Saturday, May 7, 2011

End of Nuclear



Yes, it is over.  The pending advent of effective energy storage will make wind and solar easily as competitive, as will superconducting power transmission.  Subsidies are irrelevant because nuclear is the biggest pig at that trough anyway.

Wind can build out on demand as can solar and they are doing just that.  Nuclear takes decades and that simply will not work in a high demand market now developing for ev’s.

And after all that, we now have a potent ten times unity heat engine coming on the market not causing any radiation problems at all.  With that it is truly over for nuclear. Inside five years we will see everyone figuring how to get rid of the problem once and for all.

The End of Nuclear

by Staff Writers

Washington DC (SPX) Apr 28, 2011


As of April 1, 2011, there were 437 nuclear reactors operating in the world, seven fewer than in 2002. File image courtesy AFP.



Even before the disaster in Fukushima, the world's nuclear industry was in clear decline, according to a new report from the Worldwatch Institute. The report, which Worldwatch commissioned months before the Fukushima crisis began, paints a bleak picture of an aging industry unable to keep pace with its renewable energy competitors.

"The industry was arguably on life support before Fukushima. When the history of the nuclear industry is written, Fukushima is likely to begin its final chapter," said Mycle Schneider, lead author of the new report, The World Nuclear Industry Status Report 2010-2011: Nuclear Power in a Post-Fukushima World, and an international consultant on energy and nuclear policy.

Some of the report's key findings include:

+ Annual renewable capacity additions have been outpacing nuclear start-ups for 15 years. In the United States, the share of renewables in new capacity additions skyrocketed from 2 percent in 2004 to 55 percent in 2009, with no new nuclear capacity added.

+ In 2010, for the first time, worldwide cumulative installed capacity from wind turbines, biomass, waste-to-energy, and solar power surpassed installed nuclear capacity. Meanwhile, total investment in renewable energy technologies was estimated at $243 billion in 2010.

+ As of April 1, 2011, there were 437 nuclear reactors operating in the world, seven fewer than in 2002. In 2008, for the first time since the beginning of the nuclear age, no new unit was started up. Seven new reactors were added in 2009 and 2010, while 11 were shut down during this period.

+ In 2009, nuclear power plants generated 2,558 Terawatt-hours of electricity, about 2 percent less than the previous year. The industry's lobby organization The End of Nucleard "another drop in nuclear generation"-the fourth year in a row.

Despite predictions in the United States and elsewhere of a nuclear "renaissance," the report concludes that the role of nuclear power was in steady decline even before the Fukushima crisis. The disaster will make the construction of new nuclear plants and extensions to the lifetime of current plants even more unrealistic.

"U.S. news The End of Nuclears often suggest that a nuclear renaissance is under way," said Worldwatch President Christopher Flavin.

"This was a big overstatement even before March 11, and the disaster in Japan will inevitably cause governments and companies that were considering new nuclear units to reassess their plans. The Three Mile Island accident caused a wholesale reassessment of nuclear safety regulations, massively increased the cost of nuclear power, and put an end to nuclear construction in the United States. For the global nuclear industry, the Fukushima disaster is an historic-if not fatal-setback."

3 comments:

Matt said...

The major issue with the nuclear industry is that the government refuses to make plants upgrade to generation 4 or 5 plants and move from uranium to thorium. If they did this plants would be 100% safer, be 90% less wasteful with resources, never be able to go critical like Chernobyl did.

fmhenry4@netzero.com said...

"...we now have a potent ten times unity heat engine coming on the market..."

Can you fill in more info of the
above statement?

arclein said...

Check my posts on the Rossi - focardi reactor need to be read. It is not mainstream yet but that is also not too far away.

The dream of the early fifties was free fusion and it appears to have actually arrived in a unexpected manner.