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Earth Power United States

Shutting Down Nuclear Power Could Increase Air Pollution, Finds MIT Study 155

If reactors are retired, polluting energy sources that fill the gap could cause more than 5,000 premature deaths, researchers estimate. The findings appear in the journal Nature Energy. MIT News reports: They lay out a scenario in which every nuclear power plant in the country has shut down, and consider how other sources such as coal, natural gas, and renewable energy would fill the resulting energy needs throughout an entire year. Their analysis reveals that indeed, air pollution would increase, as coal, gas, and oil sources ramp up to compensate for nuclear power's absence. This in itself may not be surprising, but the team has put numbers to the prediction, estimating that the increase in air pollution would have serious health effects, resulting in an additional 5,200 pollution-related deaths over a single year.

If, however, more renewable energy sources become available to supply the energy grid, as they are expected to by the year 2030, air pollution would be curtailed, though not entirely. The team found that even under this heartier renewable scenario, there is still a slight increase in air pollution in some parts of the country, resulting in a total of 260 pollution-related deaths over one year. When they looked at the populations directly affected by the increased pollution, they found that Black or African American communities -- a disproportionate number of whom live near fossil-fuel plants -- experienced the greatest exposure.
"They also calculated that more people are also likely to die prematurely due to climate impacts from the increase in carbon dioxide emissions, as the grid compensates for nuclear power's absence," adds the report. "The climate-related effects from this additional influx of carbon dioxide could lead to 160,000 additional deaths over the next century."

Lead author Lyssa Freese, a graduate student in MIT's Department of Earth, Atmospheric and Planetary Sciences (EAPS), said: "We need to be thoughtful about how we're retiring nuclear power plants if we are trying to think about them as part of an energy system. Shutting down something that doesn't have direct emissions itself can still lead to increases in emissions, because the grid system will respond."
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Shutting Down Nuclear Power Could Increase Air Pollution, Finds MIT Study

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  • by JoshuaZ ( 1134087 ) on Tuesday April 11, 2023 @09:09PM (#63442950) Homepage
    Nuclear power works. In the US it is highly expensive because we have made ridiculous degrees of regulatory requirements, and the fear over it is massive. But if we are going to seriously deal with issues like climate change we need nuclear power. Even if we do not build new nuclear plants (I am uncertain of whether that is needed given where solar and wind are now) each one we turn off now means more fossil fuels burned. And turning them off also results in increased prices of electricity which hurts the poor people the most. Unfortunately, the drive by some to turn off nuclear plants, especially well-meaning environmentalists, who have combined badly with lobbying from the fossil fuel industry has gotten really bad. Worse, the people who are most against nukes are really against them, and willing to spend political capital. That's how you get things like Germany shutting down all its nuclear plants even though a majority of Germans favor keeping them open https://www.bild.de/politik/inland/politik-inland/in-7-tagen-werden-die-letzten-meiler-abgeschaltet-mehrheit-gegen-akw-aus-83491960.bild.html [www.bild.de]. And the fear of nukes is so irrational in some places that one gets things like Austria trying to shut down or stop nuclear plants in neighboring countries. https://www.dw.com/en/austrias-nuclear-fear-much-ado-about-nothing/a-415735 [dw.com].
    • by jwhyche ( 6192 )

      In other news, water gets you wet.

    • You are making far too much sense for the /. comment section. Get ready for the solar zealots who have never heard of base load to flame you and your rational arguments.
      • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

        I spent a fuck ton of money on a huge solar system. And also believe nuclear power is worthwhile and new plants should be built. Those are not mutually exclusive concepts.

      • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

        solar zealots who have never heard of base load

        You don't need "base load" to complement wind and solar. You need dispatchable peakers.

    • by Kisai ( 213879 )

      The problem with Nuclear Power is simply that, particularly in the US. Waste is not a solved problem. We aren't properly disposing of it, just sealing it away for generations to come to deal with.

      Even then, ALL thermal plants (basically everything that is not hydroelectric, solar, wind, or geothermal*) put water vapor into the air, which is a green house gas itself. Not the worst one, but unless these thermal plants are boiling sea water, the net result is fresh water is lost and oceans still rise.

      Geotherma

      • by Firethorn ( 177587 ) on Wednesday April 12, 2023 @12:55AM (#63443206) Homepage Journal

        BLUF: No, thermal plants, especially nuclear ones, don't need to emit large amounts of water vapor.

        Even then, ALL thermal plants (basically everything that is not hydroelectric, solar, wind, or geothermal*) put water vapor into the air, which is a green house gas itself. Not the worst one, but unless these thermal plants are boiling sea water, the net result is fresh water is lost and oceans still rise.

        The GHG from the extra water vapor is a rounding error compared to that of carbon dioxide, methane(including that emitted by cows), etc...

        In addition, you commenting on "boiling sea water" and "fresh water is lost" indicates that you haven't read up enough on power plant operation, specifically the cooling therein. Different plants operate in different ways, of course.

        Natural gas plants produce water as a part of their operation - the hydrogen combines with oxygen to produce H2O. That means that you don't actually need to involve "fresh water", it actually generates fresh water.

        Coal plants produce a trivial amount of water - but they frequently use it for cooling, the same as nuclear plants.

        Nuclear plants, well, their primary loops are sealed. You're not boiling seawater, you're not boiling freshwater. You're boiling what is generally distilled water with very specific additives/doping. Think of the fluid in your car radiator - mostly water, but also antifreeze. Mix is completely different, and you only have trace amounts of other stuff.

        Where you get large amounts of water flow through is for cooling that water after it has gone through the turbines to generate electricity. Note, some nuclear plants use a 2nd loop so you aren't passing water with trace radioactive materials through the turbines.

        With this, you have 3 options for cooling, only one of which releases large amounts of water vapor:
        1. Direct water flow through - you bring in lots of water, such as from a river or the ocean, warm it up a few degrees, then introduce it back to the source. Benefit: It's about the cheapest way. Downside: You may not have enough volume to provide the necessary cooling while also not heating the water up so much as to negatively affect the river life.
        2. Evaporation: Due to the "enthalpy of vaporization", IE it takes energy to transform liquid water into gas water, same principle as swamp coolers and such, you can evaporate some of the water, which means you need a lot less of it. Orders of magnitude less. Benefits: Less water needed, can still operate when the river water gets too hot, etc... Downsides: A bit more expensive than #1, more visible, and introduces the water vapor you complain about. Also requires much more maintenance because evaporating water tends to leave solids behind, which you'll need to clean up occasionally.
        3. Air Cooling: You build a tower that looks a lot like an evaporation tower, except you don't put any holes in the pipes. Thus it needs to be a LOT bigger than #2 type cooling towers. Benefits: Works without the need for a water source, is relatively immune to the weather(if properly designed), etc... Downsides: Most expensive option.

        Many nuclear plants these days can operate off a mix of the above. For example, after experiencing river water at temperatures above that of what they could legally release water at(thus can't cool), they install evaporation towers so they can keep operating if necessary. A nuclear plant, considering limited water in the face of expansions, or loss of water rights, installs at least some air cooling so they can make do with less evaporation. Hybrid cooling towers are also possible - under less heat emission needs, colder weather, whatever, they can operate dry, but if they need to dump more heat they can start evaporating.

        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          The cooling needs of nuclear plants do have a serious environmental impact though.

          They can't just pump water out of a river or the sea. They need to keep wildlife and plants out. That means UV lights, mesh, and underwater speakers that scare fish away.

          When things go wrong they end up dumping warm water into the environment, killing off even more river life. It happens regularly in Europe, especially in France.

          There are more expensive options that help mitigate some of this, but nuclear is already too expens

          • by jwhyche ( 6192 )

            Nuclear bad, nuclear bad, Nuclear bad....

            Just more of the same old bullshit. Same old song and dance. The cooling needs of nuclear plants are no different than the needs of coal and gas plants. An no, nuclear isn't more expensive to compete.

            Get some fresh FUD please. This line is getting tired and worn out.

        • Natural gas plants produce water as a part of their operation - the hydrogen combines with oxygen to produce H2O. That means that you don't actually need to involve "fresh water"

          This article [ucsusa.org] says natural gas plants withdraw up to 60,000 gallons of water per MWh of electricity produced.

          Remember, there are 3 types of natural gas plants: steam turbine, combustion turbine, and combined cycle. So anytime you say "natural gas plant," it helps to be more specific.

      • We aren't properly disposing of it, just sealing it away for generations to come to deal with.

        What's wrong with that? Future generations will know more than us, have better robots to handle the materials, and the waste will be less radioactive.

        Kicking the can down the road isn't a good idea for many problems because delay makes them worse. But it is the right thing to do with nuclear waste because delay makes the problem easier.

        • by Firethorn ( 177587 ) on Wednesday April 12, 2023 @01:59AM (#63443248) Homepage Journal

          and the waste will be less radioactive.

          A very good point I've brought up before.

          With most chemical waste - arsenic, mercury, lead, and such, if you put it in a barrel and come back in a thousand years, the stuff is exactly as hazardous as it used to be. Might be a bit worse, if the barrel corroded in the meantime.

          With nuclear waste, you come back in a thousand years and it's substantially less dangerous. How substantially depends on how dangerous(hot) it was in the first place, and the exact details of the substance and decay chain.

          But something that you wanted to stay 100 meters away from, unshielded, 1k years ago, might have you only wanting to stay 1-10 meters away.

          Plus, well, it's still ~90% fuel for the right sorts of reactors, so once it's cooled off enough, reprocessing it should be a lot cheaper.

          Unlike, say, the toxic tailings from all the coal we've burnt.

          • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

            In theory, yes. In practice, we don't know because we don't have any 1000 year old barrels of nuclear waste to check.

            In the past unexpected things have happened to reactor vessels and fuel storage systems. The radiation damages them, or they degrade and corrode. That's over a timeframe of decades. It's really not clear at all if we can safely store that waste for a millennia.

            At the moment a lot of it is sat in cooling pools with nowhere to go.

            • by jwhyche ( 6192 )

              At the moment a lot of it is sat in cooling pools with nowhere to go.

              An who's fault is that? You see the problem every morning when you look in the mirror. If you hippie freaks had kept your bong holes closed in the '70s we would be recycling most of it, and safely disposing of the rest.

              Let's not forget virtually every problem we have today with nuclear power is because of people like you.

              • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

                If people really had that much power there wouldn't be coal plants spewing out crap everywhere. Anyway, it's not like windmills don't get objected to, often by people with the wealth to mount legal challenges. Somehow wind farms seem to be getting built anyway.

                • by jwhyche ( 6192 )

                  Oh bullshit. If you and people like you hadn't protested and did everything in your power to derail every nuclear project over the last 50 years, there never would have been so many coal plants built. You are so ignorant of the terminology you even protested nuclear medicine.

                  So, basically, every modern problem can be laid at the feat of you and people like you. You and your sidekick dinkypoo are just a modern continuance the ignorance and stupidity of the anti nuclear kooks from the last generation.

                  B

                  • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

                    I've never protested against nuclear power, not even wrote a letter. I don't need to, it's failing hard enough on its own. I do have family members who benefitted from nuclear medicine though, and I understand perfectly what it is.

                    When you reach the point where you have to imagine I'm something I'm not and rail against that, rather than addressing the issues, that's when you have lost the argument. That's also why nuclear is struggling - people like you who want it to happen don't actually have any solution

                    • by jwhyche ( 6192 )

                      I've never protested against nuclear power, not even wrote a letter

                      My what a selective memory you have, that or you are just lying like you always do. You have been spreading fud and protesting against anything to do with nuclear power since you started posting here. Every time it is brought up, even a little one- or two-line comment. Here you and your sidekicks come, "nuclear bad, nuclear bad." You don't even have a fucking clue what is going on in the nuclear fields. So out of touch with fucking reality.

                      SMR are just now coming into the test phase, barely out of

                    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

                      Oh I see, in your mind merely disagreeing on an internet forum is "protesting". Well Mr Nuclear Activist, might I suggest that your efforts would be better spent somewhere that actually matters in this debate?

                      I doubt many energy investors hang out on Slashdot.

      • We aren't properly disposing of it, just sealing it away for generations to come to deal with.

        That's a good thing. Countries like the US, France, Russia, China, consider most of this "waste" to be a future source of fuel for the Gen IV reactors. Having a supply of it will prove handy in a few decades.

        Speaking of sealing things away: we are emitting a shit-ton of CO2 into the athmosphere, and letting future generations deal with it too. And this is a far bigger/harder problem to solve than the small quantity (in comparison to the billions of tons of CO2 we emit with other energy-production means) of

        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          Maintaining expensive storage of spent nuclear fuel for decades, on the off chance that someone finally invents a viable Gen IV reactor, renewables don't work, and we are desperate enough to pay the price for nuclear, does not seem like a very sensible thing to do.

          Most of that fuel probably can't be used anyway. It's been sitting in pools of water for years or decades, and it's unlikely to be economical to refurbish it into something useful. Being high level nuclear waste, it's not like you can just upend i

          • Most of that fuel probably can't be used anyway.

            Thankfully for the rest of us, people in charge of that stuff are not doing things based on "probably" guesses. Science is actually involved in it, you might want to get interested in it instead of spreading your bullshit again and again.

            • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

              Do you really imagine that the operators of these plants are making an effort to preserve the waste for some theoretical time when it can be reused?

              In the UK they can't even be bothered to keep the spend fuel pools properly covered. Birds get at them and carry off the green gunk that is forming on the surface. Highly regulated, carefully managed facilities, these are not.

              • I heard some of those birds carried that green gunk away, dropped it in a street, and some turtles started chewing at it. They then later became... the Teenage Mutant Ninka Turtles!

                I mean, if we are making stuff up like you do, let's at least make it funny please.

    • In the US it is highly expensive because we have made ridiculous degrees of regulatory requirements

      False. Nuclear power has shown to be highly expensive all over the world because as it turns out, ... it is a highly expensive thing to build to modern safety standard.

      Even the Chinese with their woeful safety standards, lack of red tape, history of trampling over protestors, and effectively free labour costs can't get a reactor on the ground for under $7bn USD.

      That's how you get things like Germany shutting down all its nuclear plants

      Honestly it's a stupid policy to keep Germany's nuclear reactors open. They are very old, don't meet any modern safety requirements, and critically

    • > the US it is highly expensive because we have made ridiculous degrees of regulatory requirements

      Nuclear is just as expensive in places where the regulatory load is much less and public acceptance is much higher.

      One only has to look across the border to Canada, where the public is highly supportive of nuclear power, the entire licensing structure is different, and there is an entire government body dedicated to getting new sites built, with buy-in at all three levels of government, local, provincial an

  • Three Mile Island shut down recently, at least the reactor that didn't melt down in the 70's. Yet just down the river one of the worst air polluting coal power plants continues to operate. Coal is cheaper than all the regulations nuke plants have to follow. It would have been better to shut down Brunner Island and keep Three Mile going, but the operating costs were too high considering the wholesale price of power right now.
  • When countries shut down their nuclear plants guess what happens next? Old school coal plants open back up.
  • who cares about his grand-grand-grand children having to deal with the nuclear waste if we can live like kings now?

    • We already need to come up with nuclear waste solution because of medical needs. The amount of waste generated from nuclear plants is smaller than that.
      Besides we have solutions, such as the place they were wanting to put it in Nevada or that Texas volunteered to take when the anti-nuke people in nevada complained.
    • by sonlas ( 10282912 ) on Wednesday April 12, 2023 @03:55AM (#63443360)

      who cares about his grand-grand-grand children having to deal with the nuclear waste if we can live like kings now?

      Let me rephrase it for you:
      Who cares about his grand-grand-grand children having to deal with the climate change related to CO2 emissions if we can live like kings now?

      The CO2 we emit now will have an impact on global warming for the more than the next 100 years, because CO2 doesn't naturally break down at a fast rate (emphasis the fast rate) in the athmosphere. After 100 years, half the CO2 we emit now will still be there. After 1000 years, between 20-30% of the CO2 will still be there. After 10000 years, between 10-20% still be there. This is all documented in the 5th IPCC report from 2014, based on the different ways the CO2 has to "decay" (land update, ocean invasion, reaction with CaCO3...).

      On the nuclear waste side, the decay is actually exponential (unlike CO2). Something that is highly radioactive has a short half-life. For instance iodine 131, which is highly radioactive, has an half-life of 8 days. There is 0 chance that your children, and even less your grand-grand-grand children, will die of iodine 131 exposure that we emit now...

      There is something that kills between 8 and 10 millions premature deaths each year [sciencedirect.com] though: fossil fuel air pollution. Then you also have the indirect deaths by CO2-related emisions [nature.com] (one single average coal-plant in the US causes 904 excess death between 2000-2100 for instance).

      But as you say: who cares if we can live like kings now.

    • Thinking about nuclear waste is a pointless strawman. Nuclear waste is a political problem not a technical one.
      Actually thinking about grand grand grand children at a time where we're doing our best to fuck the planet in the shortest possible timeframe is also a strawman.

  • by Chas ( 5144 )

    I mean, cue my completely and utter lack of surprise.

  • The term renewable is simply bogus. Wind and Solar rely on photons and radiation from nuclear reactions in the sun. Once the nuclear fuel in the sun has been used up, no more wind or solar.
    Similarly nuclear powerplants use the high energy photons and kinetic energy from nuclear reactions to generate electricity on earth. By using Thorium and the Nuclear fuel in the oceans and the crust we would have more energy on tap at our present rate of use than the remaining lifespan of the sun. So existing nuclear tec

  • In other shocking news today it was learned after a multi-year study costing millions of dollars that water is wet.
    The world was also shocked to hear the first experiment to put the world's largest cork in Kilauea volcano failed and incinerated the entire research staff.

  • The reactors addressed by the study were shut down because they aged out. The alternative would have been decommissioning much of the existing structure and a rebuild, very expensive and time-consuming. Also the examples given were from decades in the past.
    "In 1985, the closure of reactors in Tennessee Valley prompted a spike in coal use"
    "the 2012 shutdown of a plant in California led to an increase in natural gas"

    They modeled three scenarios, and two of them were "an energy grid with no nuclear power". Tha

  • Note that shutting down all nuclear plants would also have the counterintuitive effect of releasing more radioactives into the environment as well.

    Fossil fuels don't burn clean, as they are often contaminated with other minerals and are only refined enough to where they can burn (and reducing can release emissions of it's own). While this is clearly true for coal it also applies to oil to some degree. For this reasons, coal power plant emissions are several orders of magnitude more radioactive than you get

  • Small Modular Thorium based reactors. We have lots of Thorium, it doesn't become weapons grade in normal use. Replace all the coal plants with it. We need MORE power and cheaper power for our children to have the futures we read about in Sci-Fi.

As you will see, I told them, in no uncertain terms, to see Figure one. -- Dave "First Strike" Pare

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