Jacob
What goes around comes around.
Not at all - over population is the evolutionary natural selection solution. It's a very crude mechanism but increases the probability of there being survivors......The real problem is over population ....
Not at all - over population is the evolutionary natural selection solution. It's a very crude mechanism but increases the probability of there being survivors......The real problem is over population ....
I think the bigger issue is the continuity of technical infrastructure and personnel.
Imagine an unknown virus suddenly arriving unexpectedly!
If you accept the idea that the solution is to generate more power then nuclear MIGHT be a possible choice. There are some good arguments made for it on here. But I am depressed by the idea that anything that has the potential to cause so much damage is considered a good idea. Surely the long term solution is to make things more energy efficient rather than to generate more power.
That's a wild guess. Another pandemic could change the picture over night. The likelihood of pandemics is increasing rapidly, not least due to increased population but also under the shadow of increasing resistance to antibioticsWhen talking about waste storage and containment, it's not hugely technical and the infrastructure is comparatively simple and robust.
Humanity has been good enough at capturing and transferring knowledge, that we would be able to retrain individuals in fields like radiation protection/monitoring, civil engineering etc.
They thought that before Chernobyl, which could have been a world changing catastrophe. Do you really thing Chernobyl was the last major nuclear disaster ever to happen?Your point is valid with regards to actual reactors and fuel processing plants; a total or significant loss of skilled personnel could result in a plant getting shut down in a manner which was safe but irreversible,
Not necessarily so! A very optimistic view.although because they're generally left for decades (to allow radiation levels to reduce) before decommissioning begins in earnest we would still have time to develop new skilled individuals to make the site safe in the long term.
A very optimistic view.
Thank God for Bill Gates:FAKE NEWS
The proposed Moorside Power Station is NOT experimental. It is of the PWR variety which is the world's most common design. We have one already at Sizewell and another under construction in Somerset, both much nearer London. What's more Londoners are only 100miles away from the largest, and now aging, nuclear station in western Europe - Gravelines which lies halfway between Calais and Dunkirk.
Fortunately we have learnt an awful lot from the Windscale, 3Mile Island, Chernobyl and ***ushima disasters. Of those 4 only 3MI was a PWR (an early American nuclear PS). The other 3 have all been abandoned as the basis of viable commercial and safe designs.
As Bill Gates said yesterday, the pandemic is a minor problem for man to solve in comparison to Global Warming and nuclear power will have to be part of the solution for the foreseeable future.
So you'd better get used to it, for our children's sake.
Brian
Yea, I don't really understand the intention of that Cumbria article. Commercial fusion reactors will be available "20 years after you fund it properly" (that's been the same answer for decades).well lets hope so because they seem to believe that they have the nuclear expertise, god help us.
Yes that worked when people died younger, there were more wars and we lived and worked in a more hazzardous world but now we live longer and have reduced life threatening hazzards so populations expand freely and everyone wants the better life, so population rising whilst natural resources decline and polution and enviromental damage grows. Something is going to have to give eventually because we cannot keep meeting demands, the only solution is going to be global and when we all trust each other enough to work as one and not keep thinking of the profit, look at how fast the vacine has been developed so pooled resources and stop wasting money on pointless projects and who knows what could be developed.Not at all - over population is the evolutionary natural selection solution. It's a very crude mechanism but increases the probability of there being survivors.
Sadly, almost certainly not, and I believe there is a lot of concern about the poor practices and corner (cost) cutting of some of the companies that run nuclear plants. However, it is worth noting that Chernobyl was a very old design, and modern plants are much safer in their operation.They thought that before Chernobyl, which could have been a world changing catastrophe. Do you really thing Chernobyl was the last major nuclear disaster ever to happen?
They were pretty optimistic before Fukushima, Chernobyl and Three Mile Island!I am sure you will no doubt be shocked to hear this and you might want to sit down before reading further, but optimistic people do exist, they aren't just characters in TV shows, they are living, breathing people. Crazy, but true!
They tend to stop expanding when people have a better life........ populations expand freely and everyone wants the better life, ....
That's a wild guess. Another pandemic could change the picture over night. The likelihood of pandemics is increasing rapidly, not least due to increased population but also under the shadow of increasing resistance to antibiotics
They thought that before Chernobyl, which could have been a world changing catastrophe. Do you really thing Chernobyl was the last major nuclear disaster ever to happen?
So you do believe that that will turn out to be the worst nuclear disaster ever!If a pandemic wipes out so many people that we're plunged back into the dark ages, then frankly any conceivable release of nuclear materials isn't going to be that big of an issue, compared to the daily struggle for survival.
That said the fundimental technology needed for "minimum viable" nuclear waste containment dates back to the Romans (water resistant cement).
In any case the sooner we proceed to start mineralisation in insoluble physical forms and geological storage for nuclear waste, the safer and less technology dependent it will be.
Currently the fear of nuclear waste drives politically motivated decisions to do nothing which mean it actually continues to be stored in more dangerous (and resource/maintainance intensive) forms and places than it could or should be; that cannot conceivably serve anyone's aims or objectives regarding nuclear power regardless of if they are pro or anti.
They (the state apparatus of the USSR) actually knew that the RBMK design used at Chernobyl was inherently unstable from the very beginning, and the whole reason for the test which precipitated the accident was to verify that operators were able to maintain control when it entered an unstable state.
It was intentionally built to a compromised design, without certain control features which were known to be needed to make it inherently safe (which following the accident were quietly retrofitted to other reactors of the type including the three other units at Chernobyl which ran until 2000).
The decision to then classify the design's safety issues as a state secret rather than share them with the safety regulators or the operators who had to run it was grossly negligent in a way I can't even begin to convey in words.
The decision to then do a live test to see if they could control it when it encountered a fault condition which could cause loss of control, by deliberately creating that fault... Was just completely insane.
The whole thing was an accident waiting to happen, and could have been predicted from the start because it was known not to be inherently safe.
I seriously doubt we will ever see anything even close to that level of incompetence, acceptance of intolerable risks, or complete lack of awareness of consequences ever again. Whilst we have seen serious nuclear incidents since then (Fukushima being the next worst) but nothing even comes close to that level of idiocy, or consequences.
So you do believe that that will turn out to be the worst nuclear disaster ever!
Human idiocy is only one of many possible causes and it tends to get the blame only after the event.
Yes it was a shame that the mechanism designed to advert such an event was itself flawed when used in that particular situation, and made worse by the fact they knew about it but had decided that situation could not occur, correct unless initiated on purpose as a test.They (the state apparatus of the USSR) actually knew that the RBMK design used at Chernobyl was inherently unstable from the very beginning, and the whole reason for the test which precipitated the accident was to verify that operators were able to maintain control when it entered an unstable state.
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