An article by Dan Haugen in Minnesota Monitor suggests that some self-alleged environmentalists are suggesting revisiting nuclear power, that it might be a lesser evil as a means of electrical production than coal-powered plants.
Also, Pawlenty has suggesting lifting the state’s ban on building new nuclear plants.
One of the dirty secrets of electrical energy is that leads to selfish users. It is produced some distance from where it is used and we users tend to forget that there are environmental costs involved with its usage. This partly explains the popularity of hybrid cars which emit less pollution on the road, but increase whatever is going out of a power plant. In either case, there is an environmental cost, but with electricity we pass the problem on to somebody else.
Nuclear power appeals to this same selfishness. It may seem cleaner at the moment, but instead of sending the problem to a rural or exurban area, it sends the problem to future generations.
The half lives of these products are calculated to be in thousands of years. [And that just means that half of the radioactivity is gone then; the other half will take longer.] We may develop adequate secure places to hide the stuff which may survive our lifetimes and the lifetimes of our children and grandchildren, but can we be sure that we can make places secure much longer than that?
We don’t know what cataclysms may come up. And, of course, we never know what some crazy person or persons will for terroristic or mental health purposes do what.
We really need to find better ways to handle our energy needs. I don’t know if the sun and wind can ever be harnessed to do it all, but it doesn’t seem that we are even trying too hard to find out. I admit that if the sun stops shining that we would have a problem, but that would seem to be a minor problem under those circumstance.
We need better ways to limit use. Letting NSP or Excell or other providers raise rates to encourage less usage will only make the providers wealthier, but somehow we need to adjust our accounting systems so that we factor in all the costs.
Maintaining a moratorium on nuclear power plants seems to be a minimal first step toward doing that.
I really don’t want to come across as an environmentalist. That brings up a whole lot of other issues. But I do think we need to look at some of the things they raise and at things they don’t raise too.
Word choice is powerful. Just another matter to wonder about: How popular would nuclear power ever have become, had the name “radioactive power” been established in the first place.
1 comment:
We can't use fossil fule forever and despite all you dogooders have said, you haven't proven that solar is doable and you're still going to use electricity and drive, so get used to it.
Nuclear power is here to stay and it will be here even more.
the Saxon
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