Why don't Climatologists Support Nuclear Power?
I am open-minded but skeptical about human-induced climate change. WDonway's - recent post got me thinking again.
If CO2 is really the culprit, and one really believes it, why then are these same people not clamoring for the only presently viable solution to resolve it, Nuclear Power?
Renewables are clearly too far off, and far too ineffective. If one really believes human-induced global warming is a looming disaster, why are they not pushing to solve it. This seems a simple question to pose to any climate-religious-zealot. I suspect a majority would think for a moment where the funding originates, and decide to take a evasive political stance.
If CO2 is really the culprit, and one really believes it, why then are these same people not clamoring for the only presently viable solution to resolve it, Nuclear Power?
Renewables are clearly too far off, and far too ineffective. If one really believes human-induced global warming is a looming disaster, why are they not pushing to solve it. This seems a simple question to pose to any climate-religious-zealot. I suspect a majority would think for a moment where the funding originates, and decide to take a evasive political stance.
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What did you do in the nuclear industry? I've worked on submarines one way or another pretty much my entire career.
- - - nameless con-gresscritter 2015
Again though, you are asserting there is sufficient information to levy a burden on others. You seems to be avoiding pointing me to fundamental technical arguments demonstrating the need for this action. Are you taking the position that enough people have agree, therefore it must be correct?
A few years ago I interviewed a well-meaning activist who thought the ISM-band signals from wireless water meters posed a health risk.
http://www.element14.com/community/commu...
It opened my eyes to how scary the world can be to well-meaning people who don't understand science.
I would extend this argument to what you said on Middle East national security issues. Using Middle Eastern oil for fuel or plastics has costs that should be borne by those who do it.
Show me the models predicting where we are from where we were. Show me that someone can prove they understand the physical system well enough that we should entrust our freedoms to them. Show me that I should pay $7,500 to someone buying a Tesla, that the EPA should have power to legislate CO2, or that we should have invested $400M in Solyndra.
The only obvious benefit from reducing our CO2 emissions is an corresponding increase in national security by reducing the strength of our asymmetric enemies in the Middle East.
If this could really be shown then given necessity, Nuclear Power MUST take off. It is clearly the only option to address the need, and in doing so, we trivialize the Middle East Threat.
Because it is not obvious, it makes the overall response lackadaisical, which is inefficient in cost and time, and worse, points the consequential investment to longer-term, unaffordable renewable sources. If you are right, we are doing the wrong thing. Convince me and I'll become a vocal supporter, as any good skeptic should do.
I even have a work buddy whose wife is a professor of climatology, but absolutely nothing she has pointed me too is more than coincidence and appealing to the potential risk IF the coincidence is correct. "Adjusting"prior temperature data from which Global Cooling was prophetized in the 70s is really not helping my suspicions that this is anything but a power play by the Greenies.
I think nuclear will make a comeback in my lifetime, either because of rising fuel costs, concern about local pollution and global climate change, and advances in making nuclear even safer.
Gotta keep reading on Thorium reactors.
I have read speculation that if not for the anti-technology movement of the late 1960's, we might already be living in an enclave that is what we consider our dream-future. I am glad that we saved the whales; I am not glad that it was at the expense of our dreams
Jan
So many benefits - all 'they' (gov) have to do is go away and let us achieve for a while.
Thanks for starting this thread.
Jan
I read that article when you posted it yesterday, and it's always good to hear someone (besides me) who realizes the benefits of nuclear power.
Today's regulatory environment (partly spurred on by the incident at Fukishima) drives up the cost of nuclear plants almost to the point of economic non-viability. I still remember (barely) when the advent of nuclear plants was going to drive the cost of electricity to be "too cheap to meter". If the regulators and some members of the public could put aside their irrational fears, it still could be ... and still be one of the safest energy sources around!
Oh, and by the way, no CO2 emissions...
The Ecomodernist Manifesto that I linked to (yesterday?) has quotes such as, "Urbanization, agricultural intensification, nuclear power, aquaculture, and desalination are all processes with a demonstrated potential to reduce human demands on the environment, allowing more room for non-human species. Suburbanization, low-yield farming, and many forms of renewable energy production, in contrast, generally require more land and resources and leave less room for nature. " and "Nuclear fission today represents the only present-day zero-carbon technology with the demonstrated ability to meet most, if not all, of the energy demands of a modern economy. However, a variety of social, economic, and institutional challenges make deployment of present-day nuclear technologies at scales necessary to achieve significant climate mitigation unlikely. A new generation of nuclear technologies that are safer and cheaper will likely be necessary for nuclear energy to meet its full potential as a critical climate mitigation technology...In the long run, next-generation solar, advanced nuclear fission, and nuclear fusion represent the most plausible pathways toward the joint goals of climate stabilization and radical decoupling of humans from nature. "
Here is a link to that document. http://www.ecomodernism.org/manifesto
I think this is a definite 'things are looking up' moment.
Jan