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droffel | 3 years ago

I've been hearing the same line about nuclear plants taking decades to be built for decades, as if its a valid dismissal. As the saying goes, the best time to plant a tree was a decade ago, the second best time is now. We should be scaling up our nuclear capacity.

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Schroedingersat|3 years ago

Any effort spent building nuclear for the 2040s is effort that could build 5x as much solar and wind for 2025.

Plus transitioning to nuclear just builds another set of kochs and saudis.

Plus it makes your entire economy beholden to one of China, Russia, France, or the US.

Plus it just kicks the can down the road. If you consider direct thermal forcing. We are exactly where we were in the late 19th century with greenhouse gases. There is no option but to transition to a steady state economy, and starting a bunch of projects that only pay off if you use as much energy as possible from them (and even then, solar + storage will be a fraction of the cost by the time they open) isn't the way to get there.

Plus those same five countries won't even let half the world have nuclear power plants.

Plus the world's uranium reserves won't actually last very long if you carry on with exponential growth (doubly so without reprocessing and breeding).

Then there's all the usual risks people mention.

The solution is the same as it has ever been. Degrowth, stopping waste, and renewables.

belorn|3 years ago

If Europe can continue to buy cheap Russian gas and oil and use it as they have done in the past then 5x as much solar and wind for 2025 sounds great. That was the Great Plan of the green movement in Germany. In 2010, 2020, 2030, 2040, 2050 or a time after that green hydrogen will become cheaper than Russian gas and oil and then this plan will be completed.

If however Europe can't continue to burn gas and oil when demand exceeds supply because of the weather, then there is a major problem that is going to need fixing in a very expensive and time consuming way. If green hydrogen don't drop in price and no other storage solution can arrive to become cheap than gas and oil, then the climate change goals won't be achieved.

To add to the problem in northern Europe, the locations for hydropower is practically already at maxed utilization. They are also quite old and with large maintenance debts. They are also is causing extinction of several species, and fixing that would cost prohibitively much money, and the solutions will reduce outputs.

The thing is, 5x solar and wind sounds great but if I can specific the time and space for it, I would make a great profit of trading 5 units of energy for 1x at a different space and time. The price difference in northern Europe can be a factor of 10 or even higher between low and high. 5 kwh worth 3 cent each is worth much less than 1 kwh worth 40 cent.

droffel|3 years ago

Solar and wind are nice, but they don't solve the base load problem. They aren't consistent enough to operate as base load on a power grid. They are certainly convenient for maintaining peak load, but without solving the energy storage issue in parallel to the added capacity, we need alternatives.

Axien|3 years ago

Solar and wind simply can not supply the energy needs in large sections of the EU.

pydry|3 years ago

Solar farms take six months. Wind farms 2-3 years. Pumped storage takes ~5 years and theres no shortage of locations: https://www.sciencealert.com/scientists-spot-530-000-potenti...

A non nuclear mix is also cheaper and isnt uninsurable without a catastrophe liability waiver.

The best time to build a nuclear plant is 40 years ago.

hokkos|3 years ago

I have read several of those studies with an automated workflow to find suitable pumped hydro/wind/solar and they consistently miss local awareness. They often use deeply inaccurate land cover classification when the simple usage of open street map could have helped, and for hydro they underestimate the recent local opposition to destroy a village to build a dam.

cuteboy19|3 years ago

Pumped storage is cool but way more situational than you think

seanmcdirmid|3 years ago

Pumped storage is hard because you need a lot of space on a hill for a reservoir. Perhaps we can turn lake mead into a giant pumped storage project with a bunch of solar installed over it to limit evaporation. Then use wind, solar, or even nuclear to fill it (but that’s a lot of water that farmers might want for their fields, again, limiting evaporation is important).

stefan_|3 years ago

Building a nuclear power plant today is assuming storage for solar and wind will not be figured out within 50 years, allowing you to sell electricity at todays price for at least this time. You can see why no one wants to take that bet. It's over, it was already over 10 years ago, stop trying to fit every crisis around a "nuclear was unfairly maligned" obsession.

nightski|3 years ago

See you in 10 years, when we are still arguing about nuclear taking 10 more years and still dependent on fossil fuels.

JohnJamesRambo|3 years ago

The best time to plant a radioactive tree in your yard is never.