in a capitalist one, because nuclear energy prefers to have the public do the cleanup, do the insurance, cover all of the losses and it only wants the profits."
It would likely benefit two reactors under construction at Southern Co.'s Vogtle Electric Generating Plant in Georgia and another two at Virgil C. Summer Nuclear Generating Station in South Carolina. Both projects are at risk of missing the 2020 deadline... "When Congress passed the 2005 act, it could not have contemplated the effort it would take to get a nuclear plant designed and licensed," said representative Tom Rice (R-S.C.).
Although one Democrat criticized the extension by arguing that nuclear power "does better in a socialist economy than in a capitalist one, because nuclear energy prefers to have the public do the cleanup, do the insurance, cover all of the losses and it only wants the profits."
Mature technology (Score:3, Insightful)
Wouldn't need subsidies (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Wouldn't need subsidies (Score:5, Interesting)
It's failing on its own merits. Even with subsidies, it's too expensive and can't compete.
The UK just approved a new nuclear plant (Hinckley Point 3) which requires consumers to buy power at a price much higher than wind, solar, coal, or anything else.
It was approved in the best traditions of corrupt government... advisers to government had a financial stake in it's approval.
Also, the plant gives the Chinese access to French and UK nuclear technology and control over the plant... a win for everyone except the UK.
Re:Wouldn't need subsidies (Score:5, Insightful)
(On the international stage, there are also entirely legitimate concerns over weaponization and nuclear proliferation.)
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Ah yes, the powerful anti-nuclear lobby which has resources of thousands of dollars has somehow managed to push aside the nuclear industry which has resources of billions of dollars.
"If only we didn't have all those pesky regulations and have to worry out nuclear waste for thousands of years and could have more subsidies and free insurance then we would be much cheaper."
Nuclear power has gone from too cheap to meter to too expensive to matter and it has nobody to blame but itself.
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Re:Wouldn't need subsidies (Score:4, Insightful)
Also, the "thousands of years" argument always indicates a profound ignorance of the time value of money.
Also: keep it on site. Nuclear doesn't generate tons of waste, that's the whole point. It uses very, very little fuel. It can all be stored on site, unless the plant is closed down, which in principle it wouldn't ever need to be because nuclear is by far the cheapest method we have of generating power.
Nuclear power has gone from too cheap to meter to too expensive to matter and it has nobody to blame but itself.
Painfully ignorant. Do you understand that nuclear power works in exactly the same as coal except instead of trucking in tons of coal you simply put a pile of fissile material under the water and let it sit there for a very long time before you need to refuel [xkcd.com] ? The only expense is the initial refining of the U235 but after that you can breed more fuel.
Beyond these relatively small fixed costs, nearly every single dollar that nuclear costs more than coal is due to increased safety regulations. Some of those regulations we obviously need. One of those safety concerns (namely, security and proliferation concerns) is actually quite worrying. But it is completely wrong to argue that nuclear is intrinsically more expensive than paying to dig up and cart around thousands and thousands and thousands of tons of coal.
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Painfully ignorant. Do you understand that nuclear power works in exactly the same as coal except instead of trucking in tons of coal you simply put a pile of fissile material under the water and let it sit there for a very long time before you need to refuel [xkcd.com] ? The only expense is the initial refining of the U235 but after that you can breed more fuel.
Beyond these relatively small fixed costs, nearly every single dollar that nuclear costs more than coal is due to increased safety regulations. Some of those regulations we obviously need. One of those safety concerns (namely, security and proliferation concerns) is actually quite worrying. But it is completely wrong to argue that nuclear is intrinsically more expensive than paying to dig up and cart around thousands and thousands and thousands of tons of coal.
Hold on a second "nearly every single dollar that nuclear costs more than coal is due to increased safety regulations. Some of those regulations we obviously need." yes we do. Do you care to identify the safety regulations that you think we do not need that is adding to the cost of nuke?
Also: "One of those safety concerns (namely, security and proliferation concerns) is actually quite worrying." -- yes, I agree that is the major concern for me. Breeder reactors are generally frowned upon because of their r
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The additional downside to breeder reactors is the increased nuclear waste and higher potential for radiation exposure. These are not marginal concerns, these are quite frankly life altering and life ending concerns.
This isn't supported by the evidence or by reasonable hypotheticals. If the engineers and operators can refrain from doing extremely stupid experimental things (Chernobyl), the danger to human life is clearly much lower than coal and oil. Even using old, moronic designs that went into meltdown mode when they lost power to the machinery, the misery and su
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Wow, you live under a rock?
Also: keep it on site. Nuclear doesn't generate tons of waste, that's the whole point. It uses very, very little fuel. It can all be stored on site, unless the plant is closed down, which in principle it wouldn't ever need to be because nuclear is by far the cheapest method we have of generating power.
Perhaps you should google how many metric tons nuclear waste the USA have accumulated. And how problematic it is to store it.
Germany is completely overstrained handling its own nucle
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Nuclear power has gone from too cheap to meter to too expensive to matter and it has nobody to blame but itself.
Succint. Very well said.
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Ah yes, the powerful anti-nuclear lobby which has resources of thousands of dollars
Erm no. The anti-nuclear lobby is huge, backed by irrational science, a public mindset thanks to movies like the China Syndrome which came out right before three mile island, and ... wait there was another small insignificant thing ... oh yes political parties in nearly every country in the world.
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Erm no. The anti-nuclear lobby is huge, backed by irrational science, a public mindset thanks to movies like the China Syndrome which came out right before three mile island, and ... wait there was another small insignificant thing ... oh yes political parties in nearly every country in the world.
The oil and gas industry has pushed the anti-nuke agenda since the 70s. There is huge influence behind it and the FUD they pushed forth still shapes public ignorance today. When it came to nukes, the greens were the oil and gas industry's best tool.
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Japan is closing its breeder reactors. They didn't work, always broken or having serious accidents. They want to try again, with the goal being a working demonstrator by 2050.
So good luck getting people to invest in a technology proven to need a great deal of development and decades to come to fruition, assuming it works next time.
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It repeat after me: only needs a "great deal of development" because of safety concerns. Lock some engineers in a room overnight and tell them to build a reactor with zero safety concerns and it will be quite simple. I'm not terribly familiar with breeder technology but it cannot possibly be remotely as expensive as uranium centrifuging.
Here's my breeder reactor design and I'm 70% sure it'll work despite my
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It repeat after me: only needs a "great deal of development" because of safety concerns. Lock some engineers in a room overnight and tell them to build a reactor with zero safety concerns and it will be quite simple. I'm not terribly familiar with breeder technology but it cannot possibly be remotely as expensive as uranium centrifuging. Here's my breeder reactor design and I'm 70% sure it'll work despite my knowing almost nothing: aerosolize the U238 or other isotope-to-transmute of choice. Set up a convection system that thoroughly mixes and circulates the powder near your neutron source--this could be done in a relatively neutron-transparent liquid or (maybe) a gas. Set up your neutron detectors and thermal imaging all around the area. When fission rates increase and/or when it starts looking hot, your neutron source retracts into its safety chamber and a series of fans blows away any residue dust off of it. Resulting powder is measured and melted or compressed into appropriate ingots for fuel usage. If it's going too slow, increase rate of neutron flow. If it's too fast, reduce it. If it's so fast that it blows up, oh well, stuff blows up with oil and coal all the time. None of this is prohibitively expensive unless/until you try to make it super safe.
By that design principles, I have three better proposals: First, lets go to fusion directly. We only need to set up a containment field for Deuterium plasma, heat the plasma with lasers until there is ignition, and then keep running the plasma through an magnetohydrodynamic generator [wikipedia.org] which we can also use (with some tricks) to separate out the fusion products (heavier nucleus = less deviation in the electric or magnetic field). Easy peasy! Or we could go to an antimatter reactor - just feed hydrogen and ant
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Seriously, the point of all that nonsense (which I nonetheless hope isn't too far off the mark from what is actually possible) was that the expense of nuclear comes almost entirely from safety requirements, not from the intrinsic complexity of what's going on. We put a pile of stuff together and it gets hot. We put a pile of stuff next to the other stuff and it turns into some other desirable stuff. There are mathematics that very, very precis
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Japan has had no serious nuclear accidents; at least, not serious in terms of public safety.
Fukushima is an INES level 7 event defined as a 'Major' accident which is more severe than a INES level 6 event defined as a 'Serious' accident. You are clearly, with regards to then international communities definitions of the terms in International Nuclear Event Scale [wikipedia.org], wrong.
It repeat after me:
No, you don't know what you are talking about.
Here's my breeder reactor design and I'm 70% sure it'll work despite my knowing almost nothing
What could possibly go wrong. Go read up on EBRII, IFR. Go find out what the difference between a Fast 'Burner' and Fast Breeder.
but we don't go apeshit over it because that news story doesn't contain the magic word:
"radionuclide"......ever.
Figure out the difference between radionuclide and radioac
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Fukushima is an INES level 7 event defined as a 'Major' accident which is more severe than a INES level 6 event defined as a 'Serious' accident. You are clearly, with regards to then international communities definitions of the terms in International Nuclear Event Scale [wikipedia.org], wrong.
The "international community" is a blend of supefyingly dull simpletons, hysterical dolts and Machiavellian assholes. I don't care if they defined it as doubleplus ungood. I define "serious" in terms of the effects that hydrocarbon usage has had and is having, which directly kills people on a regular basis and in the bigger picture borders on catastrophic even if global warming is ignored.
No, you don't know what you are talking about.
Do you eat thirteen servings of carbohydrates a day or whatever the hell it was those assholes said when we were in ele
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Do you actually believe Fukushima was a "serious" public safety incident? How would you classify the BP oil spill, which killed a dozen people and affected thousands of square miles? How would you classify the multiple ongoing coal mine fires around the world that will be burning for at least the next hundred years and have resulted in entire towns being evacuated [wikipedia.org] ? How would you classify children and pregnant women being advised not to eat too much tuna because of the brain damage they or the
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I guess a problem is that we have democracy which distributes power amongst people, interest groups, NGOs etc, but we haven't managed to distribute knowledge, so we get a lot of passion mixed with simplistic views. Take for example an environmental who worked advising on carbon trading, whom I asked, what if other problems like pollution are worse than climate change? And she replied, "it doesn't matter if CO2 isn't a problem, because by forcing people to cut CO2, you are forcing them to cut production and
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Meanwhile, I'm amazed at how many people never heard of Bhopal. Why..., because it doesn't serve an agenda drive pur
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The "nuclear is expensive" claim is only true because the anti-nuclear lobby has made it that way.
This is unequivocally false. Nuclear power has been the most expensive way to generate energy since its inception. The only possibilty and the only way nuclear power in practice has been economically feasable is more or less due to the quote in the summary:
Breeder reactors are a great idea, but do nothing to
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Every one views nuclear damage as more dangerous because it is more dangerous, no ifs no buts.
You just disqualified yourself from this conversation, sorry. Global warming is, in fact, a thing. Burning coal causing our fish to accumulate mercury, which in turn lowers the IQs of our children, is a thing. If you aren't willing to compare these harmful effects to the effects of nuclear, you are an unreasonable and unthinking person.
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Well they decided to build there the most expensive and time consuming nuclear reactor around (EPR).
As for it being more expensive than wind or solar that sounds like grade A bullshit. Even with EPR. Probably comparing lowest electricity prices (when the wind blows or when the sun shines) against the average prices. Nuclear is baseload. Most of the cost in nuclear reactor construction is pouring concrete. Once its in place the plant can run for 3 decades or more.
The Chinese were already going to build the E
Re: Wouldn't need subsidies (Score:2)
Baseload is BS. There is too much baseload. They give away electricity at night.
HP C electricity cost is twice that of the average electricity cost.
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For some reason, China and France are building this reactor in the UK using a new, French EPR design:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
The Chinese are also building this type of reactor in China so pebble bed may not be working out as well as hoped.
Of course, the EPR design has its problems. It has been built twice (France and China) and both of these have safety problems that may prevent them from getting approval to operate.
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But those were nice assumptions/guesses you made.
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It would seem that it's a bad decision by the Chinese to fund/build this design since the first projects using this design are many years late and many billions of dollars over budget (and still not operating)... but, of course, it doesn't seem to be possible to build a nuclear reactor anywhere near on time or budget. The problems with the EDF reactors cover the gamut from structure (concrete and steel) to mechanical (valves, etc.). Of course, they are developing a new, enhanced, better, EPR design which pr
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The South Koreans can stick to a timetable fine. Even the Chinese used to be able to do it before the hysteria about 9/11 and Fukushima. Ever since someone decided the reactors had to be resistant against an airplane crash they take more time to build because they need more concrete to be poured.
The problems with EPR sound to me like design issues with a reactor design that has too low manufacturing tolerances and system complexity for its own good.
There are more people working with pebble bed than the Germ
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No possibility to place standard measurement equipment in the pebble-bed core, i.e. pebble bed = black box Contamination of the cooling circuit with metallic fission products (Sr-90, Cs-137) due to the insufficient retention capabilities of fuel pebbles for metallic fission products. Even modern fuel elements do not sufficiently retain strontium and cesium. improper temperatures in the core (more than 200 C above calculated values) necessity of a pressure retaining containment unresolved problems with dust formation by pebble friction (dust acts as a mobile fission product carrier, if fission products escape the fuel particles)
And so you repeat those without really understanding any of them, their significance, or how they may or may not apply to the Chinese pebble bed. You are simply a parrot.
Re: Wouldn't need subsidies (Score:2)
These issues were raised by nuclear power experts.
The Chinese need to address them.
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I am not an expert but I listen to experts. Do you not believe in science, engineering, maths?
You may not be listening to the right experts then, because nothing you stated is a problem that can't be managed.
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Let's just make the market fair by imposing similar restrictions on coal, petroleum and gas. Coal is a radioactive substance too.
Yes you are correct, but the potential of a nuclear plant releasing highly concentrated deadly amounts of radiation in to the atmosphere in quick succession is higher than that of coal. While I agree coal has a lasting effect on the environment and human health and can lead to chronic health issues, acute radiation poisoning in the short can lead to death and in the long, lead to increased cancer risks and other related health issues.
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Let it succeed or fail on it's own merits.
Then it will fail. Nuclear cannot compete directly with shale gas. No way. Not even close. If we want carbon free electricity from nuclear, then we have to either subsidize it or start taxing carbon emissions.
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Or lets just take away all subsidies and let gas rule.
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Lets just subsidize it at half the level that we are for solar and wind on a construction cost and per mwh basis.
The justification for the wind & solar subsidies is that they are only temporary support while the technology matures. So far, this has more or less worked, as both wind and solar have become far more efficient and cost effective.
With nuclear, there is no such justification. Nuclear is not getting more cost effective. It is getting worse. Building and running a nuclear plant today is way more expensive than it was 50 years ago.
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Gas is the reason nuclear is struggling.
Perhaps the hot air is escaping?
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Of course its more expensive. The specs are outrageous and they expect them to withstand an airplane crash or a large earthquake.
As for wind and solar it remains to be seen if after 3 decades they won't break down. Ever read Google's little experience with solar? They figured out they have to clean the panels more than once a year or the performance goes down significantly. To the point where it was cheaper to get it from the grid than clean them.
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Solar (the standard panels sold today) is estimated at about 25 to 30 years. It depends on location, as they don't last as long in Arizona as Seattle. So they must be completely replaced three times during the life of the nuclear plant.
Nuclear does
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With nuclear, there is no such justification. Nuclear is not getting more cost effective. It is getting worse. Building and running a nuclear plant today is way more expensive than it was 50 years ago.
Indeed! The Price Anderson Act [wikipedia.org] was a temporary measure for the Nuclear Industry. It was originally set to expire in 1967 once the industry had proved itself safe. Evidently it hasn't.
When Dixie Lee Ray was the head of the Atomic Energy Commission she proclaimed that the disposal of nuclear fuel would be the greatest non-problem in history and would be accomplished by 1985, yet here we are in 2016, thirty years past that date and still there is no high level waste disposal site anywhere. The closest anyo
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Look, let's actually examine how nuclear works: you put a pile of fissionable material near some water. It turns the water into steam, which turns a turbine. This is goes on for an extremely long time before you need more fuel [xkcd.com]. This is demonstrably and obviously much cheaper than constantly mining coal and trucking it in and burning it to boil the water to turn the same turbine. Over the
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Right. After Fukushima Daichi, all we have to do is convince the public that nukes are too safe and we need to start cutting corners.
I don't live in Japan. This article isn't about Japan. It is true that some old reactor designs are still in use worldwide and these need
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after a breeding program is established so you don't need to constantly refine more fuel.
Refining fuel from ore is far cheaper than breeding fuel. Breeder reactors cost more to run, not less. France uses breeders, and their cost of electric power is about $0.20/kWh compared to about $0.08 in America.
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If the dumbass corporate bureaucrats (I don't exonerate the nuclear power industry itself, you see) and/or regulators have somehow found a way it more expensive to make plutonium than to separate uranium... that still doesn't speak to the fundamental difficulty
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Centrifuge separation is very tedious and expensive
Not that expensive. I also don't know what you mean by tedious. Do you know how long it takes to manufacture a modern chip with photolithography?
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It takes longer the larger the U-235 fraction. A typical commercial reactor doesn't need that much enrichment (3-5%) compared with a bomb (85%).
The plutonium can be chemically separated from the waste products of a nuclear power plant using something like PUREX.
A bit of an update (Score:2)
A bit of background: In 1968 it looked as if high grade Uranium ore was going to run out since a long list of countries even including Egypt were planning to build reactors. The price of Uranium rose as a consequence.
The French response to that was to plan some fast breeders, build them, run them for decades and then shut them down. They have not built new ones because high grade Uranium ore is no longer a rarity and the deman
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You are wrong. On average nuclear is about the price of coal. The only time when its half the price of coal is when: a) the power plant is next to the coal mines, and b) you aren't using filters to scrub the coal fly ash from the exhaust.
Fukushima Daichi? NO ONE DIED. It was as safe as you can expect a building to be after an earthquake and a tsunami.
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This is the dumbest thing I have read so far today. Nukes have historically been about twice the cost of coal. If they were "obviously" cheaper, they wouldn't require subsidies, and they would have replaced coal plants long ago.
This link shows the relative cost of operating a fossil vs nuclear plant through 2014. When fuel and O&M costs are considered, nuclear comes out cheaper.
http://www.eia.gov/electricity... [eia.gov]
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We don't necessarily have to tax carbon emissions. We can tax coal, oil, and gas production instead. We can end the depletion deduction. We can make fossil fuel production companies ineligible for any subsidies or deductions. We can ban fracking.
There are plenty of things we can do to make it much more expensive to use fossil fuel than to use renewables without subsidizing nuclear or taxing carbon emissions directly.
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settling on a proven design and mass producing them.
That is exactly what the EPR [wikipedia.org] was designed to do. It is being used for the Hinkley Point Reactor [wikipedia.org], and is expected to generate electricity for double the cost of the UK's already outrageously expensive power.
So maybe a standard design isn't a magic bullet after all. If nuclear power economics could really be fixed by a minor tweak, we would have done it long ago.
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Aside from the EDF influence, the EPR is chosen largely because of the size. There are not many places to build new plants in the UK, so when you do it makes sense to build the biggest ones with the most output.
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Let it succeed or fail on it's own merits
That depends on the merits. Humans are absolutely horrible judges of the merits of technology that is better for the general population when it means they need to pay extra money for it.
We did let things run on their own merits. That's why there's dirt cheap coal power everywhere.
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You will find that this is because utilities in many states have been able to push anti-net-metering changes, making residential solar uneconomic. On the other hand, CA residential solar capacity recently hit 5% of peak capacity, triggering a change from one net metering plan to another.
As for the idea that Solar cannot be economic, let me destroy
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Even with net metering and huge tax credits solar barely moved the meter. Now you can make excuses after excuses but its just not happening. In fact, Germany is already cutting back on solar subsidies because they finally realized how much it was costing them.
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But still, assume a 30% subsidy to the Dubai contract and then find alternatives that are as cost effective.
Utilities have killed solar in the USA.
Yes, it is intermittent, but solar production is greater w
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Yes, because other energy sources don't receive subsidies?
So what is your point, that because EVERY energy source in the US has been subsidized that makes one better or worse? All power has been subsidized because there is an economic benefit to having reliable, abundant, low cost energy in the country. It has never been to pick winners or losers until renewables. Solar and Wind get more help per MWH, by a huge margin, than any other source has ever seen. Solar is intermittent AND unreliable AND requires backup to be viable. That is why it is expensive systemicall
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Got news for you.
There is NO type of power generation technology in this country that is NOT subsidized.
Mature technology like solar and wind... (Score:2)
Solar and wind can't survive without subsidies, government mandates and market intervention giving them priority on the grid. Per unit of energy produced, they receive outrageously lavish subsidies, and their preferential treatment is pushing all reliable generators out of the market, not just nuclear. It is the pinnacle of hypocrisy to criticize nuclear, which receives virtually no help. Nuclear advocates don’t even want subsidies; they want a fair marketplace and rational technology-neutral regul
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Australian consumers pay more despite nearly all of the generating capacity being coal fired plants running at a very cheap price per MW/h. You'll need more than that assertion to show that "solar and wind can't survive", since we're discussing a group of poorly regulated local monopolies often being used as hidden taxation by governments. You are also mixing up peak and base load generation sources, where it often doesn't matter if they cost a bit more (if
Nuclear subsidies are forever (Score:2)
Re: Mature technology (Score:2)
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Are you really suggesting the government shouldn't be subsidizing new things that make the world a better place when they do not provide immediate profit motive?
Grants and assistance/seed money for scientific research grant foundations, military research projects, space exploration, other pure research/science projects, sure.
Artificially distorting/masking the cost efficiency of one existing service/product versus a 'favored' new service/product through taxes and regulation that cannot otherwise compete only wastes the people's money with artificially-inflated prices (and in the case of energy prices is extremely regressive...it hurts the poorest and most vulnerabl
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Which Democrat? (Score:5, Insightful)
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Make it public run
Like Chernobyl?
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no, not like that.
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Not that I'm disagreeing with him/her. I don't like Nuclear because America doesn't have the balls to properly regulate and punish businessmen who flaunt safety. The risks are too great. It's not NIMBY. Make it public run or show me you're willing to throw people responsible for lesser disasters like oil spills in jail for 10-20 years and we'll talk. Until then it'll be like always: privatize the profits, socialize the losses.
Nice sound bite, but ths can be a rational decision for
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Nice sound bite, but this can be a rational decision for a society to get things done. Heaving too much regulatory burden on business can slow or stop progress.
After all, most likely you have no problem with government spending wads of billions on things with little or no return, covering hurricane losses, propping up industries and Amtrack, or creating a colossal high speed rail in California, or spending more on a Boston subway or Denver air port automated luggage system than the moon landing* .
* Exagger
If it's going to fail (Score:2)
What I'm sick and fucking tired of is paying $$$ in taxes every year and getting bugger all for it. I'm a socialist, not a kleptocrate. Don't just hand billions (trillions?) of infrastructure to somebody's brother in law u
Re:Which Democrat? (Score:4, Informative)
I don't like Nuclear because America doesn't have the balls to properly regulate and punish businessmen who flaunt safety.
Nuclear power is the most tightly regulated industry in the US by far. And the history of penalties and added oversight to poorer performers, and fines and even jail sentences for violations of the law is pretty clear. I guess you just haven't looked for that information.
The NRC has public meetings almost every day. You are welcome to join and learn.
I'd feel a lot better about that (Score:2)
Americans don't like experts. We don't like people telling us what to do and how to do it. I'm sorry, but that's just a fact. A study just showed th
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There was 8 years of constant outbreaks that more or less stopped when those rules went in. But they're bad for business so out they go.
So no outbreaks at all will be tolerated! Do you frequently shut down any consideration of an actual cost/benefit analysis?
You didnt address the argument that things are over-regulated at all. All you did was back-door declare that no amount of regulation is too much (because no negative outcomes will be tolerated) which is arguing against making informed decisions.
There it is on the table now. You are arguing against making an informed decision.
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So you'll forgive me if I don't want something like a nuke plant with a 50 year life cycle in my neck of the woods when I've got to worry about a few changes in political winds undoing all those regulations...
You can ignore our history which has shown that regulation tightening consistency under every president. And since it is congress, not the president, that is required to make those changes, you are worried about the wrong thing. And, BTW, newer plants will have 60 to 100 year lifespan.
The cleanup (Score:4)
nuclear power "does better in a socialist economy than in a capitalist one, because nuclear energy prefers to have the public do the cleanup, do the insurance, cover all of the losses and it only wants the profits."
As opposed to coal fired power where you just shit raw sewage continuously into the air and expect your great grandchildren to clean it up?
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And it also turned the entire Gulf of Mexico dark. Anyone else recall those satellite pictures? Can you imagine the hysteria we would have seen if that dark stuff were actual
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In actually socialist societies like Germany they are getting rid of coal and using taxation to make sure it pays for the damage it does.
Coal has to have its own insurance too.
Black swan events (Score:5, Insightful)
In contrast, subsidies for different energy sources [eia.gov] are 23.1 cents/kWh for solar, 3.5 cents/kWh for wind, and 0.2 cents/kWh for nuclear. (Tables ES4 and ES4. Solar received $4.393 billion in subsidies while generating 19,000 GWh. Wind received $5.936 billion while generating 5,936 GWh, and nuclear received $1.66 billion while generating 789,000 GWh.) That's right. The subsidy for solar is 1650x more expensive than cleaning up nuclear accidents. The subsidy for wind is 250x more expensive.
Nuclear decommissioning costs are already paid for by the NRC's Financial Assurance fund [nrc.gov]. A portion of the revenue from electricity sales are placed into this fund.
The problem with insuring nuclear plants is just a quirk of statistics. The more times you roll the dice, the narrower the bell curve becomes and the more predictable the average outcome. e.g. A 1d100 has an equal chance to produce any result between 1 and 100 - the probability distribution function is a straight line. 2d50 produces a triangular PDF, with the values in the middle tending to be more likely. 10d10 produces an even more compact PDF - a narrow normal curve with results in the middle much more likely than the extremes. And 100d0.5 will always produce 50 - its PDF is just a single peak in the middle.
This is a problem for insuring nuclear plants - because they produce so much energy you don't need very many of them. Whereas there are thousands of coal plants, and (potentially) millions of solar installations, there are only operating 100 nuclear plants in the U.S. So insuring a nuclear plant represents a greater risk for the insurer. Even though the mean outcome will be that there is 1 accident every 30 years, the chance of a 2nd or 3rd accident is still significant and the amount the insurer has to pay out may easily surpass how much they've collected in premiums if they assume the statistically most likely outcome of a single accident.
The insurance company's response is to increase the premium to also cover that 2nd or 3rd event even though they're unlikely. In contrast, with thousands of coal plants they can be much more confident that there will be (say) only 10 accidents every 30 years, and 20 or 30 accidents is extraordinarily unlikely. So the premiums can be lower, even if the average risk (mean) is exactly the same. If there were some way to build thousands of small-scale nuclear plants instead of 100 large ones, private insurance wouldn't be a problem. You get around this problem by creating the largest insurance pool possible, which in this case would be nationalized insurance covering all 100 nuclear power plants.
Statistically, per unit of energy generated, nuclear power is the safest power source man has invented.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
http://theantimedia.org/the-wo... [theantimedia.org]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
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Err, no, the problem with insurance is that an accident can bankrupt a country. No insurer will take on a risk so great that it could potentially wipe them out in a single hit, and no bank would back such a thing anyway.
Fukushima is looking like it will end up in the hundreds of billions of dollars range, maybe $500bn all said and done. In a more litigious country like the US there would be additional claims for lost business etc like with the BP oil spill.
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They would be entirely pointless.
Thermal power scales dramatically. Double the number of solar panels and you get double the power, scale up a thermal plant the same way and you get more than double the power.
The greater the volume of steam the greater the percentage of energy you can get out of it - low pressure but a lot of it (after you've got everything out that a smaller plant could do) means you can turn
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The subsidy for solar is 1650x more expensive than cleaning up nuclear accidents. The subsidy for wind is 250x more expensive.
While most of what you say is true I find it counter-intuitive to use subsides in any argument for or against a technology. Subsidies are the result of policy favouring a technology and have little to do with the technology itself. They are temporary in nature depending on the political environment and are often used to kick-start an industry or bury another based on other factors.
E.g. subsidies for Solar have contributed to a huge increase in production to the point where if they are now removed completely
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In contrast, subsidies for different energy sources [eia.gov] are 23.1 cents/kWh for solar, 3.5 cents/kWh for wind, and 0.2 cents/kWh for nuclear. (Tables ES4 and ES4. Solar received $4.393 billion in subsidies while generating 19,000 GWh. Wind received $5.936 billion while generating 5,936 GWh, and nuclear received $1.66 billion while generating 789,000 GWh.) That's right. The subsidy for solar is 1650x more expensive than cleaning up nuclear accidents. The subsidy for wind is 250x more expensive.
[...] Statistically, per unit of energy generated, nuclear power is the safest power source man has invented.
BLESS YOU for bringing forward subsidy per units of energy produced.
I'd like to Krazy-Glue some of these Slashdot posters to the wall and dangle a bottle of nail polish remover in front of them, to be handed over after they answer the question: "Would YOU personally pay ~115 times more for solar, and ~17 times as much for wind?" I should be allowed to glue my poster. I should be allowed to think.
Glad to see you got modded up in general, but sad to see the only commenters you get repeat that "economics don
Wrong calculation (Score:2)
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Power cheap enough that in France they use resistive heating to heat bath water and their houses. And it snows there.
If that ain't cheap I don't know what is.
well if they let it actually procede (Score:2)
part of the problem is a combo of NIMBY and wanting cubic meters of docs to prove that the tech being used is
99.9999999999% safe.
if they "simply" used the same protocols that the US Navy uses for its reactors then it would be safe enough (build the things as more or less sealed units that need a chunky crane to remove so that in 20 years when the fuel is expended you just get a crane yoink the HOT bits out and replace).
Challenge for those folks that would rather have a Supermax Prison than a nuclear power p
True that (Score:2)
"does better in a socialist economy than in a capitalist one, because nuclear energy prefers to have the public do the cleanup, do the insurance, cover all of the losses and it only wants the profits."
This is precisely why the calls for "A free and open market with big government off our backs." is disastrous. In addition to little things like https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org] just think what it would be like if there were no regulation of meat, fuel, roads, drugs, doctors, chemical manufacturing, transport
Isn't it funny (Score:2)
You can blame government, hippies or whoever but the reality is that US nuclear companies just do not have their shit together which is why when the UK went shopping for nukes they went to the Chinese. Say whatever you like about the Chinese nuclear industry but they do not have the current mode of failure of Westinghouse etc of spending far more on publ
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This topic is filled with people who think they are experts..
Welcome to the internet.
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The internet?
Hell, welcome to the majority!
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Welcome to the internet.
Yea, you'd think I was new or something! :)
I am not a nuclear power expert, I have opinions and thoughts, but they are just based on reading stuff online combined with my personal worldview.
And that is all most of what is written here really is, except some of it is really out in left field, such as the "ten thousand years of nuclear waste" comments. Anything that is radioactive for 10,000 years isn't actually very dangerous, that is basic science. It is the stuff with a 50 year half life that will kill y
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For fine detail it matters if you are an expert or have listened to one on exactly that fine detail.
Due to people coming from different field or not having a generalised enough education there are a lot of topics where everyone who has picked up enough to attempt high school physics can get a handle on something but those that never got that far can not - hence a lot of pointless discussion here over very simple things and anger from the
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you don't need to be an expert to know the simple thing that hot steel gets soft.
And when it gets soft and has half a building sitting on top of it, it can bend and deform, and once it starts to go, it runs away and comes apart.
Yes, I agree with you, the 9/11 "truthers" are nuts, right up there with the "we never went to the moon" nuts. :)
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I can take it a step further... half a million people saw the planes hit the buildings, not on video, but in person, it was in fucking New York City. It isn't like it was a secret event. Further, one of my best friends was supposed to be on the A