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- Jake Friends come and go. Enemies accumulate.
Germany's Renewable Output Beats Nuclear, Hard Coal in Power Mix Dec. 16 (Bloomberg) -- Germany produced more energy from renewable sources than from nuclear, hard-coal or gas-fired plants this year after boosting investments in projects from wind to biomass. Renewables accounted for a fifth of the generation mix in 2011, up from 16.4 percent last year, the BDEW utility association said today in a website statement. Only lignite- fired output, with 24.6 percent, had a greater share this year. Atomic power sank to 17.4 percent from 22.4 percent after Chancellor Angela Merkel shuttered the country's eight oldest reactors in March in the wake of the Fukushima crisis in Japan. She plans a complete exit from the nuclear industry by 2022.
Dec. 16 (Bloomberg) -- Germany produced more energy from renewable sources than from nuclear, hard-coal or gas-fired plants this year after boosting investments in projects from wind to biomass.
Renewables accounted for a fifth of the generation mix in 2011, up from 16.4 percent last year, the BDEW utility association said today in a website statement. Only lignite- fired output, with 24.6 percent, had a greater share this year.
Atomic power sank to 17.4 percent from 22.4 percent after Chancellor Angela Merkel shuttered the country's eight oldest reactors in March in the wake of the Fukushima crisis in Japan. She plans a complete exit from the nuclear industry by 2022.
I tend to agree with you that Germany should have focused on eliminating coal before nuclear, but at least most of the change is happening through the increase in the share of renewables rather than fossil-fuel plants. and that's before the large scale investment in offshore wind shows up in the numbers. Wind power
Italy: Direct substition of dirty power upon the abandonment of their nuclear programme.
Barsebeck: Replaced by fossile fuels in the short run, swedes cleaned up the shortfall via.. uprating the remaining reactors.
Data from this year are also skewed by the unusually warm weather, so consumption was down anyway, and there was no need for actual replacement of all the nuke capacity. Question, of course, is whether the "unusual" is so unusual...
But again, you will get no disagreement from me that coal should be phased out before nukes - but since it's harder to phase out nukes (full base load), if that can be done we'll know it's easy to do the same to coal... Wind power
Direct substition of dirty power
how, after fukushima et al, you can still cling to a belief that nukes are clean in any way shape or form is as mysteriously wrong-headed as are your claims that PV, wind etc are delusional.
impasse? look at the economic forces pushing for more nukes, look at those like Jerome pushing for really clean solutions. which camp do you belong in?
it's not 1950, we are not fooled by the pseudo-promise of nuclear, we have a quarter of the world's nukes here in Europe already, you want more, lots more, when the ones they are building already are always astronomically over budget, there is no agreed safe way to dispose of the waste, and the sheer energy/risk needs for the next hundreds of thousands of years keeping them chilled will probably outweigh the needs people have for other things.
more new nukes to power the chilling of the old nukes.
redefines the term 'vicious cycle', what could possibly go wrong(er)?
every penny spent on nukes takes us farther away from the world we could create, where citizens can marry their needs with those of their environment.
we are already indebting our descendents economically in our insanely entitled profligacy and denial about our consumption patterns, but economic debt pales before the debt of suffering we will bequeath to them sprinkling more nukes around their landscape.
i agree with your loathing of coal, but the rest, no matter how sincerely you may feel what you do, rings as off-the-map self-destructive a strategy as building more coal plants.
i can't understand how anyone can still believe nuke propaganda, after all the lies and cover-ups, unless they are contrarian-for-its-own-sake, or have some financial investment in pushing this nightmarish technology which may present well on paper, but it should be patently obvious by now to all but the wilfully blind that we all-too-fallible humans are nowhere near the level of carefulness or responsibility to make happen right here.
the EROI is unquantifiable seeing how long these beasts take to die, and how much it costs to embalm them, so no nuke advocate should ever dare to describe this technology as economically justifiable, the data just isn't there! 'The history of public debt is full of irony. It rarely follows our ideas of order and justice.' Thomas Piketty
The problem is that this model is dead - it's actually even illegal in the EU as it would amount to State aid... and let's not talk about the general weakening of regulators over the past 30 years, not in energy in particular but in general.
So today, nuclear electricity (from new plants) will cost 8c/kWh instead of the 3-4c/kWh France achieved for the past 20 years - so more than wind, with even more controversy... Wind power
I've been asked to contribute to the Hollande campaign on these issues and am passing on some of these ideas as well. Wind power
The saving grace is that there are alternatives, namely wind, solar, geothermal, etc. Should it be that TPTB decide that the incentives are ripe to switch to these alternative energies and move forward full throttle, both coal and nukes could be phased out.
While there's always been known knowns and unknown knowns, it's the unknown knowns that concern me most. And the possible ramifications of nuclear power use fall squarely in the latter category imo.
is not mature enough to split the atom with respect for the entire cycle.
You are what you eat. The technocratic view of the nuclear cycle, that it's manageable, may well be true, but it is not manageable by this civilization.
Technocrats always view nuclear power in isolation, which just can't be done. "Life shrinks or expands in proportion to one's courage." - Anaïs Nin
What is manageable (in a good way I mean) by this civilization? Sometimes one wonders.
In order: nuclear waste does not need longterm cooling. LWR waste needs short term cooling while the shortest-lived isotopes decay. Long term storage, of the kind the finns and swedes are actually building has an ongoing energy consumption of zero, being a gold(well, glass, copper and clay)-plated hole into bedrock. The energy cost of building them compared to the energy extracted from the fuel before deposition is also zero. Nuclear waste quantities are very small, and the energetic costs of blasting bedrock arent that high. The energy cost of construction and decomissioning any given reactor are also neglible. Nuclear reactors are very expensive, but that is because they require enormous quantities of skilled manhours to build, not because they are resource hogs.
The error you are making is that it is very easy to construct a very long list of steps in the production of nuclear energy that consumes energy, and then claim that the EROI must be bad, but that is not how you do EROI. You need to run the numbers, and for nuclear fission, the numbers are very, very good, and can easily be dramatically improved by moving to more advanced fuel cycles.
As for pseudo-promises - Renewable advocates have promised a future powered by sun and wind since 1970, using the exact same retoric, the same images and the same arguments. This has given us 40 years of dominance by coal, and global warming. If the enviormental movement had backed nukes in 1970 global warming would basically not exist The same advocacy groups are currently signing us up for thirty+ years of natural gas, fracking and earthquakes. - You can loadbalance a wind grid with sufficient HVDC interconnections on a continental scale, or with gas turbines. Pay attention to which of those utilities are actually building....
.. BTW, can anyone explain to me why HVDC lines are not being laid more than they are? Because just looking at electricty prices in various markets, investors are passing up serious arbritage possibilities.
As for fukushima. That was a disaster beyond what I had reckoned plausible. A very expensive disaster. And the radiation killed noone. Mostly, that disaster is an argument that it is worth it to invest a heck of a lot in smaller designs with passive safeties, because heck, yes, LWR's are white elephants.
Renewable advocates have promised a future powered by sun and wind since 1970, using the exact same retoric, the same images and the same arguments. This has given us 40 years of dominance by coal, and global warming.
Renewables (along with energy efficiency and savings) were on the right path until they were killed in the 80s by the combination of the oil price collapse and the neolib revolution (remember Reagan tearing down the solar panels on the White House?). I don't think there have been a lot of coal plants built in the Western worlds in the past 25 years - but gas-fired plants have indeed been built, and they are the logical consequence of energy deregulation and investment driven by short term returns rather than long term considerations - a policy issue unrelated to renewables or their advocates.
You can loadbalance a wind grid with sufficient HVDC interconnections on a continental scale, or with gas turbines. Pay attention to which of those utilities are actually building....
Can you make the difference between a lot of gas-fired MWs, and a lot of gas-fired MWh? Balancing requires a lot of gas-fired plants but not a lot of gas to be burnt? Gas peakers are profitable with a utilization rate of 2-10%. I don't see anything wrong with having lots of little-used gas-fired power plants.
As to utilities building gas-fired plants, see my comment above about deregulation, and my various posts about how it is so much easier to be profitable with a price-making technology (high magical costs) than with a price taking technology (high fixed costs)...
BTW, can anyone explain to me why HVDC lines are not being laid more than they are? Because just looking at electricty prices in various markets, investors are passing up serious arbritage possibilities.
It's mainly a NIMBY issue, unfortunately. Wind power
The wonders of OSX Lion auto-correct... maybe not so inappropriate here! Wind power
could we take this discussion to a diary of yours on nuclear power, and not hijack a diary on the French presidential election? "Life shrinks or expands in proportion to one's courage." - Anaïs Nin
As far as cost effectiveness of EROI for nukes, I have no reason to doubt what you say. However, with respect to 'why' alternative renewable energy has only been a promise since the 1970s, my point here was that up until relatively recently (and still not to a great extent) TPTB have chosen to go the nuke route instead. Perhaps not only because it's cleaner, but probably mostly because of ROI.
As for fukushima. That was a disaster beyond what I had reckoned plausible. A very expensive disaster. And the radiation killed noone.
... yet.
Besides, the focus on radiation leaves out the fact that a lot of the longer-lived radioactive crap is also chemically toxic and very expensive to get out of your soil.
In principle, it should be possible to determine the Chernobyl risk factor by conducting enough (and large enough) epidemiological studies on the relevant populations.
In practise, it would be very expensive, and require high-quality individual-level medical data from Ukraine and the Soviet Union. Between the dissolution of the Soviet Union and the sorry state of Ukraine today, I doubt that those records exist today. If they ever did.
How do we apply that to the Fukushima incident?
Good epistomology on it is however honestly very difficult, because chernobyl was located in the industrial heartland of the SU, which means it is horrifically polluted, chemically. The citizenry in those parts can be expected to suffer elevated rates of just about anything, with or without radiation, and we have no hard data on how radiation interacts with chemical toxicity in general. - We know that it is a very bad idea for radiation workers to smoke, but beyond that- nada.
The fatality numbers for fukushima are much more reasonably predictable, tough. And And while not zero, the main cause of death is not radiation, it is relocation stress. - a lot of people got moved, and some of them were not in the best of health.
But - you know - so what?
If you can find a fossile fuel bump I would like to see it, in particular considering that fossile fuel for electricity is rare in Sweden. Vattenfall has some rarely used oil for back-up on cold winter days with nukes offline and low water levels at the water plants.
If you instead take the long view, the 1980 referendum on nuclear power that halted the expansion of nuclear is partially responsible for phasing out oil for heating. See, when nuclear was planned to be ever-expanding Vattenfall used its market position to provide local utilities with a lower price if they choose direct eletric heating over district heating. As local utilities had a lot of say in city planning, the wasteful practice of direct electric heating ruled the day. After the referendum further expansion was halted anyway so local utilities gradually moved towards district heating and the state launched incentives for converting homes heated with oil or direct electric heating to biofuels (forest by-products) or with electric heatpumps. Sweden's finest (and perhaps only) collaborative, leftist e-newspaper Synapze.se
We need to operate on deaths per KwH. Nuke wins hands down. Align culture with our nature. Ot else!
No one here is advocating for more coal and other fossil burning. So your straw dog disappears. Then the comparison with renewables must take place, on a time scale of millennia.
Not one person on this planet is capable of making an adequate judgement of the effects of nuclear power, since a) we are only just beginning to understand genetics, and b) we don't have a handle on real costs or real time frames.
What we do have is hard, commercial evidence, that overcoming cost barriers and massive supply chain scale up has already been proven on a global scale for renewables, which can't be said about nuclear. "Life shrinks or expands in proportion to one's courage." - Anaïs Nin
No one in their right mind ignores the lethal nature of coal as king killer, and the other fossils as part of a poison in this civilization.
PS. Fish count too, especially in Japan. "Life shrinks or expands in proportion to one's courage." - Anaïs Nin
Not that the SU was a textbook example of openness. But it's still rather hard to find solid basic data for contamination and exposure from Fukushima.
A lot of people have missed that the supposedly open Western democratic free market state of Japan has actually been more secretive and less concerned with the fate of its citizens than the Stalinist socialist etc Soviet Union.
More secretive, yes. Less concerned with the fate of its citizens... that's hard to argue when you consider the sort of hazmat gear the Soviets sent their cleanup crews in with (or not).
One never knows if rumours like these are true.
But when TEPCO has such a reliable record of spin and terminological inexactitude, almost anything could be going on.
It's also interesting that the last radiation survey focused on external sources only and apparently made no attempt to check for internal contamination.
But yes, by and large we keep running our nuclear plants with no plans about what to do with the waste. See, for instance Nuclear dump (of final storage and German elections) by DoDo on September 27th, 2009. tens of millions of people stand to see their lives ruined because the bureaucrats at the ECB don't understand introductory economics -- Dean Baker
The original story here, "How Sweden deals with nuclear waste" is the pro-nuclear story. It needs to be read carefully to sort out what "could" be done with the high-level waste from what "is" being done, i.e., it's being stored in "temporary" above-ground sites just like it is everywhere else.
Since Starvid wrote that piece, SKB has chosen Forsmark as location (so much for my industry sources) though the final decision rests with the government. Latest news is contracts with the consultants needed to construct the place where the waste will be encapsulated (new part of CLAB) has been put up for tender. Encapsuling is scheduled to start in 2025 and be in full speed in 2027. The process is lumbering on in its own slow pace with no visible signs of halting. Sweden's finest (and perhaps only) collaborative, leftist e-newspaper Synapze.se
So, basically the green party is in favor of at a minimum doubling the CO2 emissions of france. Great.
How is this a reply to anything I wrote? Wind power
For example, the Humboldt nuclear station in California, 64 MW, was shut down in 1976. The Techapi Pass wind farm, 710 MW, was started up in the early 1980s. So the sequence is correct to say that the nuclear resource was replaced by a sustainable resource.
However, obviously it is not a one-for-one replacement, the process for planning and deploying electrical power is inter-related with a whole range of factors like planned or unplanned shutdowns of certain sources, changing regulatory environment, demand growth rate, cost of supplies, interest rates, etc. It's never going to be a case of "we are shutting down this one system and replacing it with this other system," because none of the activities live in an isolated system.
Therefore, your question is nothing but provocation.
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