Guest guest Posted August 3, 2007 Report Share Posted August 3, 2007 At 03:16 PM 8/2/07, you wrote: >Los Angeles Times, Jul. 30, 2007 >[Printer-friendly version] > >THE MIRAGE OF NUCLEAR POWER > >By Paul Josephson > >In the last two weeks, the Chinese signed a deal with Westinghouse to >build four nuclear power plants; a U.S. utility joined the French >national nuclear juggernaut -- with 60 reactors under its belt -- to >build stations throughout the United States; and the Russians neared >the launch of the first of a dozen nuclear power stations that float >on water, with sales promised to Morocco and Namibia. Two sworn >opponents -- environmentalists and President Bush -- tout nuclear >energy as a panacea for the nation's dependence on oil and a solution >to global warming. They've been joined by all the presidential >candidates from both parties, with the exception of John Edwards. And >none of them is talking about the recent nuclear accident in Japan >caused by an earthquake. > >These surprising bedfellows base their sanguine assessment of nuclear >power on an underestimation of its huge financial costs, on a failure >to consider unresolved problems involving all nuclear power stations >and on a willingness to overlook this industry's history of offering >far-fetched dreams, failing to deliver and the occasional accident. > >Since the 1950s, the nuclear industry has promised energy " too cheap >to meter, " inherently safe reactors and immediate clean-up and storage >of hazardous waste. But nuclear power is hardly cheap -- and far more >dangerous than wind, solar and other forms of power generation. Recent >French experience shows a reactor will top $3 billion to build. >Standard construction techniques have not stemmed rising costs or >shortened lead time. Industry spokespeople insist they can erect >components in assembly-line fashion a la Henry Ford to hold prices >down. But the one effort to achieve this end, the Russian " Atommash " >reactor factory, literally collapsed into the muck. > >The industry has also underestimated how expensive it will be to >operate stations safely against terrorist threat and accident. New >reactors will require vast exclusion zones, doubly reinforced >containment structures, the employment of large armed private security >forces and fail-safe electronic safeguards. How will all of these and >other costs be paid and by whom? > >To ensure public safety, stations must be built far from population >centers and electricity demand, which means higher transmission costs >than the industry admits. In the past, regulators approved the siting >of reactors near major cities based on the assumption that untested >evacuation plans would work. Thankfully, after public protests, >Washington did not approve Consolidated Edison's 1962 request to build >a reactor in Queens, N.Y., three miles from the United Nations. But it >subsequently approved licensing of units within 50 miles of New York, >Boston, Chicago and Washington, D.C. New Orleans had three days of >warning before Hurricane Katrina hit and was not successfully >evacuated. A nuclear accident may give us only 20 minutes to respond; >this indicates that reactors should be built only in sparsely >populated regions. > >Finally, what of the spent fuel and other nuclear waste? More than >70,000 tons of spent fuel at nuclear power stations are stored >temporarily in basins of water or above ground in concrete casks. The >Bush administration held back release of a 2005 National Research >Council study, only excerpts of which have been published, because its >findings, unsympathetic to nuclear power, indicated that this fuel >remains an inviting target for terrorists. > >And more than 150 million Americans live within 75 miles of nuclear >waste, according to the Office of Civilian Radioactive Waste >Management. A storage facility that was supposed to open at Yucca >Mountain, Nev., in 1989 still faces legal and scientific hurdles. And >if Yucca Mountain opens, how will we transport all of the waste safely >to Nevada, and through whose towns and neighborhoods? > >Industry representatives, government regulators and nuclear engineers >now promise to secure the nation's energy independence through >inherently safe reactors. This is the same industry that gave the >world nuclear aircraft and satellites -- three of the 30 satellites >launched have plummeted to Earth -- and Three Mile Island, Chernobyl >and a series of lesser known accidents. > >Let's see them solve the problems of exorbitant capital costs, safe >disposition of nuclear waste, realistic measures to deal with the >threats of terror, workable evacuation plans and siting far from >population centers before they build one more station. In early July, >President Bush spoke glowingly about nuclear power at an Alabama >reactor recently brought out of moth balls; but it has shut down >several times since it reopened because of operational glitches. What >clearer indication do we need that nuclear power's time has not yet >come? > >Paul Josephson writes about nuclear power and teaches history at Colby >College. ****** Kraig and Shirley Carroll ... in the woods of SE Kentucky http://www.thehavens.com/ thehavens 606-376-3363 --- Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free. Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com). Version: 6.0.859 / Virus Database: 585 - Release 2/14/05 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 3, 2007 Report Share Posted August 3, 2007 Japan built their largest on an earthquake fault. Wonder where China will put its new ones, maybe low in a flood plain. The convoluted logic dictates that they put it there to take advantage of natural cooling from time to time. - The Havens graffis-l ; stopthepoisons ; Health and Healing- Friday, August 03, 2007 9:54 AM Re: Rachel's #918: THE MIRAGE OF NUCLEAR POWER At 03:16 PM 8/2/07, you wrote:>Los Angeles Times, Jul. 30, 2007>[Printer-friendly version]>>THE MIRAGE OF NUCLEAR POWER>>By Paul Josephson>>In the last two weeks, the Chinese signed a deal with Westinghouse to>build four nuclear power plants; a U.S. utility joined the French>national nuclear juggernaut -- with 60 reactors under its belt -- to>build stations throughout the United States; and the Russians neared>the launch of the first of a dozen nuclear power stations that float>on water, with sales promised to Morocco and Namibia. Two sworn>opponents -- environmentalists and President Bush -- tout nuclear>energy as a panacea for the nation's dependence on oil and a solution>to global warming. They've been joined by all the presidential>candidates from both parties, with the exception of John Edwards. And>none of them is talking about the recent nuclear accident in Japan>caused by an earthquake.>>These surprising bedfellows base their sanguine assessment of nuclear>power on an underestimation of its huge financial costs, on a failure>to consider unresolved problems involving all nuclear power stations>and on a willingness to overlook this industry's history of offering>far-fetched dreams, failing to deliver and the occasional accident.>>Since the 1950s, the nuclear industry has promised energy "too cheap>to meter," inherently safe reactors and immediate clean-up and storage>of hazardous waste. But nuclear power is hardly cheap -- and far more>dangerous than wind, solar and other forms of power generation. Recent>French experience shows a reactor will top $3 billion to build.>Standard construction techniques have not stemmed rising costs or>shortened lead time. Industry spokespeople insist they can erect>components in assembly-line fashion a la Henry Ford to hold prices>down. But the one effort to achieve this end, the Russian "Atommash">reactor factory, literally collapsed into the muck.>>The industry has also underestimated how expensive it will be to>operate stations safely against terrorist threat and accident. New>reactors will require vast exclusion zones, doubly reinforced>containment structures, the employment of large armed private security>forces and fail-safe electronic safeguards. How will all of these and>other costs be paid and by whom?>>To ensure public safety, stations must be built far from population>centers and electricity demand, which means higher transmission costs>than the industry admits. In the past, regulators approved the siting>of reactors near major cities based on the assumption that untested>evacuation plans would work. Thankfully, after public protests,>Washington did not approve Consolidated Edison's 1962 request to build>a reactor in Queens, N.Y., three miles from the United Nations. But it>subsequently approved licensing of units within 50 miles of New York,>Boston, Chicago and Washington, D.C. New Orleans had three days of>warning before Hurricane Katrina hit and was not successfully>evacuated. A nuclear accident may give us only 20 minutes to respond;>this indicates that reactors should be built only in sparsely>populated regions.>>Finally, what of the spent fuel and other nuclear waste? More than>70,000 tons of spent fuel at nuclear power stations are stored>temporarily in basins of water or above ground in concrete casks. The>Bush administration held back release of a 2005 National Research>Council study, only excerpts of which have been published, because its>findings, unsympathetic to nuclear power, indicated that this fuel>remains an inviting target for terrorists.>>And more than 150 million Americans live within 75 miles of nuclear>waste, according to the Office of Civilian Radioactive Waste>Management. A storage facility that was supposed to open at Yucca>Mountain, Nev., in 1989 still faces legal and scientific hurdles. And>if Yucca Mountain opens, how will we transport all of the waste safely>to Nevada, and through whose towns and neighborhoods?>>Industry representatives, government regulators and nuclear engineers>now promise to secure the nation's energy independence through>inherently safe reactors. This is the same industry that gave the>world nuclear aircraft and satellites -- three of the 30 satellites>launched have plummeted to Earth -- and Three Mile Island, Chernobyl>and a series of lesser known accidents.>>Let's see them solve the problems of exorbitant capital costs, safe>disposition of nuclear waste, realistic measures to deal with the>threats of terror, workable evacuation plans and siting far from>population centers before they build one more station. In early July,>President Bush spoke glowingly about nuclear power at an Alabama>reactor recently brought out of moth balls; but it has shut down>several times since it reopened because of operational glitches. What>clearer indication do we need that nuclear power's time has not yet>come?>>Paul Josephson writes about nuclear power and teaches history at Colby>College.******Kraig and Shirley Carroll ... in the woods of SE Kentuckyhttp://www.thehavens.com/thehavens (AT) highland (DOT) net606-376-3363 ---Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free.Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com).Version: 6.0.859 / Virus Database: 585 - Release 2/14/05 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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