It is always good if the people do not leave politics to the politicians but have a look into issues that can affect their lives in a drastic way. I would support autogyro in that proposal.autogyro wrote:WB has researched his own area and I believe we should all do the same. Checking reactors and delaying building them is hardly a knee jerk reaction is it.
Something which I have realized when I checked some open safety issues of nuclear power plants is the different level of information you find from sources like Wikipedia depending of the language you use. This for instance is the German version of the level 2 incident in the Swedish Forsmark NPP. If you check the English version most of the relevant information about the 2006 accident is missing although it is now considered to be the most important accident between Chernobyl and Fukushima in terms of nuclear plant safety.
In Forsmark something similar happened to Fukushima just with a better outcome. The power was lost after a shut down caused by an external problem with the grid and vital parts of the control room instrumentation was lost. Luckily the engineers were very competent and well trained. They tweaked the faulty UPS system in such a way that they could bring the emergency generators back on line. So no serious damage was done. Nevertheless the same faulty design of the electric systems could have had much graver consequences. I bet the faulty design still exists in many plants and waits to be triggered by some idiots like those who ran Chernobyl. The English Wickipedia text about this safety problem is totally misleading.
Another issue I would not be happy with is the assumption of Californian utilities that the quakes at Californian NPP locations cannot exceed a magnitude of 7. They have apparently done all the tsunami simulation right but they gamble that they will not get the big one with a 9 magnitude. I would not accept that if I were living there.
I could add more examples for instance of hydrogen explosions in NPPs and why it is bad news for them to happen but I don't want to solve other people's problems.
But there is one point I want to cover and that is the possible replacement of nuclear by renewable sources in Germany in the next years. As a society we are dedicated to do it and surely we will. The question atm is only if we should do it by 2020, 2030 or later. That is the only point of discussion in Germany. We are not going to use nuclear and we will not build new nuclear plants. We are prepared to build a better grid than we even have today and create electricity storage to compensate for times when wind and sun produce no electricity. And we are happy enough to pay a little more for the pleasure to live with the knowledge that none of our power plants will have a fatal radiation accident.
That is peanuts in energy politics. You cannot even buy one state of the art nuclear power plant for less than $7 billion, and that is after your national government has spent 20 billions to oil the wheels of the industry. Wall street is as keen on nuclear as I'm on collecting dog sh!t.Pup wrote:Populist grandstanding. Germany's needless reactor shutdown is pure theater that's going to cost them almost $4 billion.
http://www.boston.com/business/articles ... expensive/