The Nuclear Option Could Be Best Bet to Combat Climate Change

cancel2 2022

Canceled
If I was an American, I wouldn't vote for Bernie Sanders for several reasons, but his total irrationality towards nuclear energy would be enough for me alone.


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The 1.2-gigawatt Callaway Energy Center is Missouri's third-largest power producer, and its cooling tower is the second-tallest structure in the state.

CALLAWAY COUNTY, Mo.—The 31-year-old Callaway Energy Center is doing some heavy lifting. Missouri’s lone nuclear power plant produces 11.7 percent of the state’s electricity from one reactor cranking out 1.2 gigawatts, making it the third-largest electricity producer in the state. Its 553-foot-tall, cloud-spewing cooling tower is the second-tallest structure in Missouri behind the St. Louis Arch, two hours’ drive east. Operated by Ameren Missouri, Callaway’s Westinghouse four-loop pressurized water reactor provides electricity to 1.2 million customers. The $3 billion facility puts more than 800 employees and contractors to work. In the humming reactor control simulation room, with tan walls filled with dials, knobs, switches, lights and monitors, Barry Cox, senior director of nuclear operations at Callaway, explains that engineers train to make the plant withstand earthquakes, tornadoes and human error. But most of the indicator lights are off and the room is quiet, save the sounds of ventilation. “This is what it’s like in the plant at night, 2 o’clock in the morning,” he says.

Engineers are working to keep up the steady, if boring, plant operations, especially since the Nuclear Regulatory Commission extended Callaway’s license last year to run until 2044. “We are a baseload plant,” Cox says. “About 3,565 megawatts thermal and about 1,283 MW electric go out onto the grid. So it’s about 30 percent efficiency from what I have to produce inside the core from a heat point of view to what I get out on the electric grid, and that’s typical for all steam-producing plants.” But Callaway really flexes its muscles when it comes to zero-carbon-emissions energy in a coal-heavy portfolio. Missouri gets 82 percent of its electricity from coal, and the recently bankrupt Peabody Energy Corp., the nation’s largest coal company, is based in St. Louis. The U.S. Energy Information Administration reports that Missouri ranks 13th in total greenhouse gas emissions in the United States. Wind, solar, biomass and hydroelectric power provide the state with just 2.2 percent of its electricity. That means 83 percent of Missouri’s carbon-free energy comes from Callaway.

Many analysts are now calling not just to preserve existing nuclear power plants, but to invest in new designs to help fight climate change. “A new round of innovation for nuclear reactors would be quite important,” said Energy Secretary Ernest Moniz last month. Across the United States, nuclear provides 20 percent of all electricity and more than 60 percent of greenhouse gas-free electricity. But some plants have already shut down ahead of schedule, and others may do so, as well, not because of environmental opposition but because of market forces. “In the United States today, we have some older plants shutting down,” Moniz said. “The pattern is obvious: It’s principally plants in competitive markets faced with very low natural gas prices.”

A clear role in the Clean Power Plan

Nuclear energy’s clean bona fides may be its saving grace in a wobbling global energy market that is trying to balance climate change ambitions, skittish economies and low prices for oil and natural gas. Many countries are wrestling with the nuclear option as stalwarts like France tap the brakes, Japan uneasily presses on and China drops a cinder block on the gas pedal. Some nuclear advocates argue that in the climate fight, nuclear energy deserves many of the same considerations as wind, solar and other renewable energy. Callaway and 98 reactors like it in the United States are facing an identity crisis over whether they count as clean. In a country about to go on a strict carbon diet, the nuclear energy industry wants to make sure it’s still on the menu.

However, sticker shock and staunch public opposition continue to haunt the nuclear industry, and other nations are watching the sector closely to see whether they should make billion-dollar investments in reactors to fight climate change and grow their economies. “Nuclear is without a question the most important environmental technology in the 21st century,” said Michael Shellenberger, an advocate for nuclear power and president of Environmental Progress. He said nuclear is the highest rung on the energy ladder that civilizations climb as they move to denser fuels from biomass, to coal, to oil, to gas and finally to uranium. “From an energy and environmental and development perspective, I want everybody to go up the hierarchy of energy,” Shellenberger said.

Under U.S. EPA’s Clean Power Plan to reduce emissions in the power sector, new nuclear power plants and reactors upgraded to produce more power count toward states’ carbon goals. “The language in that rule is very explicit about the role that nuclear can and should play in mitigating against climate change going forward,” said John Keeley, a spokesman for the Nuclear Energy Institute. “We’re really, really excited about that.” The Clean Power Plan requires Missouri to lower its emissions by 36.7 percent by 2030. The state was one of 27 that filed lawsuits against the rule, and pending legislation may block funding for compliance plans (ClimateWire, April 28).

A reactor that doesn’t need ‘babysitting’?

According to the Missouri Department of Economic Development, the state spent $6.7 billion on electricity generation in 2010. The weighted average price of electricity across economic sectors in Missouri ranked the state 34th in the country. Keeping the nuclear option open would take a massive bite out of carbon pollution, and a growing cohort of environmental activists is pushing to make this happen. Unlike wind and solar power, nuclear can run at full blast almost all the time while emitting zero carbon dioxide. The nuclear industry would also like recognition for existing nuclear power plants as a bulwark against climate change, arguing that states should count nuclear energy toward their renewable portfolio standards and afford them the same tax incentives and subsidies as renewables.

Momentum is building for nuclear energy in some parts of the world, with China leading the charge. The country has 32 nuclear reactors online, 22 under construction and more in the planning stages, putting it on a trajectory to hit 150 GW of nuclear power generation by 2030. In 2012, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission approved the first new reactors in the United States in 30 years. Among students in the country, nuclear engineering is becoming a more popular major (ClimateWire, Dec. 15, 2014). The renewed interest in nuclear energy has led to startup companies developing “fourth-generation” reactor designs that are walkaway safe, meaning that if left unattended, they safely coast to a halt. “All three generations of nuclear technology that are out there today require babysitting,” said Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates during a panel last month in Washington, D.C. “The nuclear industry has never designed an inherently safe product.”

Gates is the largest investor in TerraPower, a nuclear energy firm that’s developing a reactor that runs on depleted uranium, a waste product of the enrichment process used to make fuel for conventional reactors, yielding a fiftyfold gain in fuel efficiency. He acknowledged, however, that it may take a long time for new reactors to gain enough traction to start making a dent in global greenhouse gas emissions. “We’re moving faster than anybody ever has in that space, but that’s about a 30-year period, assuming things go really well,” Gates said.

Nuclear advocates eye many power sources

Other companies, like NuScale Power, are developing small modular reactors. Rather than building one-of-a-kind, billion-dollar, gigawatt-scale plants, NuScale is proposing a reactor with a smaller output fabricated on an assembly line and dropped in place. The smaller scale means lower upfront costs, and mass production would lead to economies of scale.

“To me, what may end up being the most important thing is if this is an attractive technology, the capital requirements and financial structures are so different that it opens up the geography” to other markets that don’t have billions to spend, Moniz said. “This year, we expect that NuScale will be submitting a design certification application to the Nuclear Regulatory Commission. It’s for a roughly 50-MW reactor.”

However, existing reactors are tacking into the wind, in terms of economics and politics. Vermont independent Sen. and Democratic presidential hopeful Bernie Sanders has laid out a plan to decommission every reactor in the United States. Nuclear supporters warn that letting aging reactors wither would harm the fight against climate change as coal- and natural-gas-fired generators ramp up to fill the gaping void. The 2012 shutdown of the 2 GW San Onofre nuclear plant in California raised generation costs by $350 million the following year, and carbon dioxide emissions in the state increased by 9 million metric tons, the equivalent of putting 2 million more cars on the road.

Reprinted from Climatewire with permission from Environment & Energy Publishing, LLC. www.eenews.net, 202-628-6500



http://www.scientificamerican.com/a...n-could-be-best-bet-to-combat-climate-change/
 
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we still got spent fuel rods stored on site. we still are haunted by Chernobyle. we still look at nuke plants as 'terrorist targets'.
Nothing is without i'ts problems.. I just find it ironic that the "no nukes" crowd of yesterday is the no coal crowd today.
I think they don't want natural gas either..not sure
 
we still got spent fuel rods stored on site. we still are haunted by Chernobyle. we still look at nuke plants as 'terrorist targets'.
Nothing is without i'ts problems.. I just find it ironic that the "no nukes" crowd of yesterday is the no coal crowd today.
I think they don't want natural gas either..not sure

That so called spent fuel will be a valuable commodity in future. 4th gen nuclear reactors will be able to use it as a fuel.

http://www.extremetech.com/extreme/...t-nuclear-reactor-that-eats-radioactive-waste
 
For starters, nothing will combat climate change at this point. I don't know why more people don't talk about this: the same scientists who agree that man is causing or contributing to it also say that there is basically nothing we can do. Even if all carbon emissions stopped today - worldwide - it would be centuries and possibly longer before there would be any discernible difference.

Beyond that, nukes aren't the answer. Generationally irrresponsible. There is no good plan for long-term storage of waste, just for starters.
 
Radiation usually produces cancer or death, cases in which it causes some kind of massive, obvious mutation are pretty much rare to non-existent. The body is pretty good at killing off cells where the DNA is obviously erroneous.

Not uncommon downwind from the Chernobyl/Kiev area.
 
Nuclear waste. FILTHY stuff. LETHAL stuff. PERMANENT stuff. Dump it on your kids and grandchildren. Tell 'em you had no choice.
 
Radiation usually produces cancer or death, cases in which it causes some kind of massive, obvious mutation are pretty much rare to non-existent. The body is pretty good at killing off cells where the DNA is obviously erroneous.

There hasn't even been one death attributable to radiation at Fukishima, yet that's all you ever hear about from zealots. Over 15,000 died from the tsunami but that has just been forgotten about. Chernobyl was a 1st generation reactor which even so it required total human ineptness to go into meltdown.

UNSCEAR's 1,220-page magnum opus: "Sources and Effects of Ionizing Radiation," subtitled "The UNSCEAR 2000 Report to the General Assembly, with Scientific Annexes," was published in September 2000. The report to the General Assembly itself is short, only 17 pages, which serves as a non-technical summary of the 10 technical appendices.

http://www.21stcenturysciencetech.com/articles/chernobyl.html

On April 26th, 1986, at 1:23 am, Alexander Akimov did what he and thousands of other nuclear plant operators have been trained to do. When confronted with confusing reactor indications, he initiated an emergency shutdown of Unit 4 of the large electricity generating station near Pripyat in Ukraine. By doing so, he unwittingly initiated an explosion whose effects continue to be felt throughout the world. On the occasion of the tenth anniversary of the Chernobyl accident, it is appropriate to understand what went wrong and what has been done to prevent it from happening again.

Initial Conditions

Before pressing the AZ button – used to initiate an emergency shutdown – Akimov and his fellow operators were immersed in the conduct of a special test. The procedure was designed to prove that the reactor would be provided with sufficient cooling water even if a complete loss of power to the large electric generating complex occured while the emergency cooling system was inoperable. According to engineering calculations, the inertia of the plant’s big 500 MW electric turbines would allow them to generate enough electricity to keep cooling water pumps operating during the 30 to 50 second delay required to start the emergency diesel generators. The engineers who designed the test were specialists in electric generators, not in nuclear reactors. The historical record indicates that there was little consultation with nuclear reactor specialists during the procedure preparation. The test was planned for a time when the plant was to be shut down for routine maintenance and its power output was not needed for the national electrical grid.

Establishing the initial conditions for the test proved difficult and more time consuming than initially planned. The first problem was that the grid needed the power longer than expected. It was after midnight when the plant was finally allowed to begin the test, and a new shift of operating personnel had just taken over. The new shift was not very familiar with the test and did not get a complete briefing by the off-going shift operators. The actions of the off-going shift operators had put the plant into an unusual situation because the power history and the resulting concentration of fission product poisons was different than any situation considered during the design of the control system. The man in charge of the test, Anatoli Dyatlov, the deputy chief engineer of the plant, had been involved in the test preparations and in setting the initial conditions. The new operators deferred to him for decisions, because of his experience, his official position and his familiarity with the specific test protocol.

Pressure to Succeed

There were several times during the period immediately prior to the test when the plant technicians considered action that could have averted the catastrophe. They did not like the way that the plant was responding to their control inputs. If they had taken appropriate action, however, there is no guarantee that they would have been rewarded for their decision. In fact, there is every likelihood that they would have been punished for delaying the test and the subsequent maintenance period. Dyatlov had a reputation as an irritable taskmaster; apparently he was especially impatient on the night of the accident.

Though Soviet reactor plant operators were not under pressure from their bosses to maximize financial profit, the Communist political system provided considerable incentive to maximize production for the benefit of the the state and the party. Failures or perceived weakness were often severely criticized or punished by demotion or reassignment. During the night of April 26th, all the Chernobyl operators had to offer as a reason to discontinue the test was a sense of confusion over the plant indications. Apparently, Akimov must have comforted himself with the knowledge that he knew exactly where the AZ button was and readied himself to push it if it became necessary. There is no way he could have known that pushing the button could lead to a dangerous insertion of positive reactivity.

Positive SCRAM Reactivity

Much has been made of the fact that RBMK reactors can develop what is known as a positive void coefficient of reactivity. What that long phrase means is that increasing boiling caused by increasing core temperature can lead to an increase in core reactivity, an increase in core power and even more boiling. This positive feedback mechanism is assiduously avoided in most reactor plant designs. What has not been so well understood is that the shutdown button of an RBMK could, under very special initial conditions, initiate a positive insertion of reactivity that could increase core temperature rapidly enough to cause a steam explosion. No nuclear reactor plant can explode in a manner even remotely similar to an atomic bomb, but, as boiler operators have known for well over a hundred years, a steam explosion can pack quite a punch.

Though much has been made of the lack of a “safety culture,” lack of containment, and violations of procedures by operators, the specific cause of the Chernobyl explosion and subsequent release of radioactive material from the Chernobyl reactor was a shutdown system that initiated a positive reactivity accident. For those readers who have never operated a nuclear reactor, it might be helpful to think of the cause as a brake pedal that – without the driver’s knowledge – transformed itself into an accelerator. It took far longer than it should have to find the technical cause of the accident, largely because efforts were made to protect the designers and their powerful bosses and to fix the blame on the less politically connected operators.

The design fault that caused the explosion required several straightforward technical modifications that have now been completed on all operating RBMK reactors. There is essentially no chance that the accident could happen again. However, the fix has not satisfied the calls for action from those that do not understand the production of electricity. The fix has – rationally enough – not satisfied the desires of those that want to use the accident as an excuse to get rid of nuclear power for political or competitive reasons.

http://atomicinsights.com/accident-at-chernobyl-caused-explosion/
 
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Nuclear energy is absolutely the way to go. It is far safer now than it was 20 years ago, let alone, 30+ years ago. Until we can create cold fusion or some other virtually unlimited power source, nuclear is the cleanest energy.
 
Nuclear energy is absolutely the way to go. It is far safer now than it was 20 years ago, let alone, 30+ years ago. Until we can create cold fusion or some other virtually unlimited power source, nuclear is the cleanest energy.

The trouble is that various countries are shutting nuclear plants down and fossil fuel use is rising, blowback from greenwash and bullshit from environmentalists.

http://www.environmentalprogress.org/clean-energy-crisis/
 
What's the plan for waste?

And how about the plants themselves? Who knows what kind of earth changes we'll have in the next few centuries. Some will likely be underwater, some are in earthquake zones. The landscape will undergo huge changes.

We're like kids playing with matches. The lengths of time we're talking about are beyond the comprehension of most humans.
 
What's the plan for waste?

And how about the plants themselves? Who knows what kind of earth changes we'll have in the next few centuries. Some will likely be underwater, some are in earthquake zones. The landscape will undergo huge changes.

We're like kids playing with matches. The lengths of time we're talking about are beyond the comprehension of most humans.

We sure don't want to build one in a fracking zone, now do we.
 
What's the plan for waste?

And how about the plants themselves? Who knows what kind of earth changes we'll have in the next few centuries. Some will likely be underwater, some are in earthquake zones. The landscape will undergo huge changes.

We're like kids playing with matches. The lengths of time we're talking about are beyond the comprehension of most humans.

Please pay attention ffs, 4th generation molten salt nuclear reactors will use spent fuel and depleted uranium as a fuel source. Please stop spouting bullshit and do some reading, see post 3!!
 
There hasn't even been one death attributable to radiation at Fukishima,

Filthy. Lethal. Permanent.

One might say the same about the damage from scurrilous half-truths from self-serving industrialist bum-boys- except that they're sussed already.

A few of the plant's workers were severely injured or killed by the disaster conditions resulting from the earthquake. Furthermore, at least six workers have exceeded lifetime legal limits for radiation and more than 300 have received significant radiation doses. Workers involved in mitigating the effects of the accident do face minimally higher risks for some cancers.[9]

Predicted future cancer deaths due to accumulated radiation exposures in the population living near Fukushima have ranged[10] in the academic literature from none[11] to hundreds.[12] On 16 December 2011, Japanese authorities declared the plant to be stable, although it would take decades to decontaminate the surrounding areas and to decommission the plant altogether.[13]


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fukushima_Daiichi_nuclear_disaster_casualties
 
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