heimlaga":3rlm7bra said:
This concept is also very much in line with my principle of putting the means of production in the hands of the people and outside the control of big business.
I visited the hinkley b site, in the run up to hinkley c final approval.
This was in the whole "will she, won't she" phase, where there was still a pretence of doubt.
All I can say is that there was a *lot* of money being spent on the C site considering we were being told that the decision had not yet been made...
Nuclear is already more expensive than offshore wind. Hinkley C will be the most expensive terrestrial object ever made. The cost risk is partially underwritten by the tax payer, in excess of the agreed purchase price of the energy.
I understand the capacity arguement, but the financial and, arguably, environmental cost of nuclear has always been obscured. The tax pound to get to this level of development will never be clear. Again the windscale stacks were never intended to generate electricity - it was just a spin off. The cold war was the driving force.
And, still, after all this military investment, since the 1950s, our latest plant will still be more expensive than, the relative new commer, offshore wind.
I do wonder where we would be if the same level of investment, over the past 70 years, had been poured into renewables?
Anyway, I digress -
My point was to be about centralisation of production.
A nuclear plant is massively centralised. Solar panels on everyone's rooves massively decentralised. And, of course, the profits from production follow.
We have recently seen cuts in the FITS rates for domestic generation, whilst increase in the funding for massively centralised generation.
You do have to wonder if it's physics of corporate interest pushing choices like this.