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BlacknGold (39.93)

Nuclear Power Not the Answer to Climate Change

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May 24, 2011 – Comments (9) | RELATED TICKERS: URA , CCJ , UEC

Here is an interesting article written by New Scientist. Absolutely fantastic site/magazine. Feel free to check it out. Its free! 

    BlacknGold

The climate change threat to nuclear power

24 May 2011 by Natalie Kopytko Magazine issue 2813. Subscribe and saveFor similar stories, visit the Comment and Analysis and Energy and Fuels Topic Guides

Far from solving the climate problem, nuclear power may be highly vulnerable to it

THE accident at the Fukushima power plant in Japan has led to much discussion about the future of nuclear power. I believe one important lesson of the accident has been overlooked. Nuclear power is often touted as a solution to climate change, but Fukushima serves as a warning that far from solving the climate problem, nuclear power may be highly vulnerable to it.

Of course, the emergency in Japan was caused by an earthquake and tsunami. But the effects of climate change could cause very similar problems.

Two facts that everyone should now know about nuclear power are that it needs access to large volumes of water to cool the reactor and a supply of energy to move the water. For this reason nuclear power plants are typically sited near large bodies of water, often seas or estuaries. It is this attachment to water that makes nuclear power vulnerable to climate change (Energy Policy, vol 39, p 318).

First of all, coastal areas are highly dynamic: storms batter, sea levels rise, and land shifts. This already poses problems for the safety of nuclear plants, and is only going to get worse. Secondly, nuclear power can be disrupted by water scarcity and rising water temperatures.

Nuclear regulators are already well aware of several safety issues, including flooding, loss of power, loss of communications, blockage of evacuation routes and equipment malfunction. Hurricanes pose the greatest threat.

Many climate models predict an increase in hurricane intensity. Even if they are wrong, existing reactors were built (along with most coastal developments) during a period of historically low hurricane activity and a return to baseline seems likely.

This is not to say an accident will happen every time a hurricane passes by a nuclear power plant. Unlike earthquakes, hurricanes can be predicted, allowing time for preparation. Still, preventative measures are not always taken. For instance, during hurricane Francis in 2004 doors designed to protect safety equipment from flying debris at the St Lucie nuclear power plant in Florida were left open.

Another cause for concern is floods. All nuclear power plants are designed to withstand a certain level of flooding based on historical data, but these figures do not take climate change into account. Floods due to sea-level rise, storm surges and heavy rain will increase in frequency.

This isn't a hypothetical future scenario. In 1999 the Blayais nuclear power plant on the Gironde estuary in France flooded due to a high tide and strong winds that exceeded anything it was designed to withstand. Two of the reactor units on site were severely affected by flooding.

Heat waves are another serious concern, for two reasons. One, the colder the cooling water entering a reactor, the more efficient the production of electricity. And two, once the cooling water has passed through the system it is often discharged back where it came from in a much warmer state.

During the 2003 heat wave in Europe, reactors at inland sites in France were shut down or had their power output reduced because the water receiving the discharge was already warmer than environmental regulations allowed. Citing "exceptional circumstances", the French government relaxed the regulations to maintain the supply of electricity. After subsequent heat waves it became a permanent measure during the summer months.

The relaxing of the regulations causes thermal pollution that reduces the ability of aquatic ecosystems to adapt to warmer temperatures. Some may argue these regional impacts are insignificant compared to the global ramifications of climate change, but they illustrate that nuclear power can actually worsen its impact.

There is a human cost too. As the heat wave wore on, French consumers were asked to conserve energy, and exports to some countries, especially Italy, were reduced. While France, which generates over 75 per cent of its electricity from nuclear sources, avoided blackouts, Italy did not. The heat wave caused an estimated 40,000 deaths, around half of them in Italy. These deaths cannot be attributed directly to the failure of nuclear power but energy conservation and blackouts surely made people more vulnerable.

The final problem is droughts, which climate models predict will become longer and larger. Legal battles have already been fought in the US over scarce water resources in regions with nuclear power plants, including the Catawba river basin in the Carolinas and the Apalachicola/Chattahoochee/Flint river basin in Georgia, Florida and Alabama. These battles show us that adapting our systems - including nuclear power - to a reduced supply of water will not be easy.

The International Atomic Energy Agency advises the nuclear industry to build power plants to last for 100 years. Given that climate models don't agree on what to expect within this time period, it is not at all clear how this can be achieved.

New reactors could use dry or hybrid systems with lower water requirements, but the costs of running these systems are likely to be prohibitive. Considering nuclear power plants already have problems with construction cost overruns, any additional costs are likely to meet resistance.

What is to be done? Most forms of energy generation are vulnerable in some way to the effects of climate change, and the fact that nuclear power is among them is yet another argument against a wholesale shift towards this source of energy.

The bottom line is that if nuclear power is to be used to mitigate the effects of climate change, it must also be capable of adapting to them. There are serious doubts that it can.

9 Comments – Post Your Own

#1) On May 24, 2011 at 3:11 PM, smartmuffin (< 20) wrote:

I propose we solve climate change by recruiting an army of black mages to cast Blizzaga on all the glaciers.  Imaginary problems require imaginary solutions.

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#2) On May 24, 2011 at 3:23 PM, miteycasey (99.89) wrote:

You don't go entirely to nuclear. You use nuclear as a base and use NG or coal to support it during spikes and other instances.

Heat wave? keep the nuclear output the same and get more from the coal/NG electic plants.

 

no biggie.

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#3) On May 24, 2011 at 3:25 PM, mhy729 (27.28) wrote:

Interesting read...thanks for posting.

One question though:  don't all power plants (those based on heat, that is) use steam-driven turbines, and thus require a source of water?  I am guessing the essential problem with nuclear reactors is that without the constant supply of water to be heated, that there is no "heat sink" to cool the reaction that is designed to run at a slightly supercritical level?

I've read a few articles re: different designs for nuclear reactors where the reaction temperatures are much lower than those present in currently existing ones.  There were also articles on how thorium-based reactors were considered back in the day, but were rejected in favor of our current uranium-based ones because they are more compatible with the production of nuclear weapons.  Apparently thorium is something of a big disposal problem for rare earth metal producers...would be nice if it could serve as useful fuel rather than troublesome waste.

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#4) On May 24, 2011 at 5:26 PM, L0RDZ (55.33) wrote:

Climate change ????   new  politically correct way to say  ~~~~~  global warming....

Any system is only as good as its design and back up plans and back up plans to the back up  to the contingency  plans to the new  contingency  issues.

Plus you have the management  and  middle managers who  either do what they  are suppose to  or  take short cuts ?

 Since i'm sure your talking about the nuke plant  in JAPAN that went  Cher no ville...       they also  had  workers die from  hand mixing uranium to save some money.  I'm sure the top bosses were so  shocked when  some temp workers died  by hand mixing radioactive uranium by hand.

To punish all  nuclear facilities because of  one  accident  from mother nature in  how many years since the last one  which was  the Russians  fault  is  so  justified.

Lets all just stop driving, stop using electricity, no more air conditioning  or  using  electricity  to stay warm when it gets cold.

No more refrigerators,  no more stoves, just go outside and eat some grass and tree bark  and  hug your  brother  and  so on and so on :)

Let me know how that works ?

:-9

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#5) On May 24, 2011 at 6:45 PM, devoish (98.88) wrote:

To punish all  nuclear facilities because of  one  accident  from mother nature in  how many years since the last one  which was  the Russians  fault  is  so  justified.

Actually, the Chenobyl accident hasn't ended yet, and neither has the Fukushima accident.

To not protect ourselves would also be unjustifiable.

Best wishes, Steven

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#6) On May 24, 2011 at 9:34 PM, BlacknGold (39.93) wrote:

Haha I knew this post would create some conversation. It was an interesting post and I apologize for not giving my thoughts. I am long uranium in general and I actually purchased shares of URA the Monday before the Japan disaster. Talk about timing. I recently sold my shares at to free-up some cash for Solazyme's (SZYM) IPO this week. Hoping to make a quick profit from the buzz surrounding the company. Anyway...

mhy729: Interesting thought about thorium reactors. I never knew that was an option. I have heard that we can acheive, with current technology, super efficient energy production with a block of pure lithium. So its curious why we don't include these other options. As for heat transfer at plants, I'm not sure, but I will say yes. I've read about paper mills that have released their out flow of air from their dryer units at certain temperatures and humidities and effectively enveloped the surrounding areas in a blinding fog and mist. I know from my design projects that any time you release steam or air with water in it you must account for the outside temperature and humidity to prevent that from happening.

mitey and LORDZ: Nuclear is obviously a part of the energy future, especially for domestic-energy barren countries such as Japan. The article does however present an interesting view of possible scenarios that don't get discussed very often. But, as with any technology, things go wrong. Airplanes and lawnmowers could be pretty dangerous things as well in certain circumstances, but we don't lose sleep over it. As Japan has reminded us though, it may only take one major nuclear disaster to severly alter our ways of life for good.

devoish: Thanks for stopping by and good point. I've read some interesting studies about the health of ecosystems in Chernobyl 20 years later. Apparently, humans have a much more negative impact on mother nature than radiation. That is, of course, because most animals don't live long enough for radiation to have much of an effect. There are large areas near Chernobyl that are still unsafe for human occupation - and will be for many years. Hope the same isn't true for Japan.

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#7) On May 24, 2011 at 10:01 PM, devoish (98.88) wrote:

Animals are affected as embryo's just as humans are. Japan has also lost huge amounts of land,.

I could not have imagined comparing Fukushima or Chernobyl to a lawn mower accident, but I suppose it had to happen.

Best wishes,

Steven

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#8) On May 24, 2011 at 10:24 PM, BlacknGold (39.93) wrote:

The report stated that even though some lakes had magnitudes greater the normal background radiation they were some of the healthiest. The fact that fish and other animals are busy surviving and escaping predators means they don't live as long, which means they aren't as severly affected by radiation. Just going on the report.

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#9) On October 29, 2011 at 5:09 PM, clevelandrudge (< 20) wrote:

I propose that the comedians out there stick to comedy and leave the questions of global warming and nuclear emergencies to those of us who are serious about surviving for another generation or two. The jokes aren't that funny if you're under fifty feet of hot water.

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