Firstly, a modern reactor design reduces the ability of even incompetent managers to cause a disaster. The fundamental problem with the old designs wasn't so much a lack of safety as such, as that there was a lack of "idiot-proof" design and of "fail-safe" systems that would be safe if they stopped working. We now have a good idea of how to fix that.Thanas wrote:Because work safety and ecological impact is better in Germany than say in China, whereas the nuclear power companies have proven themselves to be ham-handed incompetents, so there is no reason to give them special treatment from the other incompetents.Simon_Jester wrote:Why is it that you CAN take a world average of the safety of nuclear power, that includes 1950s-era reactors run by ham-handed incompetents, and compare it to new reactor designs which don't incorporate the dangerous features of the old ones?
But again, in one area (nuclear) you are still in the position of comparing high-risk old reactors to low-risk new reactors, and claiming that the new reactors are unacceptably dangerous because at other times and placed, the old reactors were dangerous.
And yet in another area (deaths caused by installation and maintenance of renewables), you are doing the exact opposite. You are saying that we can't compare high-risk installation in Third World countries to low-risk installation in Germany. Or that if we do so, we can't then claim that there is any significant risk associated with the installation in Germany.
Now, aside from the point that this is inconsistent...
Just how many billions of euros is it worth spending extra on the all-renewable Energiewende, compared to a cheaper Energiewende that does not involve wending your way away from nuclear power at the same time that you try to get rid of fossil fuels?
And given that we treat those billions of euros as a cost savings, is it really that hard to get results using those same billions to educate the public about what hazards a modern reactor does and does not present? And to reform the German power industry, or create a state-run organization, capable of operating nuclear facilities competently?
I honestly suspect that including nuclear power, and spending what it takes, accepting the costs it takes, to get acceptance of nuclear power and to get acceptably safe nuclear power, would be worth it.
And the insistence on not doing this, the stubbornness, is going to cost the Germans a great deal of money, both government money and costs passed on to the customer. It will extract a price in ecological damage caused by the need to construct energy storage facilities. And even if the all-renewable Energiewende "works" in the sense that it achieves its stated goals, it will very likely involve a great deal of Germany's electricity being imported from foreigners who still use fossil fuels or nuclear power, which entirely defeats the purpose of the project!