Environment & Energy
Related: About this forumHere come the small modular reactors. Or maybe not.
What strikes me about SMRs is that there are so many competing designs in a field that promises to standardize, to concentrate on two or three designs that will simplify licensing, construction, operation, and decommissioning. Instead, we have dozens of tech firms, each claiming its design is the one, and each demanding federal money for development. If I were a cynical person, I might think this whole thing is a big scam, an effort to embellish old ideas and suck up taxpayer money.
https://ieefa.org/resources/small-modular-reactors-still-too-expensive-too-slow-and-too-risky
Think. Again.
(18,009 posts)...but a very important path to eliminating CO2 emitting energy.
Research and development in any new industry is always competitive, and that's a good thing. The more they work toward finding the best final design, the better off we will all be. The last thing we should do with any new nuclear energy designs is to take the first one that comes along.
Envirogal
(169 posts)So will the eventual l/inevitable decommissioning of nuclear plants cancel out any net emissions savings?
Not to mention the impacts of facility building, mining feedstock, and managing the waste?
Are we just borrowing Peter to pay Paul on harm and environmental liability?
Think. Again.
(18,009 posts)...we know that the absolute most harmful thing about energy production right now is CO2 emissions.
And yes, we WILL have to deal with less immediate dangers in the future no matter what we do, but the math does actually add up: less fossil fuel burning (due to replacing CO2 emitting energy plants) equals less CO2 emissions.
Shermann
(8,653 posts)WheelWalker
(9,200 posts)Think. Again.
(18,009 posts)...and we must act now, in this moment.
Luckily, research and development on fusion will continue anyway, but our immediate need, in this moment, is to reduce and then eliminate CO2 emissions.
mountain grammy
(27,277 posts)hunter
(38,941 posts)See usonian's post here:
https://www.democraticunderground.com/1127174162
Seek to ensure the long-term use of fossil fuels, like natural gas, promoting natural gas as a bridge fuel, and eventually even a safe destination fuel. For example, a 2017 BP America Inc. (BP) email asserted that promoting and protecting the role of gas as an increasing part of our energy mix is a paramount priority. We need to be ready to speak to this wherever there is a credible effort to dis-incentivize gas.
Seek to portray natural gas as a green, climate-friendly fuel, while internally acknowledging that there is significant scientific evidence that the lifecycle emissions from natural gas are as harmful to the climate as coal and are incompatible with scientific emissions reduction targets. For example, the American Petroleum Institute (API) developed a 2016 draft print ad showing people engaging in outdoor activities, like skydiving, soaring on a playground swing, and playing basketball that states: Natural gas doesnt just cook dinner. Thanks to natural gas the air up here is cleaner than its been in 25 years.