- cross-posted to:
- nuclear_power
- cross-posted to:
- nuclear_power
I found this surprising. Even considering the costs of construction and decommissioning, nuclear does not compare too badly to renewables.
This doesn’t seem to be just made up. It cites this which cites this, which cites this. And as far as i’m willing to dig, there’s nothing bogus about it.
I have a few comments though:
- in the Warner article, do the costs represent proper decommissioning, like making it as safe as a decommissioned solar farm would be? It’s not clear.
- The OWID article doesn’t distinguish between different types of wind/solar, which the source material does! So maybe that’s how they are fudging the data? Somebody needs to take some time and improve the OWID dataset.
- It’s really pathetic if renewables still aren’t safer and cheaper than nuclear. Nuclear is so wasteful. If we need a decade or two of research before we can ditch nuclear, then let’s do it.
- CHEF-KOCH21·3 years ago
- You need to enrich the uranium in the first place, you need machines and know-how so there is no full stop. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=apODDbgFFPI
- There was leakages across the globe, some example. https://www.cbsnews.com/news/hanford-nuclear-site-leaking-radioactive-chemical-waste/
- We have options like water for example. Wind, solar. Combining them is a beginning.
- You need to put into consideration that creating solar panels also creates a carbon footpint as well as recycling it. It is not about mistakes, it is about the scope, research material often put the scope on other variables. If we swipe under the carpet that solar has flaws, or forget the nuclear waste, well sure than those solutions look - clean. But they are not.