Some random ramblings.
Nuclear waste storage has already been proven to be safe for 1.5 billion years (and counting).
In Her infinite wisdom, Mother Nature realized Her spoiled children would abuse her with smoke, sooth and carbon dioxide and set up an experiment for us to demonstrate that deep geological storage of nuclear waste is perfectly safe. At Oklo, Gabon, is a former natural nuclear fission reactor.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Natural_nuclear_fission_reactor
One and a half billion years ago (that's 1 500 000 000 years) enough uranium was bunched together at this site and a fission reaction started spontaneously and ran for a few hundred thousand years with an average power output of about 100kW thermal. This generated the very same kind of nuclear waste that artifical reactors produce. This waste sat there, unprotected in the rock, with water running right though it. What happened?
Nothing... nada... ingenting... absolument rien. The particulary dangerous byproducts bond very tightly to rock and as such, the nuclear waste moved mere inches, in one point five thousand million years.
The Swedish KBS-3 method of storing nuclear waste uses this knowledge gained by the Oklo site and unless someone drills 500m though rock down to the site and literally carries the waste up to the surface, pounds it into dust and then throws it up in the air, it's going to stay down there forever.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/KBS-3
Deep geological storage of spent nuclear fuel is safe.
The Chernobyl disaster was not that lethal.
While Chernobyl indeed was a significant and serious industrial accident, it still doesn't hold a candle to some of the other disasters that mankind has created. The UN calculates that the final death tally for the accident will be about 4000. The claims you have heard of millions dead and million more children being born deformed and the area being completely unfit for human life forever and ever is nothing but hyperbole... i.e. pure bullshit.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chernobyl_Accident
This tally we can compare with sooth and particle induced deaths from the usage of fossil fuels. Coal power for instance induces approcimately 25 deaths per Terawatthour produced. The US is instance, in 2006 - that is one single year - produced 2000 TWh from coal. Do the math children. Biofuels, while more harmless, are still not free of guilt with 7 killed per TWh.
Not even hydropower is any less innocent than Chernobyl. In 1975, the dam at Banqiao, China, collapsed. 26 000 died instantly and another 145 000 perished in the resulting epidemics and famine. That's 170 000 people killed by hydropower in a single accident. That is 40 times worse than Chernobyl!
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Banqiao_Dam#Casualties
All in all we surround ourselves with risks that, even in retrospect and looking at what has actually happened rather than relying on optimistic prognosises, are magnitudes worse than nuclear power. Chemical industries (remember Union Carbied at Bhopal, hm?), fossil fuels, transports of dangerous goods such as cholrine gas are all much more dangerous.
No other reactor is like Chernobyl.
Well actually there are a few of the Soviet RBMK reactors still in operation, but all of them are in the former Soviet Union and all of them are under pressure to be shut down.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RBMK
The RBMK type graphite moderated nuclear reactors were built with two things in mind:
- To be made cheap
- To produce plutonium
To this end, graphite was chosen as the moderator because firstly that allows you to use unenriched uranium as opposed to using enriched unrainum that costs a bit to produce. And seconly this allows you to produce plutionum as a byproduct of running the reactor. But since you need to be inside the reactor and fiddle quite often when you use a reactor for this purpose, they decided against building something that is present in all other reactors in the world: a reactor containment. This is because such a containment meant you cannot open the reactor and extract the plutonium as fast as is needed before it is lost.
The bad part about this is two-fold. Firstly the lack of reactor containment means that when something bad happens, you have nothing stopping the fallout from escaping the building, and this is indeed what happened. Second, the graphite gives the reactor something called a positive void coefficient. In short this means that if you overheat the reactor and boil some of the coolant (i.e. get voids (bubbles) in the coolant), then the nuclear reaction speeds up. This makes the reactor even hotter, boils more coolant, makes it even hotter, boils even more coolant and so forth. This is what happened. The Chernobyl accident was not a meltdown, it was a power excursion (i.e. the reaction ran away and overheated the reactor) that caused a steam explosion.
Every other nuclear reactor in the world works the opposite, i.e. when there is voids in the coolant, the reaction slows down, cooling the reactor and stopping the coolant from boiling.
Finally, apart from the that that it is phycially impossible to do to a western reactor what they did in Chernobyl, western reactors (and indeed now the remaining RBMK reactors) have an entirely different culture of safety. The things they did at Chernobyl are by no other words appalling.
Solar and wind power will never suffice.
Solar and wind power have approximately the same environmental impact as does ncuelar power. The problem with the reneweables though is that they are not available in the volumes we'd like them to be. In Sweden we have at present approximately 800 wind turbines. Yearly they prodoce approximately 1 TWh of energy. In comparison, the 10 nuclear plants we have produce 194 TWh yearly... and we get 230 Twh from fossil fuels. Now if you want to replace nuclear and fossil fuels with wind... that means building 400 x 800 = 320 000 more wind plants. And with this I havn't taken into account the fact that the so called "A-sites", the good windy sites will run out fairly soon. So we have to factor in that we will have to place these plants at sites that aren't as good in regards to producing wind power.
Solar... well that isn't much better. While we do have an enormous influx from the sun seen on the Earth as a total, we still have to harness the power. 100% effective solar panels, at the best spot on Earth, at the best time of the day can soak up 1kW per square meter... not more. Do the math again kids and see how much solar panels you must build to replace fossil and nuclear power.
So in essence, only nuclear power can produce the volume needed to replace coal. Wind and solar are nice complements, but the investment needed to produce the number of TWh needed to replace fossil fuels makes it unrealistic to put our hopes in wind and solar... because they just don't give enough energy unless we spend huge amounts of cash on building the facilities for it.
4) Saving power will not be enough. Currently 85% of our energy is produced by fossil fuels. The International Energy Agency calculates that until 2030, our needs will have increased by approximately 60%.
But suppose there is a miracle and we instead decrease out need for energy by, say 50%. That means we can scrub fossil fuels, right? No... cut our energy need by 50% and use all that saving to decrease only the use of fossil fuels, and we still produce 70% of all our energy through fossil fuels.
So in conclusion my vote is: Nuclear Power? Yes Please!
/S