What's new

Why Nuclear Energy Is On The Verge Of A Renaissance

_NOBODY_

SENIOR MEMBER
Joined
Jan 6, 2016
Messages
3,327
Reaction score
4
Country
Pakistan
Location
Pakistan

Why Nuclear Energy Is On The Verge Of A Renaissance



For some, nuclear power may conjure images of mushroom clouds or bring back memories of disturbing nuclear disasters like Chernobyle and Fukushima. But despite public fear around nuclear power, the technology has proved to be an emission-free, reliable way to produce large amounts of electricity on a small footprint. As a result, sentiments about the technology are beginning to change.

Both the U.S. government and private companies including X Energy, NuScale and, Bill Gates-backed, TerraPower are pouring money into developing, what they say will be smaller, safer nuclear reactors. CNBC visited Idaho National Laboratory to see the Marvel microreactor firsthand and learn what such developments could mean for the future of nuclear power.

After humankind discovered nuclear fission, the first applied use was the atomic bomb. The study of fission for electricity production came later.

In December 1953, President Dwight D. Eisenhower gave his fateful Atoms for Peace speech, an impassioned plea to reconstitute the power of the atomic bombs dropped in World War II for a more noble cause.

“Against the dark background of the atomic bomb, the United States does not wish merely to present strength, but also the desire and the hope for peace,” Eisenhower told the United Nations.

Almost 70 years later, the tension between those end uses still underlies the space today.

From the 1950s through the 1970s, the United States dramatically increased its nuclear energy generation.

But the Three Mile Island accident in 1979 and Chornobyl meltdown in 1986 changed the landscape, spurring fear that nuclear energy could not be controlled safely.

Since the 1980s, nuclear energy capacity and generation in the U.S. has largely stayed flat. Today, the country’s fleet of nuclear power reactors produces only 19% of the country’s electricity, according to the government’s Energy Information Administration.

In more recent times, the Fukushima Daiichi accident in Japan in 2011 — and earlier this year the capture of nuclear power plants in Ukraine by invading Russian forces — have added to public concerns.

But despite its fraught origin story and the psychological effect of high-profile accidents, nuclear energy is getting a second look.

That’s largely because nuclear energy is clean energy, releasing no greenhouse gasses. Meanwhile, the world is seeing more of the effects of climate change, including rising global temperatures, increased pollution, wildfires, and more intense and deadly storms.

“We need to change course — now — and end our senseless and suicidal war against nature,” Antonio Guterres, the secretary-general of the United Nations, said in Stockholm on Thursday.

“There is one thing that threatens all our progress. The climate crisis. Unless we act now, we will not have a livable planet,” Guterres said. “Scientists recently reported that there is a 50-50 chance that we could temporarily breach the Paris Agreement limit of 1.5 degrees Celsius in the next five years.”


@ghazi52 @araz @The Eagle @The Accountant @That Guy @Irfan Baloch @PanzerKiel @AgNoStiC MuSliM @Imran Khan @PAKISTANFOREVER @waz @Windjammer @WinterFangs @KaiserX @niaz @farok84 @AZADPAKISTAN2009 @MastanKhan @krash @FOOLS_NIGHTMARE @Bilal Khan (Quwa) @Cookie Monster @Bratva @Foxtrot Alpha @Rafael @Rafi @Trango Towers @TNT @Indus Pakistan @Falcon26 @Norwegian @LeGenD @Iltutmish @notorious_eagle @Akh1112 @mingle @AZADPAKISTAN2009 @Tipu7 @Horus @Ark_Angel @SQ8 @Goenitz @messiach @TaimiKhan @SecularNationalist @farok84 @Blacklight @Meengla @Ahmet Pasha @White and Green with M/S @Dalit @ARMalik @Sainthood 101 @Zibago @Jango @untitled @Reichsmarschall @Bleek @Dual Wielder @Smoke @RescueRanger @Trango Towers @Asimzranger @FuturePAF @Imad.Khan @forcetrip @baqai @blain2 @khail007 @N.Siddiqui @kingQamaR @Wergeland @PakAlp @VCheng @Wood @Blueindian @Joe Shearer @Beast @beijingwalker @IblinI @chinasun @shi12jun @serenity @MH.Yang @Daniel808 @dani191 @Dariush the Great @dbc @KAL-EL @Hamartia Antidote @UKBengali @Avicenna @Beny Karachun @Foinikas
 
That’s largely because nuclear energy is clean energy, releasing no greenhouse gasses.

Funny how Germany retired its nuclear power plants "for protecting the environment", making it dependent on external fuel sources, when nuclear energy itself has been reclassified as a clean energy source. It was always clean, it is only the political winds that have changed. In this is an important lesson for the rest of the world.
 
I gotta say that,I don't know about other countries,but so far in Greece,no matter the government's efforts,Green Energy is failing. You know,the wind turbines and the weird stuff. We're not a nuclear power country,but we do have a lot of coal energy. And because of Green Energy policies,we've ended up even importing electricity from what I've heard. Because they decided to shut down the coal plants.
 
Sustainable nuclear fusion seems to be elusive. I think thorium based nuclear fission reactors are more feasible in future. They are also much safer.
 
Funny thing is : We are still using designs (PWRs etc) that were more suited to maximize plutonium production. Gen 3 designs more suited for safer reactors are still not mainstream. Actually its a misnomer. Most of Gen-3s go back to 60s and early 70s.
 
Sustainable nuclear fusion seems to be elusive. I think thorium based nuclear fission reactors are more feasible in future.
The trouble is that we are doing nothing about our advantages.
 
I gotta say that,I don't know about other countries,but so far in Greece,no matter the government's efforts,Green Energy is failing. You know,the wind turbines and the weird stuff. We're not a nuclear power country,but we do have a lot of coal energy. And because of Green Energy policies,we've ended up even importing electricity from what I've heard. Because they decided to shut down the coal plants.
What percentage of Greece's energy is produced by renewables?
 
What percentage of Greece's energy is produced by renewables?
This is from wikipedia:

In line with the European Commission's Directive on Renewable Energy, Greece aims to get 18% of its overall energy from renewable sources by 2020.[3] In 2015, according to the independent power transmission operator in Greece (ΑΔΜΗΕ) more than 20% of the electricity in Greece was produced from renewable energy sources and hydroelectric powerplants. This percentage in April reached 50%.[4] The same trend was the case also for 2016.[5]

The contribution of non-hydroelectric renewable energy sources (RES) to the gross final electricity consumption accounted for 24.5% in 2016,[6] while hydroelectric power represented approximately 25% by installed capacity. According to the Greek Electricity Market Operator (LAGIE), the total installed capacity in the Greek interconnected system at the end of 2016 accounted for almost 16,615 MW, including 3,912 MW lignite, 4,658 MW natural gas, 3,173 MW large hydro-power and 4,873 MW RES.
[6]
 
With improvement in technology, nuclear plant are safer with latest gen. Uranium usage can be maximized and radiation can be keep to the minimum.
 
I gotta say that,I don't know about other countries,but so far in Greece,no matter the government's efforts,Green Energy is failing. You know,the wind turbines and the weird stuff. We're not a nuclear power country,but we do have a lot of coal energy. And because of Green Energy policies,we've ended up even importing electricity from what I've heard. Because they decided to shut down the coal plants.

Ah! The Greens in my state are all patting themselves on the back at all the evil nuclear power and fossil fuel plants they have closed to help the world..so now we import power from Canadian nuclear powerplants...awesome logic there!
 
Ah! The Greens in my state are all patting themselves on the back at all the evil nuclear power and fossil fuel plants they have closed to help the world..so now we import power from Canadian nuclear powerplants...awesome logic there!

Just wait until they shut down gas pumps and the transportation system is made dependent on that woefully inadequate grid. :D
 
This is from wikipedia:

In line with the European Commission's Directive on Renewable Energy, Greece aims to get 18% of its overall energy from renewable sources by 2020.[3] In 2015, according to the independent power transmission operator in Greece (ΑΔΜΗΕ) more than 20% of the electricity in Greece was produced from renewable energy sources and hydroelectric powerplants. This percentage in April reached 50%.[4] The same trend was the case also for 2016.[5]

The contribution of non-hydroelectric renewable energy sources (RES) to the gross final electricity consumption accounted for 24.5% in 2016,[6] while hydroelectric power represented approximately 25% by installed capacity. According to the Greek Electricity Market Operator (LAGIE), the total installed capacity in the Greek interconnected system at the end of 2016 accounted for almost 16,615 MW, including 3,912 MW lignite, 4,658 MW natural gas, 3,173 MW large hydro-power and 4,873 MW RES.
[6]
Is Greece currently importing coal/fuel to power its nonrenewable power plants?
 
Ah! The Greens in my state are all patting themselves on the back at all the evil nuclear power and fossil fuel plants they have closed to help the world..so now we import power from Canadian nuclear powerplants...awesome logic there!
Is that Washington or New York we are talking about?
 
Just wait until they shut down gas pumps and the transportation system is made dependent on that woefully inadequate grid. :D

Don't worry our magical sun will power our cars with only a 1cm sq solar panel stuck on the bumper next to the "Successfully green" bumper sticker.
 
Is Greece currently importing coal/fuel to power its nonrenewable power plants?
No idea,but we do import oil and gas. The problem is that we had big lignite plants,that are now shut because the government wants to turn into "renewable energy"...meanwhile,there's a lot of criticism on that.

Here's the whole article,maybe you can make more sense out of it,I'm ignorant when it comes to that stuff :P

 
Last edited:

Pakistan Affairs Latest Posts

Back
Top Bottom