▲ | generalizations 2 days ago | |||||||
> If someone had an easy non-snake-oil nuclear solution we would be using it already. Nuclear has been pretty much regulated to death. This is definitely not true. > Nobody’s dropping off a nuclear fucking reactor in the middle of a disaster area on six hours’ notice in any universe other than the bizarro one invented by their PR firm. Why not? It absolutely has the potential to be cheap, reliable and safe. That sounds like a fantastic use case. The biggest reason we don't do that is environmental lobbying regulating the technology into oblivion. | ||||||||
▲ | hinkley 2 days ago | parent | next [-] | |||||||
I grew up an hour from a lake you couldn’t swim in because the cooling equipment for the plant caused microbes to grow that cause encephalitis. Those regulations are written in blood and you’re fantasizing about an unattended reactor as the next generation? No. Dream on. I’m not saying it’ll never happen. I’m saying the work hasn’t been done and this is more snake oil. And then there’s the physics and logistics the other responder mentioned. For conventional reactors, that much concrete of a very specific and difficult quality to achieve in that many layers is expensive. The last one I heard about being built they had to jackhammer off many feet of the base because they missed spec, and lay it all over again. And the carbon footprint of that much concrete is not tiny. The embodied cost of a built plant is huge, and repairs are constant. They aren’t free, even if you ignore heat pollution, and we are running out of runway for that conceit. | ||||||||
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▲ | ViewTrick1002 2 days ago | parent | prev [-] | |||||||
Nuclear power was dying due to cost overruns already before TMI. The blaming everything on regulations is a nice scapegoat when the technology doesn’t deliver. We left the piston steam engine to the past, now it’s nuclear powers time to fade into museum pieces. |