• @DPUGT2
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    12 years ago

    Is it credible? If it were 1980 again, I’d certainly agree with you. But given the long lead times just to get a new plant up and running, can it make any difference now? At least in the US, it’s something like 30 years from the day that everyone agrees to do it to the day it lights up the first light bulb. My understanding is that it’s a similar timeframe in Europe.

    And for that matter, it’s not even clear that there is the capacity to build significant numbers… the pressure vessel components are only built in two places on our planet, and I wouldn’t even want to know how difficult it’d be to build more such factories.

      • @a_Ha
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        22 years ago

        good, developing thorium would be nice also

        • ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆OP
          link
          42 years ago

          Also being tested now, big advantage of thorium reactors is that they use molten salt instead of water. This means you don’t have to build them next to large bodies of water for cooling, and in case of a shutdown the salt solidifies precluding the problems with radioactive leaks. https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-021-02459-w

          • @a_Ha
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            2
            edit-2
            2 years ago

            will these 150 be thorium based ?
            ( 2nd ref., yours is paywalled )

            possible answer :

            ( source )
            (…) the international Nuclear Energy Agency predicts that the thorium cycle will never be commercially viable while uranium is available in abundance—a situation which may persist “in the coming decades”.

            • ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆OP
              link
              22 years ago

              I suspect the ability to build thorium reactors away from large water sources may play a role as well as availability. My understanding is that’s the main reason China is experimenting with them. However, I’m guessing the 150 proposed reactors will be uranium based since it’s mature technology.