This would be a decent argument for fossil fuels over nuclear in an AGW-less world, but the magnitude of that potential loss is so much higher, and the other good solutions to it so much worse, that I think we need to stop worrying so much about the no fatality accidents and minor radiation leaks.Aharon wrote:@HMS Conqueror
Well, obviously the same events as in Japan won't transpire in Germany. The problem is that we don't sufficiently prepare for this kind of accident, and that it seems to be very hard to put a probability to it.
The Rasmussen-Study (1976) puts the risk of a meltdown at 2/10000 per year per reactor (according to wikipedia, haven't read the extensive source myself (link)
A similar study for german reactors from th end of the 1970s gets the same result, but a change in methodology leads to completely different results in the continuation in 1989; it puts the same risk at roughly 3/1000000.
So basically, it seems to be very hard to judge the actual safety of nuclear reactors. If we work with the higher risk (considering oneself risk-averse), we do get the oft-cited result of one major accident every thirty years. Now this is for 400 reactors world-wide, so the chance that this accident is in Germany is rather low, but if it does happen here, it would bring tremendous costs - both Japan's and the Ukraine's economies will have to deal with the costs for a long time.
And this doesn't take into account the issue of repositories for nuclear waste yet. Yes, there isn't lots of waste in relation to the energy produced, but it does add up. And previous governments didn't ensure safety in the past - I'm talking about Asse II, which leads to high costs the public has to shoulder (2 billion, if I remember correctly).
So, to summarise my position: in theory, nuclear energy could be safe. In practice, people are idiots, and costs will be cut in the wrong places, making it less safe than it ought to be if one considers the big consequences a major accident can have.
I also think you are being a little unfair to nuclear:
1. The plant design matters, and it changes. At one time there were catastrophic industrial accidents caused by coal dust explosions, explosives handling, and on one occasion even a molasses spill. They were about on par, or greater, in terms of casualties than 'major nuclear accidents', and they no longer happen.
Chernobyl is the only truly large industrial accident that has occurred; that is, that has caused a considerable amount of deaths and destroyed a town. This was only possible because of the bad design. Fukushima was nothing on this scale, and happened only after a far rarer and more extreme cause (combined earthquake and enormous tidal wave vs operator error). And Fukushima plants that had problems were from the 1st generation of commercial reactors.
2. Waste disposal is a red herring. It can all be destroyed by neutron bombardment if anyone cares that much. Storing it in drums until we want to do that is basically as safe as anything, though.
Changing lightbulbs doesn't impose much cost, but it also doesn't save much CO2. We need serious solutions.Simon_Jester wrote:Not necessarily. Swapping incandescents for fluorescents isn't much of a quality of life issue (though I'm sentimental about blackbody radiation; I sometimes indulge in incandescent light bulbs in the winter when the waste heat doesn't do me any net harm anyway). Swapping poorly insulated homes for well insulated homes, or energy-economic refrigerators for uneconomic ones, likewise. Improving the energy-efficiency of industrial processes, likewise.
So no, I don't agree with that: the amount of electricity you consume may correlate with your quality of life, but that doesn't mean the relationship between them is one-to-one.
The problem with all these things is they only reduce a bit the energy needed, which currently is supplied mostly by fossils. Ultimately you have to replace the fossils with something that doesn't emit CO, and if you do that it doesn't matter how much you use.
China is building lots of coal plants...Stas Bush wrote:I wouldn't do so. China is funding massive construction of nuclear reactors and at the same time lots of research in the renewables field (solar, wind, storage, hydro).
ofc to third world countries like this even the cost premium of nuclear matters (though there are ancillary benefits to having a few, like being Taken Seriously and producing plutonium; I also suspect their token purchases of foreign reactors are essentially industrial espionage).