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Environment & Energy
In reply to the discussion: Who Killed the Liquid Fluoride Thorium Reactor (LFTR)? [View all]Bob Wallace
(549 posts)11. I think what many of us recognize...
is that there are significant unsolved problems. And if they aren't solved they could be insurmountable.
That's a worst case.
Best case, we can solve them. But we won't know that for many years.
Time is running out. Each year we wait to get cracking on cutting fossil fuels makes that much harder to avoid a climatic runaway. If, a decade or two from now, someone figures out how to make these whiz-bang ideas work then we can reassess. Right now we need to get going with what does work, is cheapest, and brings no new dangers to us and those who follow us.
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Yes, I'm not looking at economics, I'm looking at environmental considerations.
joshcryer
Dec 2011
#28
700+ environmental organizations think that we should sit on nuclear waste...
joshcryer
Dec 2011
#32
The DOD wanted all reactors to be dual purpose -- provide plutonium for weapons, as well as power.
eppur_se_muova
Dec 2011
#2
Did it ever occur to you that the US commercial nuclear fuel cycle was developed to produce bombs
jpak
Dec 2011
#91
North Korea's plutonium production reactor had an electrical generating capacity of 5 MWe
jpak
Dec 2011
#98
Barry Brook is the Director of Climate Science at the University of Adelaide.
joshcryer
Dec 2011
#21
He might as well be drawing a paycheck directly from the uranium mining industry.
kristopher
Dec 2011
#37
Nice find. Brook's environmental record remains untarnished by anonymous detractors.
joshcryer
Dec 2011
#90
The damage comes from both the use of the energy and the waste products of its production.
GliderGuider
Dec 2011
#52
OK - why is human impact 6x what it should be to guarantee long-term sustainability?
wtmusic
Dec 2011
#83
I base my opinion on the situation around the beginning of the Industrial Revolution.
GliderGuider
Dec 2011
#84
There is no plan. The required change is too large to be anything except involuntary.
GliderGuider
Dec 2011
#64
The "required change" I talk about has little to do with immediate human welfare.
GliderGuider
Dec 2011
#66
I thought I was clear. I don't "propose" any mechanism, I think all we have to do is wait.
GliderGuider
Dec 2011
#70
According to WHO, "only" 150,000 annual deaths are directly attributable to global warming
wtmusic
Dec 2011
#80