Andrew_Fanner
Well-Known Member
Re: Well, I think its a good idea - you are a right bunch of Green Nimbys
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Only a politically based industry could possibly happen with no real idea of its own ecomonics. Nuclear is political not practical.
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RupertW. Your point is, as ever, highly valid. I have to insist that wind energy fits into exactly the same category, with the added proviso of not having been military technology for 50 odd years. The military quite like their stuff reliable and safe enough to use in close proximity. On the whole they are less fussy about costs.
I guess one of the base level problems in the debate is that there are dyed in the wool types on both sides, each having no concept that the other's pov has any validity. There are also polit5icians in decision making positions, politicians who may have degrees in media appreciation and getting elected, but no real understanding of the technology. Terms like "base load" "storage" and so forth have no real meaning to them. It isn't even their money, so doesn't feel like spending, as long as the currently fashiionable boxes are ticked, or the greatest number of voters are appeased.
Micro nuclear power stations, using standard military reactors, on suitably sized barges and thus connected to the National Grid. To me, that sounds cheap, mobile and achieveable in a short time period. The footprint is small and if decommissioning became an issue then a subduction zone may well put all the radioactive core back into the place it came from. I'm sure that there are valid engineering arguments against, but I have yet to hear any.
>>>
Only a politically based industry could possibly happen with no real idea of its own ecomonics. Nuclear is political not practical.
>>>
RupertW. Your point is, as ever, highly valid. I have to insist that wind energy fits into exactly the same category, with the added proviso of not having been military technology for 50 odd years. The military quite like their stuff reliable and safe enough to use in close proximity. On the whole they are less fussy about costs.
I guess one of the base level problems in the debate is that there are dyed in the wool types on both sides, each having no concept that the other's pov has any validity. There are also polit5icians in decision making positions, politicians who may have degrees in media appreciation and getting elected, but no real understanding of the technology. Terms like "base load" "storage" and so forth have no real meaning to them. It isn't even their money, so doesn't feel like spending, as long as the currently fashiionable boxes are ticked, or the greatest number of voters are appeased.
Micro nuclear power stations, using standard military reactors, on suitably sized barges and thus connected to the National Grid. To me, that sounds cheap, mobile and achieveable in a short time period. The footprint is small and if decommissioning became an issue then a subduction zone may well put all the radioactive core back into the place it came from. I'm sure that there are valid engineering arguments against, but I have yet to hear any.