by KaiserJeep » Wed 26 Feb 2014, 19:11:08
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Lore', 'I') believe half a billion in today's dollars is talking real money?
The point again is that nuclear power is ultimately expensive and unpredictably dangerous. Big Rock may be dead and gone, but its radioactive waste will live on for many, many generations.
Then again, this is just arguing semantics since there are no resources financially, intellectually or physically to put a chain of nuclear power plants together in time to make an impact on a global, let alone a national scale.
You just refuse to let go of your irrational prejudices, don't you?
Again, nuclear energy is safer than any other form. Safer than natural gas, solar thermal, solar PV, hydro-power, coal, wind turbines, anything else you care to name. "Safer" means that in the entire lifecycle, from mining fuel to reactor de-commissioning and waste disposal, fewer people are injured or killed than with any other form of energy. When you throw a log into your fireplace, you experience more danger than living next to a nuke plant your entire life. There are primary references quoted in my earlier message, which you either refuse to read, or don't believe, even though the sources are respectable.
Your point about modern reactors taking a long construction cycle and costing too much are not valid at all. Modern PBNR's (pebble bed nuclear reactors) are modular, standardized, and inherently safe. Even if abandoned, they can never experience a "China Syndrome" meltdown.
I don't know how else to say it. Get over your nightmares about mushroom clouds. We need those nukes as a bridge to a renewable energy economy, which is going to take decades.