BocoDragon said:In geological time, that earthquake was routine.
In geological time humanity has existed for a negligible time.
BocoDragon said:In geological time, that earthquake was routine.
Gaborn said:So you're arguing that the licenses should be cheaper. Understood. Although "extremely expensive" is such a general term I'd be curious of your source.
in the first place, I have to say, I love that turn of phrase "the potential fall-out from an accident is so great..." could be trying to convey "the potential COST in the EVENT of a fall out..." or "the potential FOR an event is so great..." or even both! Wonderful. Simply wonderful. 5 stars on the wording. The risk nuclear power poses is still extremely minimal and fatalities from nuclear disasters (chernobyl aside, and even then it was more negligence in the response of the government than anything) are extremely minimal. Coal is more dangerous.
Third, the reason a nuclear plant hasn't been built in 30 years is the fear mongering after the 3 mile island incident which, and most anti-nuclear activists leave this out, resulted in no fatalities, no injuries, and no adverse health effects. Fear can be a powerful thing, just ask South Koreans about fan death.
I'm pro-science, there is no reason to have an irrational fear of nuclear power any more than I should support South Korean superstitions about fan death.
A wonderfully bland phrase that says everything and means nothing. I agree! I think we should EXPAND our nuclear power as France has done personally though.
How many people have died fom Fukushima?Ether_Snake said:And that is why nuclear power cannot be safe. Humans run the damn thing, and greed, profits, ignorance, and shoving problems under the rug will cause other Fukushimas and Chernobyls to happen.
The unfortunate irony is that the well-intentioned campaigning against building new nuclear reactors actually results in us just using less-safe old reactors.FyreWulff said:Still less radiation than coal plants are pumping into our air every day.
Oh wait, I can see the smoke from the coal plant, so that means its safe!
It'd be extremely safe if we were actually able to replace all those ancient reactors. Everyone will gladly let coal plants be rebuilt as technology catches up, meanwhile we're running the equivalent of nuclear Model-Ts.
There was an administrative issue at Fukishima, but the plant was also 40 years old and hit by a double whammy of an earthquake and tsunami wave. It is now contained. Chernobyl was a reactor type that nobody sane uses, and was a worst of worst case scenario.
Pinning nuclear safety on this ancient and special case makes about as much sense as saying nobody should drive a car because someone's 1972 Cadillac burst into fire after being hit yesterday by a pickup truck.
Ether_Snake said:I was in Fukushima yesterday! Great sushi! Everything is A-OK!
speculawyer said:So a bunch of silly nit-picking and not a single mention of the real problem . . . the fact that the market has turned its back on the issue. Pathetic.
And I'm sorry to hear that democracy is such a nuisance . . . I didn't realize that being authoritarian and for subsidies were Libertarian principles. LOL.
speculawyer said:Well economically is where it falls apart. The reactors are extremely expensive site, license, and build. And the potential fall-out (pun intended) from an accident is so great that we subsidize the fuck out of nuclear power with things like the Price-Anderson act. (Think of the value of all that land around the Fukushima plant which is now pretty much worthless.) Yet even with the massive subsidy, there hasn't been a new plant built in 30 years.
I think nuclear power should continue since fossil fuels are dirty and finite. But nuclear needs to very carefully regulated.
Live by the sword, die by the sword . . . except when you don't like it? Perhaps I should complement you on your growth in admitting that the market is not always the best solution. That was MY point and it seems you are learning. Good. Now maybe you'll sit it is true in other areas as well.Gaborn said:The "market" in the US favors Creationism, are you suggesting I should? This seems to be a rather, as you put it, "pathetic" argument. The truth is nuclear power is a safe technology and should be used as much as possible under, as you said, 'very careful regulation.' As opposed to "careless regulation" I suppose.
speculawyer said:Live by the sword, die by the sword . . . except when you don't like it? Perhaps I should complement you on your growth in admitting that the market is not always the best solution. That was MY point and it seems you are learning. Good. Now maybe you'll sit it is true in other areas as well.
It doesn't matter. 9.0 earthquakes are routine on planet Earth on the long timescale, therefore they can happen at an moment and they are a realistic threat. It's incorrect to make it seem like it's a "freak accident" that no one could ever predict.... 9.0 earthquakes will happen again and again. Therefore, consideration for such quakes is intrinsically a part of the nuclear risk. It's not an external freak occurance, thrust upon the perfectly safe nuclear industry.Gaborn said:In geological time humanity has existed for a negligible time.
Upsidedown Fuji said:Now I see why the Speculawyer official thread on Fukushima/Nuclear news hasn't been busy. This extra thread exists.
Not surprised there are still reactions going on up to this point. The extent of the damage sustained during the quake and tsunami took away nearly all the control TEPCO had over their geriatric generators.
At least this time around TEPCO didn't sit on the information and say everything was going well like they have been over the past half year. Its kind of hard to hide now anyhow.
I hope the reactions can be stopped for good and soon.
Tepco is aware of the estimate from the institute through media reports and has no comment, spokesman Hajime Motojuku said today by phone.
BocoDragon said:It doesn't matter. 9.0 earthquakes are routine on planet Earth on the long timescale, therefore they can happen at an moment and they are a realistic threat. It's incorrect to make it seem like it's a "freak accident" that no one could ever predict.... 9.0 earthquakes will happen again and again. Therefore, consideration for such quakes is intrinsically a part of the nuclear risk. It's not an external freak occurance, thrust upon the perfectly safe nuclear industry.
Perhaps this fact doesn't mean abolishment of nuclear power... but it does mean that you must design plants to withstand that force, or you can't expect them to be safe over a long enough timeline..... (and that day could come in 10,000 years, or tomorrow, it's not a matter of age)
You can't really subject Chernobyl to market consideration since it was designed and built by a communist system.Al-ibn Kermit said:With the chernobyl accident you might have a point but ultimately that was caused entirely by human negligence.
But the situation in Japan and Fukushima goes directly against your point as the actual Tsunami that caused the reactor melt-down was far, far, far more destructive than the reactors themselves. Nobody has died because of the Fukushima plant, which to me is impressive considering how old the plant is combined with the safety screw-ups by the plant operators (ie: Their back-up diesel generator wasn't even compatible with their pump system).
We need to continue to research making renewables more efficient, but we need to also actually build nuclear plants for providing our energy for at least the near future. That's a hard concept for some people (not you) to grasp so every time this topic comes up you end up with a minefield of opinions.
I hope so. I'm sure new plant designers are obsessing over earthquake-proof techniques at this point.Gaborn said:sure. I think it was more the combination of the earth quake and the tsunami that did it though. If either even occurred separately the plant would have been fine. Combined it was too much to handle. I think most modern plants can handle that kind of earthquake though, just as earthquake proof buildings are better now than in the 70s.
I see. I should probably read more. I've been watching too much Japanese news on TV as of late. The media here sure does spin things in Tepco's favor.Ether_Snake said:Actually they did sit on their asses; the info came from others, at least in the first case:
Manos: The Hans of Fate said:How many people have died fom Fukushima?
Last I checked it was zero.
speculawyer said:Yeah, let's all take lessons about energy from Enron. LOL! He's clearly the smartest guy in the room.
Orayn said:Darn those pesky people who disagree with you. (Whichever side they're on, I don't know your stance.)
Why do they have to be so wrong all the time?
The water probably isn't even from the reactor or anywhere near the plant anyhow. Its all window dressing.RSLAEV said:http://i.imgur.com/K061e.jpg
This man doesn't give a damn about your fission.
Seriously though this is fucked up.
Gaborn said:Cue people that take a poorly maintained 40 year old plant that experienced two catastrophic events right after each other and claim that nuclear power should be banned.
Facts only come down on one side here.Orayn said:Darn those pesky people who disagree with you. (Whichever side they're on, I don't know your stance.)
Why do they have to be so wrong all the time?
Orayn said:Oh boy, I can't wait!
Keep digging that fossil fuel grave while praying for miraculous advances in renewable energy, residents of Earth.
RSLAEV said:
This man doesn't give a damn about your fission.
Seriously though this is fucked up.
Cow Mengde said:
Perfect time to make a new Godzilla movie.
Dude Abides said:You enviro-hippies are so naive. Once we eliminate human fallibility and natural disasters nuclear power will be perfectly safe.
Cronox said:Fission sucks. Fusion is the answer, and with the proper funding and without interference from current energy market leaders it could be here faster than you'd think.
https://lasers.llnl.gov/about/missions/energy_for_the_future/life/
This is the article you want. http://www.japantimes.co.jp/text/nn20111101a7.htmlBorkBork said:What's the context of this picture?
If it's what I think it is, that's pretty ballsy. And stupid.
speculawyer said:It is extremely difficult. How do you contain it? There is no timeline for fusion at this point . . . just a distant hope.
BocoDragon said:It doesn't matter. 9.0 earthquakes are routine on planet Earth on the long timescale, therefore they can happen at an moment and they are a realistic threat. It's incorrect to make it seem like it's a "freak accident" that no one could ever predict.... 9.0 earthquakes will happen again and again. Therefore, consideration for such quakes is intrinsically a part of the nuclear risk. It's not an external freak occurance, thrust upon the perfectly safe nuclear industry.
Perhaps this fact doesn't mean abolishment of nuclear power... but it does mean that you must design plants to withstand that force, or you can't expect them to be safe over a long enough timeline..... (and that day could come in 10,000 years, or tomorrow, it's not a matter of age)
RSLAEV said:
teh_pwn said:Agreed with the time problem. We can't afford to rely on coal for 30 more years unless we're willing to give the next generation even more shit to deal with.
However a fusion reaction is theoretically fail safe. If it's magnetic based, no magnetism => collapsed reaction. Or lasers, no lasers => collapsed reaction. System failures result in a collapsed reaction very quickly.
This is important to note, because man is equally responsible for meteors and the production of nuclear waste.Amibguous Cad said:Extinction level events are common on the timescale you want us to examine. If we're really concerned about such long timescale threats, a little bit more radiation in nature paes in comparison to a meteor strike.
iidesuyo said:The Japanese haven't even realized yet what happened to them in Fukushima. This is fucking them to the ground and - as usual - the taxpayers are going to pay for it.
In after people ignore that this could only happen with nuclear power.Gaborn said:Cue people that take a poorly maintained 40 year old plant that experienced two catastrophic events right after each other and claim that nuclear power should be banned.
Upsidedown Fuji said:Electricity already costs an arm and a leg here.
Fossil fuels and the associated fires have rendered far more land uninhabitable than nuclear accidents.Utako said:In after people ignore that this could only happen with nuclear power.
I hope that the area can recover swiftly (as much as it can "recover") in 2012.
speculawyer said:It is extremely difficult. How do you contain it? There is no timeline for fusion at this point . . . just a distant hope.
A Game-Changing Energy Solution
How does it work? In a laser fusion power plant, fuel pellets are rapidly injected into an interaction chamber, producing pulses of fusion energy that heat a blanket of material surrounding the chamber. The fusion heat is then transferred to a power conversion system to produce electricity.