The UK needs to replace 13000MW of Nuclear generation by 2023. The government will announce new plants today. 13000MW equates to 2600 x 5MW wind turbines that generate power at a cost marginally higher than coal and gas. Why chose the nuclear route?
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The UK needs to replace 13000MW of Nuclear generation by 2023. The government will announce new plants today. 13000MW equates to 2600 x 5MW wind turbines that generate power at a cost marginally higher than coal and gas. Why chose the nuclear route?
Cost: lower construction costs, lower running costs, longer lifetimes of service, greater reliability of supply in service, cheaper connections to the national grid. Plus, it's quite useful to have a lot of onshore expertise in nuclear materials handling if you're also keeping a deterrent, whether missiles or subs.
I'm a pro-nuclear green, by the way...
Best,
H
In the US, anyway, it was the constantly changing standards, rules and regulations which made nukes prohibitively expensive. But that was due to our scientific and engineering naivety at the time.
I suppose there's lots of coal, but gas will only get more dear. Plus it really makes more sense to use it for chemical feedstock intead of burning it. As far as wind, it is nice to have power when the wind's not blowing. Basically, a wind or solar requires you to build the nukes as a backup anyway, so wind up being an expensive and largely meaningless gesture to stroke the aesthetic sensibilities of post-materialist voters.The UK needs to replace 13000MW of Nuclear generation by 2023. The government will announce new plants today. 13000MW equates to 2600 x 5MW wind turbines that generate power at a cost marginally higher than coal and gas. Why chose the nuclear route?
From a post of mine on an previous thread. Obviously directed at the US situation, but relevent:Most of my reservation over nuclear is the waste disposal issue. Crack the long term problem and I could be persuaded.
The UK idea seems to be to use night time wind energy to pump water to hydro reservoirs, might work but generally, we consume the energy available to us.I suppose there's lots of coal, but gas will only get more dear. Plus it really makes more sense to use it for chemical feedstock intead of burning it. As far as wind, it is nice to have power when the wind's not blowing. Basically, a wind or solar requires you to build the nukes as a backup anyway, so wind up being an expensive and largely meaningless gesture to stroke the aesthetic sensibilities of post-materialist voters.
Don't know if the reactors will be based on the French model, one would hope so since the UK hasn't made a good job of dealing with the waste it's produced thus far.From a post of mine on an previous thread. Obviously directed at the US situation, but relevent:
"The nuclear waste issue, and the quantity of waste in in this country itself, is due to politics, not physics. Jimmy Carter canceled fuel recycling, but more than 98% of the material in a spent nuclear fuel rod is recyclable, and elsewhere in the world that's what they do. About 97% of spent fuel is uranium: 2% of that is the fissionable U-235 isotope, which powers the reactor, and the other 95% is U-238, the same non-fissionable isotope that comes out of the ground. This can't be used for bombs. Yes, it has a very long half-life, which is why environmentalists think they have to sit and watch it for a million years, but it's the same stuff that's in granite. The isotope of concern is plutonium-239, formed when small amounts of U-238 absorb neutrons during the three-year cycle. It makes up 1% of spent fuel. Separating it and putting it back in a reactor as "mixed oxide fuel" (uranium plus plutonium) is no problem. France, where 78 percent of electricity is generated by 58 nuke plants, recycles all its fuel rods. The remaining 2% of the fuel rod--the highly radioactive transuranic elements and fission byproducts-- are is all stored in a single room in Le Havre."
The UK idea seems to be to use night time wind energy to pump water to hydro reservoirs, might work but generally, we consume the energy available to us.
Don't know if the reactors will be based on the French model, one would hope so since the UK hasn't made a good job of dealing with the waste it's produced thus far.
...Don't know if the reactors will be based on the French model...
The UK idea seems to be to use night time wind energy to pump water to hydro reservoirs, might work but generally, we consume the energy available to us.
Don't know if the reactors will be based on the French model, one would hope so since the UK hasn't made a good job of dealing with the waste it's produced thus far.
The frenchies are all presumably 1st or 2nd generation 'kludges" - inefficient, not very safe, probably productive of more waste. These will be presumably be 3rd and/or 4th generation designs that are light-years more advanced, efficient, safer, cleaner.
BTW, the resevoirs is a cool idea, but I'm betting the capacity is limited and back-up is still needed.
The frenchies are all presumably 1st or 2nd generation 'kludges" - inefficient, not very safe, probably productive of more waste. These will be presumably be 3rd and/or 4th generation designs that are light-years more advanced, efficient, safer, cleaner.
BTW, the resevoirs is a cool idea, but I'm betting the capacity is limited and back-up is still needed.
...On reservoirs, people in the UK will infinitely prefer creating reservoirs for hydro schemes over 'littering' the hillsides with wind generation plant. Wales is hilly and no one lives there or really likes it<ducks and runs for cover>