▲ | mpweiher 2 days ago | |||||||
Since the 70s, oil reserves only lasted for another decade. "Current reserves" is a moving target: once scarcity raises prices, prospecting makes sense again. Uranium is incredibly cheap. Prospecting is not worth it as there are enough reserves to exploit in the foreseeable future. Seawater extraction is starting to be competitive with mining. With that, even natural Uranium becomes essentially unlimited. In addition, we currently throw away >95% of the energy potential of the Uranium we use. Why? Recycling is not economically viable, because raw Uranium is far too cheap (see above). So facto 20 of what we've used so far is just sitting in Castors. And fortunately not in deep geological repositories, out of reach. And then there's Thorium, which is significantly more abundant in the crust than raw Uranium. And of the Uranium, only a small percentage is currently usable. Fuel is simply not going to be a problem. | ||||||||
▲ | natmaka 10 hours ago | parent [-] | |||||||
> Uranium is incredibly cheap. Prospecting is not worth it as there are enough reserves to exploit in the foreseeable future. A huge uranium bubble between 2004 and 2008, which triggered massive investments for prospection... and a ridiculous result (15%). The cause is known: the quest for atomic weapons triggered during the 1950's and 1960's massive prospection, and there is no decisive way to better prospect and few not yet prospected zones. > Seawater extraction is starting to be competitive with mining This is periodically announced since the 1970's, and no-one could industrialize. Bottomline: "pumping the seawater to extract this uranium would need more energy than what could be produced with the recuperated uranium" Source: http://large.stanford.edu/courses/2017/ph241/jones-j2/docs/e... > In addition, we currently throw away >95% of the energy potential of the Uranium > So facto 20 of what we've used so far is just sitting in Castors. And fortunately not in deep geological repositories, out of reach. It would be sound if a ready-for-deployment model of industrial breeder reactor. There is none. > And then there's Thorium Indeed, but not industrial reactor. Next. | ||||||||
|