▲ | idiotsecant 4 days ago | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Why do you think fission plants are expensive? Do you think it's the pumps and turbines and concrete? Pro tip: it's not. It's because there is millions of man-hours of regulatory burden attached to every decision, to every bolt, to every instrument or valve installed. There is a reason for all that regulatory burden, of course. It's the release of long lived and deadly radiation from a meltdown. If it wasn't for that regulation building a nuke plant would actually be quite inexpensive, relative to current costs- On the scale of a hydro dam. Fusion has none of those costs because it has none of the same dangers. It's a wildly different problem with wildly different cost basis. The expensive part is research. Once that's done that cost is gone. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
▲ | pfdietz 4 days ago | parent [-] | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Fission plants are expensive because malfunctions cannot be tolerated. Malfunctions cannot be tolerated because the government would not give them a liability cap if there was a significant chance of serious accident. Guess what? Fusion reactors also can't tolerate malfunctions. Not because of public safety, but because large (DT reactors being 40x the size of a fission reactor for a given power output) complex devices that are too radioactive for hands on maintenance are unrepairable. Helion is claiming they can go with materials with very low beyond short term activation, and that the cylindrical geometry would make swapping out hot components easier. Whether that is enough remains to be seen, but IMO DT approaches are complete dead ends. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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