▲ | Joel_Mckay 2 days ago | |||||||
All holes eventually fill with water, especially in places with soluble structures and negligent engineering assumptions. Or, people could put up a 20kW solar roof for $1k year in most places. =3 | ||||||||
▲ | fruitworks 8 hours ago | parent [-] | |||||||
I know a guy who was a nuclear engineer and geologist who did planning for yucca mountain and he seemed to know his stuff. I don't know if you would be getting that much water in the desert that is the nevada test site, or who would even be drinking from that water. Also the cat litter thing you mentioned earlier is already regulated by 10 CFR, and all uranium offgasses radon (even natural uranium that never gets dug up and used in a reactor in the first place). The threat from used fuel is that the short lived nuclides seep into groundwater, or that someone might use the fissile material create a weapon. So as long as you keep it in a deep cave in the middle of nowhere and guard the entrance, it's fine. Solar will probably remain cheap as long as it can take advantage of the existing grid capacity and push that storage externality on the rest of the electrical grid. Nuclear's long-term problem in the USA is the massive reserves of cheap shale gas discovered in the last 10 years. | ||||||||
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