Submitted by GraniteGeekNH t3_z6wak3 in vermont
ThisistheInfiniteIs t1_iy428zt wrote
Reply to comment by balding_dad in Bloomberg article on tearing down Vermont Yankee by GraniteGeekNH
>The status quo is completely unsustainable and nuclear is a crucial part of a balanced energy strategy
That is absolutely false, we do not need nuclear fission at all, not to mention the fact that even if you were somehow able to find a site for a new plant, which is very doubtful, it would be a decade just getting the planning done, and like another decade before it was actually built, and most likely billion over budget. Financially, nuclear fission just can't compete, even with the massive subsidies and the Price-Anderson act.
Also, nobody wants a pile of radioactive waste in their back yard.
WE have much better options now, which are much easier, and much much faster to build, which don't come with all of the awful liabilities of nuclear fission, or the permanent radioactive waste problem. In fact, they don't consume any expensive fuel whatsoever and they actually make money instead of wasting it.
The green revolution is here and this failed technology is dead, thankfully.
balding_dad t1_iy44t8w wrote
The existing renewable options don’t actually fill the same energy niche as coal and natural gas. We still need baseload power to serve as a stable base for consumption. This company has been trying to “solve” grid storage as baseload power since 2012 and they’re still saying “two more years” (spoiler lossless energy storage is very expensive and probably thirty years away). Our existing renewables are great for variable needs but the existing options are coal, natural gas, and nuclear. For the baseload niche, that is our choice today, I choose nuclear.
ThisistheInfiniteIs t1_iy46wl7 wrote
>We still need baseload power
This is also false, first, we already have "baseload power" from Hydro-Quebec, what we need are sources that can be easily taken on and off line, which nuclear is terrible at. It is actually a liability in our future grid.
Also, everywhere else, "baseload" power stations are not going to be a part of our electric grid going forward, renewables and batteries are what is actually being built now, we have this technology today, which is much cheaper, safer, greener and easier to build than super expensive, dangerous, unpopular nuclear fission plants.
Edit: spelling
Viewing a single comment thread. View all comments