US Regulators Will Certify First Small Nuclear Reactor Design (arstechnica.com) 157
The Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) has announced that it would be issuing a certification to a new nuclear reactor design, making it just the seventh that has been approved for use in the US. But in some ways, it's a first: The design, from a company called NuScale, is a small modular reactor that can be constructed at a central facility and then moved to the site where it will be operated. From a report: The move was expected after the design received an OK during its final safety evaluation in 2020. Small modular reactors have been promoted as avoiding many of the problems that have made large nuclear plants exceedingly expensive to build. They're small enough that they can be assembled on a factory floor and then shipped to the site where they will operate, eliminating many of the challenges of custom on-site construction. In addition, they're structured in a way to allow passive safety, where no operator actions are necessary to shut the reactor down if problems occur. Many of the small modular designs involve different technology from traditional reactors, such as the use of molten uranium salts as the reactor fuel. NuScale has a much more traditional design, with fuel and control rods and energy transported through boiling water. Its operator-free safety features include setting the entire reactor in a large pool of water, control rods that are inserted into the reactor by gravity in the case of a power cut, and convection-driven cooling from an external water source.
Goverment handout (Score:5, Informative)
For anyone wondering, this is the PDF [azureedge.net] that's handed out to government entities that just covers the high level aspects of their product. Has a few figures in it that are worth noting. If figure if everyone's going to be debating this here, might as well have some from the company numbers.
NRC reserving right to review location (Score:4, Insightful)
The question is will this be a huge hurdle or just a formality? The main reason why nuke plants take so long and cost so much to start is regulatory issues about approving design.
If the new review for location is a formality, simply making sure they have appropriate water consideration and electrical hook ups, that NuScale already knows about, then this is a huge win for both NuScale and Nuke power. We could see Nuclear power plants popping up all over the place, especially at say, large factories that have large electrical requirements.
But if the NRC is going to have massive requirements for the locations that NuScale will not expect and deal with before hand, this will kill the business entirely. No nuclear revival, just same old same old.
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No, the reason nuke plants take so long and cost so much is that as soon as the plan to build one becomes public, the lawsuits by the anti-nukes start flying.
And the lawsuits continue until the builders give up on the nuke plant...
Remember, the first nuclear power plant took less than four years to go from an idea to an operational plant. There is NO good reason why it should take 20+ years
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And you know all this how? Here's a list of abandoned projects, which ones got that way because anti-nuke "lawsuits continue until the builders give up".
https://www.powermag.com/inter... [powermag.com]
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Not sure, but do you mean this one?
https://www.energy.gov/ne/arti... [energy.gov].
You are so sill, it is beyond believe.
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The main reason why nuke plants take so long and cost so much to start is regulatory issues about approving design.
A modern nuke costs to build about 20 billion dollars.
So, you want to tell me more than 30% - or let it be 50% - if that is what you want to say with "main reason", costs 6 to 10 billion dollars?
Did you ever do the math?
To spent 10 billion dollars on paper work, during an 5 years approval process, you would have to spent 2 billion every year. Assuming a very well paid paper workers occupied in
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You are missing the impact of financing and risk. If you add five years to a 5-year lead time, and double the risk that the project gets cancelled, and have a break-even point 20 years after going online, $1 initial cost results in $9-15 in additional financing costs.
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And all your example costs have nothing to do with: paper work and regulations, like the pro nuke idiots here on /. claim.
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...We could see Nuclear power plants popping up all over the place, especially at say, large factories that have large electrical requirements...
On the one hand, that's a very attractive prospect. There would be a lot less transmission loss, and the resulting redundancy should make the grid more resilient.
On the other hand, it's scary - it enormously increases the attack surface, and it increases the chances of mistakes and negligence causing a major nuclear incident. Also, if nuclear plants become widely distributed and commonplace, attitudes toward them will become less cautious, and complacency will tend to breed carelessness. This development is
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Actually the opposite tends to be true in terms of procedures. The only thing you increase risk on is the number of locations; risk per reactor drops by likely two orders of magnitude due to inherent safety and standardization.
Need to start cranking these out rapidly. (Score:5, Insightful)
If every town about 10,000 people had one or more of these we might have a nation that is a lot less susceptible to power grid failures, and we could close down a lot of coal and gas power plants a lot sooner.
Being able to manufacture these in a factory and shipping them out where needed should make it possible to greatly speed up the process of production compared to traditional reactors, and the small size of them means they should be a lot more acceptable in more places than a giant reactor would be.
We are already spending billions to pay companies to put chip plants in the U.S., let's spend what is needed to stand up a large SMR factory ASAP.
We should also make offers to send a few to every Native American reservation, and remote indigenous towns in Alaska that would like one. Free power is the least we can do for them.
P.S. hopefully they are making these with some kind of EMP hardening as well.
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> we might have a nation that is a lot less susceptible to power grid failures, and we could close down a lot of coal and gas power plants a lot sooner.
Energy that doesn't come from the Middle East would also make western countries much less dependent on political conditions in the Middle East, with less desire to intervene.
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Energy that doesn't come from the Middle East would also make western countries much less dependent on political conditions in the Middle East, with less desire to intervene.
That'd be a disaster for US foreign policy & the military industrial complex.
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NuScale plans to build the first reactor in 2030 and the projected cost of electricity is already higher than wind and solar. Those prices are continuing to drop, so by 2030 it is very possible that the SMR won't be at all economical for most purposes.
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Yep. that's possible. It's also possible you are wrong. We can't know unless we try. If it works then we can produce energy at costs lower than wind and solar for all time. That's a payback that is incalculable. If is a failure then we learned a few things about materials, nuclear fission, and what doesn't work for energy. What's that worth? A billion dollars maybe? We can't really calculate that value either because we see a lot of materials research end up being used in all kinds of new ways. Som
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We can know a lot of things aren't economically viable even if we don't try them. NuScale went public recently, a very risky investment.
>> costs for all recent nuclear projects have vastly exceeded original estimates. It cited cost overruns at the embattled Plant Vogtle in Georgia, the project “most like NuScale in terms of modular development” where costs “now are 140% higher than the original forecast.”
https://www.power-eng.com/nucl... [power-eng.com]
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Tiresome personal opinion as usual.
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Investing in nuclear energy (including SMR) is only "risky" if you firmly believe people will abandon heat and electricity by the hundreds of millions.
Investing in nuclear is only "safe", if you assume it's the only way to generate heat and electricity.
Hint: It's not.
Good luck betting against fundamental human needs.
Good luck believing nuclear will be too cheap to meter this time.
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We should try to develop better wind and solar instead. We can't know unless we try. If it works then we can produce energy at costs lower than wind and solar for all time. That's a payback that is incalculable. If is a failure then we learned a few things about materials, wind and solar, and what doesn't work for energy. What's that worth? A billion dollars maybe? We can't really calculate that value either because we see a lot of materials research end up being used in all kinds of new ways.
We should tr
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Yep. that's possible. It's also possible you are wrong. We can't know unless we try.
What a bullshit version of a canned response!
We pretty much know what it's going to cost [westerninvestor.com] from comparable projects, it's not like this is unicorn tech being built in vacuum for the first time. Money quote:
Each of the 300 MWe SMRs cost between $1 billion to $1.5 billion and can provide enough electricity to power approximately 240,0000 homes.
A 300W-solar power farm would require 1.5 million solar panels and cost approximately $300 million [...]
The typical wind turbine delivers an optimal 2-3 MWe in power, and cost from $2 million to $4 million, so 300 Mwe would require at least 100 turbines at a total cost of between $200 million to $400 million.
Take away message: right now there's almost 1 order of magnitude between solar/wind and nuclear. Oh, and don't get fooled by "small, modular 300 MW plant" -- many "traditional" European plants are in the ~500 MW range. A "small and modular 300 MW" is neither small, nor modular. The power plants TFA talks ab
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Oh, and don't get fooled by "small, modular 300 MW plant" -- many "traditional" European plants are in the ~500 MW range. A "small and modular 300 MW" is neither small, nor modular. The power plants TFA talks about are in the 300-900 MW range, FYI. (Whether the "small and modular" here is just a marketing trick to wave away critique, along the lines of "no, no, no, no, no, we're talking about completely different tech here, not about what you've all come to know about and expect from nuclear tech" is up to anybody's judgement.)
If you had read the story link or the PDF linked in the first post you would know that this 300 MW plant is made up of four 77 MW "modules" manufactured offsite. So yeah, pretty much the definition of small and modular.
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If you had read the story link or the PDF linked in the first post you would know that this 300 MW plant is made up of four 77 MW "modules" manufactured offsite. So yeah, pretty much the definition of small and modular.
Literally the first slide that talks about capacity (slide 3) shows that the 300 MW is made up of 4 modules. With 77 MW each. The 300 MW combo is the smallest one they present.
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"running costs are zero, waste disposal is free, and we don't pay for any damages should something of epic proportions go wrong"
I've never heard those assumptions, ever.
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I've never heard those assumptions, ever.
Point me to one where they take waste disposal and damage restitution into account.
Point me to instances where a plant owner did full damage restitution for past accidents of scale.
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I don't need to. I'm only saying nobody makes those assumptions. They choose to not address them in a lot of cases, but that's not the same thing.
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I'm only saying nobody makes those assumptions. They choose to not address them in a lot of cases, but that's not the same thing.
We're talking about price comparisons to other sources of energy. Of course it is the same thing when you display "costs of nuclear" and omit the parts that are the most problematic. Splitting the costs between "building" and "operational" when the competition you're up against doesn't have "operational" costs worth mentioning is like splitting the price of a Ferrari between "what you pay upfront" and "what you pay on delivery", and comparing it to a Chevy Nova for which you "pay upfront" essentially most o
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It's highly unlikely that these will ever be cost competitive with wind or solar. You can't just ship one to a town and plug it in, it needs a proper facility and operators. NuScale designed them to be kept in an underground pool of water, so the pool itself needs to be built and maintained. The pool has to be able to vent steam in case of emergency so you can't seal it up too much.
NuScale's reactors need refuelling every 2 years. Most likely the spent fuel will also end up in big pools, at the same site as
Not really. (Score:2)
Modern societies need power 24/7, not at the whims of the weather. Using the UK as an example, on average an onshore wind installation produces about 6 hours of its nominal power output a day, and solar about 3 hours. So although the cost per MW is low, you need to overbuild by 300 and 700% respectively.
Then you need to store the energy, because some weeks the wind doesn't blow and the sun doesn't shine. An optimum wind/solar battery mix which will supply 1 GW continuously, and 1.5 GW intermittently on aver
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Good points, and variability is obviously a problem, but the UK isn't a very good representative example. A small set of islands that would fit comfortably into the landmass of Texas, and at a latitude well above Maine. In the USA there's a lot more solar and wind site opportunities that can be networked together for redundancy at 3 cents/kWh.
Conventional nuclear has its own set of significant problems, and let us know when Hinkley Point C becomes operational. Guaranteed 11.3 cents/kWh for 35 years, far mor
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Not going to happen. These need at least 30 years before large-scale deployment becomes possible. That is a best-case scenario.
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Are you really blaming the Texas school shooting on an unlocked door?
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nope, but a locked door wouldn't have hurt
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ask northern California how well their power company is doing maintaining basic wires
$64/ MWh 12 modules vs $23 solar (Score:2)
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At least it will produce electricity on dark, still nights. Perhaps what we need is a variety of sources.
Best wishes,
Bob
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That's always been the case.
Some sources are dependent on light. Others on wind activity. Others on tidal power. What we need is a combination of 1) blended sources so that any one source being in a valley of it's production cycle can be compensated for by other sources and 2) Better kinetic storage, be it battery, thermal, kinetic, etc. that can compensate for variances and demand and 3) Whole grid sharing where a state with surplus generation at the moment can help a city in another state with brief de
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$64 /MWh for CO2 free power available 24/7 is going to look very cheap in the next decade.
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Re:$64/ MWh 12 modules vs $23 solar (Score:4, Insightful)
Just because it's more expensive, doesn't mean it shouldn't be built. If you go by nothing but cost, you get wind and solar. And then you have a variable output problem because your generation is weather dependent, so you end up using fossil fuels to backstop it - largely natural gas / methane turbines because they are better at load-following and can be turned on in minutes.
Or you can have some generation that is a bit more expensive in the mix, and far less variability which brings down overall cost of keeping the grid stable. Which is exactly what grid operators do today.
So probably stop with the absolutist approach, and instead go for "what's the best mix we can come up with, which optimizes both price and grid stability, while reducing carbon output?"
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As we move more and more to renewables in TX, I expect those swings will get worse.
As we build our renewable capacity, the swings will get less. There will be less chance they will all be producing at their lows at the same time.
There may be more times when the price goes negative though. Oh no the electricity is too cheap.
Storage will solve both "problems"
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Solar never works at night. You can over build 1000x times, and it still will never work at night.
Negative pricing means that you have to pay people to take your electricity. Storage is not going to be able to solve those problems. We need days to weeks of storage, and we are building minutes annually.
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Funny (Score:3)
Funny the difference of tone and quality of the comments between here and Ars. The nerds have left slashdot.
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Re:Is this more of the same? (Score:4, Insightful)
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The largest civilian nuclear power providers are USA, France, China, Japan, and Russia
4 out of 5 ain't bad
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4 out of 5 ain't bad
4 out of 32 not so much.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
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These all just happen to also be the biggest economic and military powers. Shocking.
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Also, Japan has a declared deterrence policy [wikipedia.org] of being able to manufacture a nuke within a few months if they ever were attacked. I would not count them out of the nuclear power list.
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Also: South Korea recently tested homegrown submarine launched missile technology. An utterly absurd platform for conventional weapons, but very valuable if Seoul decided they wanted to build out a hardened nuclear stockpile for deterrence. With submarines being sea-based, SK could also lean on the USN to help patrol the waters where the submarines might lurk.
Economically obsolete. (Score:2)
Nuclear electricity is economically obsolete.
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Funny thing is, the very first atomic bombs were created before there was any nuclear power plants.
So even without the power of a phone for calculations, with poorer safety, more unknowns, you can build a nuke. So it is even easier to build, with current levels of widespread technology and knowledge.
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Even if you trust a country to have civilian nuclear power, many don't want it because of the cost and infrastructure needed. The NuScale reactors need refuelling every 2 year, for example. They produce more waste than conventional reactors.
In order to use them, a country needs to set up a nuclear regulator and staff it with experts, and then create an entire industry to supply fuel and dispose of it afterwards. SMRs don't do anything to change that.
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In fact, you can make nukes out of a thorium reactor. Thorium itself isn't fissile; it has to be irradiated to make it U233, which is. It's lower yield than U235, but it's been done (by India, in 1998 [wikipedia.org].
Re:Is this more of the same? (Score:4, Informative)
India is building a new thorium reactor.
China is operating an experimental thorium reactor.
Thorium reactor projects [wikipedia.org]
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All experimental though. We are many decades away from commercially viable thorium reactors. In fact I think it's very likely that they will never be commercially viable.
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Actually it's even older, the US tested a U-233 warhead all the way back in 1955 [wikipedia.org].
Re: Is this more of the same? (Score:2)
ppl will claim that it is a waste of $, but the fund was set aside to deal with spent fuel. I can not imagine a better use of it than burning 75-95% of the fuel.
Re:Is this more of the same? (Score:5, Informative)
This isn't quite true. Traditional reactors use mildly enriched uranium, which means they have some 235U but mostly 238U. As such, they will breed plutonium, and burning the Pu they breed is part of the overall design. If they use typical long fueling cycles, the 239Pu winds up producing heavier isotopes that poison it for nuclear weapons use. But those same power plants can be used to generate weapons-grade Pu by shortening the fueling cycle. This is why IAEA looks carefully at the fueling cycle for civilian nuclear plants; if a country starts refueling on a short cycle, it's a sign they're trying to build a Pu stockpile.
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While i understand your stance towards Thorium vs. Uranium as a fuel - do remember these are Commercial designs, expecting a Commercial Lifecyle and financial returns.
There is a large industrial complex that exists today around Uranium fuel bundle manufacturing, and zero around Thorium.
If we waned to make that kind of shift - we would be looking at a major government action to ensure viable and affordable long term Thorium fuel production - and that just isn't going to happen when we can barely get the gene
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hum the average solar panel does not have any heavy metals.. while ending up in a landfill is not and efficent reuse of materials - they are not toxic to the environment..
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the average solar panel does not have any heavy metals
It's better to just look up the MSDS sheets firsthand: http://www1.mscdirect.com/MSDS... [mscdirect.com] Lots of heavy metals but thankfully not as toxic as lead.
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good point - i forget that copper falls into the heavy metal group.... i am surprised (not surprised) to see Cadmium, we need to get rid of that stuff same way we did with lead...
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55 tons of waste per fuel cycle for a 3-6 year fuel cycle on a GWH-class reactor would be around 14 tons for 4 years of 100-1000mw of power.
55 tons of solar panel waste for a 20yr 'fuel cycle' would be about 100 homes, which would equate to about 200kw continuous over 20yrs.
55 tons of waste for 4mw vs 55 tons of waste for 2000mw (or more).
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Re:Is this more of the same? (Score:5, Informative)
Is it a coincidence that the nations with the highest use of uranium nuclear power also tend to have the largest nuclear weapon stockpiles?
No, because it isn't true. 14 countries generate more than 25% of their electricity from nuclear, and 13 of them have no nuclear weapons.
France 69.0%
Ukraine 55.0%
Slovakia 52.3%
Belgium 50.8%
Hungary 46.8%
Croatia 36.9%
Slovenia 36.9%
Czech Rep 36.6%
Bulgaria 34.6%
Finland 32.8%
Sweden 30.8%
Switzerland 28.8%
South Korea 28.0%
Armenia 25.3%
Nuclear power by country [wikipedia.org]
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France has nuclear weapons, and many of the other places used to belong to the USSR block and had nuclear weapons.
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Then why did he put France on the list of countries he presumed that they have no nuclear weapons?
Why did he make a list of countries who used to have nuclear weapons?
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and 13 of them have no nuclear weapons
That is a virtually irrelevant statement. For example Ukraine may have no nuclear weapons *now*, but the only reason is has nuclear power is because it used to be a part of Soviet Union, a nuclear superpower. Some of these reactors like RBMK were even designed with a potential for furthering the Soviet nuclear armament goals. Other countries like Czech Republic or Slovakia (federated as the Czechoslovak Socialist Republic at the time) were then the targets of Soviet nuclear exports, again a byproduct of the
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It's not irrelevant. More than half those countries with the most nuclear power have never had a nuclear bomb, were not researching or creating fuel for bombs for a parent state, and are likely to never have one.
Remember, the original assertion was:
Is it a coincidence that the nations with the highest use of uranium nuclear power also tend to have the largest nuclear weapon stockpiles?
And that assertion is still wrong even if the 13 out of 14 number can be fudged.
Note specifically that the countries with the highest number of nukes are not on the list at all. US, Russia, China, etc, are not getting more than 25% of their energy from nuclear
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Also, we need to stop indoctrinating children with Islamic terrorist maths! https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com] God bless America! Freedumb!
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To be fair, at the time most of those reactors were built those ex-USSR states did have nuclear weapons.
South Korea is one of those countries that doesn't have nuclear weapons, but maintains the ability to build them on short notice using its civilian nuclear power plants to provide the necessary materials.
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"which use uranium while nuclear weapons use plutonium."
The people of Hiroshima would disagree with you.
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True, the Hiroshima weapon used U-235. Fat man used Pu-239. Basically the US had 2 different nuclear programs in parallel during WWII so that if one path failed, the other would succeed. Also, the myth that the US was out of bombs is only true for the U-235 type weapon. We had plenty of Pu-239 to make more 'Fat Man' style weapons.
Also, people in this thread are confusing the Th/U fuel cycle with the U/Pu fuel cycle. Th/U uses U-233 breed from Th-232. U/Pu uses both U-235 and Pu-239 (breed from U-23
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Is this yet another design with a once-through fuel cycle, and no ability to use Thorium? If so this is a waste of time. Obligatory Kirk Sorensen video - https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]
I'm not sure why you were modded down. I disagree with you that it's a waste of time, because any development of nuclear power to help reduce greenhouse gas emissions is a step in the right direction. But I agree with you on thorium - it's definitely the way future reactors should be built, and is far, far preferable to uranium for several reasons.
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Then there's that great big nuclear fusion reactor in the sky that we only have to catch the energy from with panels or wind or water turbines.
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Fission is VERY dangerous because of the radioactivity.
How dangerous is it? No energy source is safe, because doing anything carries some risks. Nuclear power is the safest energy source we have available to us today. Calling nuclear power unsafe is like saying cars are not safe. First, some cars are safer than others so pointing to any one vehicle tells us nothing about the technology as a whole. Second, while cars might kill many people from accidents every year we recognize that without them our lives would be far more difficult and dangerous. Cars mea
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Yes, people in Japan and Europe are dying by the thousands every day from malnutrition and lack of medical care.
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We are actually dying from the serious head ages this MadMann is giving us.
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Cars mean people can drive to a grocery store for fresh food. Without them people would have less nutritious diets, not get medical care, among other benefits.
You think people can't want to a grocery store for fresh food? What do you think people did before they owned cars?
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Do you know why it's much harder to become a pilot of a 747 than it is to get a driving licence for a car?
It's because if you crash a 747 you can potentially do a lot more damage than if you crash your car. Your mistake will probably affect many more people, and cost a lot more to put right.
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Not that much because of that. It i mainly because learning to fly a liner is more technical. That requires an education that corresponds roughly to an engineering technician degree. Military reconnaissance pilots, who do not have the same responsibilities towards passengers have an equivalent training.
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Fission is VERY dangerous because of the radioactivity.
Less so than mass media would like you to believe. Cancer rates among employees at nuclear power plants is lower than in the general population.