Voters should get to decide if they want a nuclear power plant
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Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison:
I am disappointed with your editorial that appeared in Sunday’s Victoria Advocate. I really need some clarification. You state, and I quote, “While global demand increases, worldwide energy supply remains fairly stagnant, unnecessarily restrained by government regulations and prohibitions.” What do you mean by energy supply? Do you mean oil, electricity or both? What are the unnecessary government regulations concerning nuclear energy? Are you suggesting we do away with the NRC (Nuclear Regulatory Commission)? Your editorial is entitled “ Texas poised to lead American nuclear renaissance.” You never mention nuclear waste. Are you suggesting as good Americans that we build the proposed nuclear waste facility in Texas? Who should pay for the nuclear waste facility and its maintenance? I share your concern for our energy needs! The following are just a few of my thoughts and concerns — clean, cheap, safe energy?
I am writing to express my concerns regarding the energy crisis facing our great country. Everyone, myself included, is concerned with the price of gas and on our dependency on foreign oil and global warming. What we want is clean, cheap, safe energy.
People propose that nuclear energy is clean energy, that it leaves no carbon footprint. It does not produce carbon dioxide. This is true. However, it does leave a footprint. It leaves a radioactive footprint that will last at least 10,000 years. What do we do with the radioactive waste? As of now, there is no solution other that to store it at the facilities where it is generated. We are running out of room. A facility has been proposed — the Yucca Mountain Nuclear Waste Facility in Nevada. The latest estimate to build the facility is about $100 billion. That is the cost to build it, not maintain it. That is about a billion dollars for every nuclear power plant in our great country. But does Nevada want the facility in their state? No! Do Texans want it? No! Do people in Victoria or Refugio or Jackson or Goliad counties want it? No! No one wants it! Who will pay for the waste facility and who will maintain it? As of now, Congress is proposing that the taxpayers pay for the facility, not the nuclear industry. So we will pay for their electricity and their waste. Wish somebody would pay my garbage bill! The nuclear industry should pay for the facility and the maintenance (10,000 years).
Maybe nuclear energy isn’t so cheap. Would we be building more nuclear plants if the nuclear industry had to pay for the disposal and maintenance of their waste? Then there is the notion of “safe.” So we have the NRC (Nuclear Regulatory Commission). Is there a WRC (Wind Regulatory Commission) or a Solar Regulatory Commission? Is the NRC like the DPS, it will prevent accidents? Hello! One definition of “safe” is — protected from danger or risk. Nuclear material is dangerous, otherwise we wouldn’t have to a have regulatory commission, the NRC. So I ask you is nuclear energy really clean, cheap, safe energy?
People exclaim, “But we have to do something about the energy crisis!” Yes, let’s develop renewable energy. Exelon, develop a solar or wind plant, and you will not drive the wedge you are building between the citizens in Victoria County, and you will not contribute further to an ever-growing 10,000-year radioactive footprint. There has not been a nuclear license granted in the United States by the NRC since 1984. Why? Because of the fear of a nuclear accident — Three Mile Island and Chernobyl. Those memories have faded. Now we have the fear of high energy prices and fear that we will have to change the way we live. The nuclear industry is now trying to play on our present fears and fast track new nuclear facilities. Let the people of Victoria County vote on if we need a nuclear power plant.
Mark Loffgren is a resident of
Victoria.
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Comments
To the comment "Voters should get to decide if they want a nuclear power plant" I agree!
Where can I vote?
Put me down as a "YES"!!
August 21, 2008 at 7:29 a.m.Man, I hope your dog doesn't get run over.
August 18, 2008 at 3:46 p.m.
August 18, 2008 at 12:49 p.m.Mr. Sheffrey your post brought tears to my eyes...God bless you !
Mr. eerkens maybe you should build a house next to the plant to prove how safe it is. Maybe your children and grand children should live there too since you know that it is so safe.
August 18, 2008 at 8:56 a.m.Jeff W. Eerkens, Ph.D, Thanks, Victoria Residents couldn't have said it better. Those that find this actual science, over science fiction interesting should also check out Craig Nesbit in yesterday's Crossroads section in answer to Dr. Toothfairy's piece of a week ago. Outstanding! Again, thanks for bringing light to where others have been trying to shield it.
August 18, 2008 at 8:04 a.m.This article reflects the stale anti-nuclear cry "what do we do with all the long-lived radioactive nuclear waste". The volume of waste amounts to one aspirin tablet per year per person using nuclear electricity, compared to tons of air pollutants and globe-warming gaseous CO2 emitted by coal or fossil-fuel combustion. Nuclear waste can be easily stored and safely transported, as the US nuclear navy has done for half a century. Contrary to allegations that uranium and plutonium in spent fuel elements pose a problem because of million-year half-lives, they are separated from fission products by reprocessing and burnt as fuel in future fast-breeder reactors. They will not be dumped. This reduces 50,000 tons from ten-year accumulation of spent fuel to 500 tons (with shorter decay lives) of fission products, taking centuries instead of decades to fill the Yucca Mountain repository in Nevada. The notion that long radioactive lifetimes are undesirable is also erroneous. The longer the decay lifetime, the less the radiation emitted per gram of radio-isotope. Most elements that make up our bodies (hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen, etc) have infinitely long decay lifetimes. All humans are "hot" because everyone has radioactive potassium-40 (K-40; 0.012% abundance) in his body, which continuously emits beta particles with a half-life of one million years! Man successfully evolved in this environment, and there are even indications that low levels of radiation benefit health (called hormesis). The hue and cry about possible terrorism and "dirty bombs" is also highly exaggerated. By the reasoning of anti-nuclear activists, we should stop flying 707 jets because they can be used as weapons to kill thousands of people.
Green nuclear power is the only practical solution to simultaneously (1) ameliorate global warming, (2) avoid dependence on foreign oil/gas, and (3) overcome oil/gas depletion. Only two prime energy sources, coal and uranium, can affordably deliver terawatts of "mother" electricity for: (a) heavy industry, i.e. manufacture of automobiles, ships, airplanes, bridges, etc; (b) power for vast fleets of future electric plug-in autos; and (c) production of portable synfuels (hydrogen and ammonia) and biofuels to replace oil. However coal worsens global warming and should be preserved as raw material to make plastics and other organics when oil/gas is gone. This leaves uranium as the only "big-mama" green energy source, an "inconvenient truth".
Solar and wind energy are useful for small-quantity power generation in select locations. But at terawatt levels, immense areas of land and/or sea would be needed, requiring enormous maintenance operations, spoiling scenic land- or sea-scapes, and destroying local ecosystems. As scientifically documented in "The Nuclear Imperative - A Critical Look at the Approaching Energy Crisis" (ISBN 1-4020-4930-7), by 2050 when petroleum fuels are basically exhausted, only uranium and thorium can affordably sustain global energy needs for some 3000 years, using proven fuel reprocessing and advanced reactor technology. A serious in-depth analysis of our future energy shortage by engineers (not by anti-nuclear hand-waving philosophers) reveals that nuclear power is essential to rescue our children from a future economic collapse. For the USA, 500 additional nuclear reactors are required, built on 9000 acres (@ $1.5 trillion), compared to 1,500,000 windmills with storage batteries on 6,000,000 windy acres (@ $4.5 trillion). Ten times these numbers are needed for the entire world. (Costs are in 2006 dollars; for later years, these costs must all be multiplied by the dollar inflation factor).
Because it takes a decade to design, license, and build a reactor, action must be taken immediately to prevent an economic catastrophe by 2030 when oil starts to run out. Contrary to false propaganda by anti-nuclear groups, the cost of electricity at terawatt levels is three times less expensive with nuclear than for wind or solar. Solar and wind power generation requires expensive energy storage systems (batteries, etc) when there is no sunshine or wind. Also many miles of access roads for maintenance and repair are needed to keep blades or solar panels clean from bird droppings, dead birds, sand erosion, and storm damage, and to periodically replace electrodes on storage batteries. Aficionados of renewables usually quote peak windmill or solar station capacities, neglecting to multiply their numbers by a factor of four to account for a year-averaged availability of only 25% of peak wind or sunshine. Reactors run continuously all year at 90% capacity. Should the USA limit itself to solar and wind energy, it is guaranteed to become impoverished and dependent on portable synfuels imported from other countries (the future OPECs), who have expanded their nuclear power generation when oil fields are depleted.
Modern nuclear power plants are absolutely safe. Because of the negative "coefficient of reactivity", reactor fuel elements only melt (an explosion is not possible) during a maximum credible accident in which the emergency core cooling system totally fails. This was "experimentally" proven in the Three-Mile-Island (TMI) accident. A negative coefficient of reactivity means that neutron multiplication is automatically stopped when the temperature in the reactor gets too high. The Russian Chernobyl reactor which took the lives of approximately 60 people, had a positive coefficient of reactivity because it used graphite as moderator, a design for nuclear power plants which is now prohibited in all countries. Furthermore the Chernobyl reactor had no containment vessel, as is the law in all Western countries and now worldwide. The assertion that perhaps thousands of people could still die from radioactive fallout around Chernobyl is nonsense. Of the 60,000 inhabitants of Pripyat who had been exposed to fallout, about 9,000 will die at an advanced age of cancer because worldwide 15% of all people ultimately die from cancer. To ascribe those 9,000 deaths to Chernobyl's fallout is equally ridiculous as claiming that such a death toll is due to drinking coffee because 15% of all people drink coffee. Security precautions and containment measures for today's nuclear power plants do reckon with the possibility that terrorists might crash a large airplane or bomb on a reactor. Even if aerial obstructions (e.g. balloons) or underground construction can not prevent penetration of the large dome-shaped containment vessel, the reactor core vessel is designed to remain mostly intact. It can further be inundated with neutron-poisoning borated water which suppresses all further uranium fission in case of an accident.
Energy is man's third most important need after water and food. Those who hinder expansion of nuclear power will be viewed as irresponsible neo-luddites by future generations. Any further delay of a committed worldwide nuclear energy program will cause certain impoverishment and death of many people by 2050. Those responsible will and must be held accountable for this. Without greatly expanded nuclear power, desert towns like Las Vegas and Phoenix will become ghost-towns. Originally the US had planned to have 300 reactors by the year 2000, but instead there are only 104 today. After the Three-Mile-Island (TMI) reactor meltdown in 1979 in the US (with 0 casualties) and Russia's Chernobyl accident in 1986 (with 57 fatalities), public hysteria fanned by fear-mongering antinuclear activists caused cancellations and moratoria on construction of new nuclear plants. While the USA was once the leader, most US businesses with reactor manufacturing know-how closed. Instead France, Russia, Japan, South-Korea, India, and China are now in charge. Zealous anti-nuclear lobbyists and mal-informed governments have created the pending energy crisis. We are entering a war-like energy-deprivation period as serious as WW-II or Al-Qaida. Strong Manhattan-project-like leadership is needed.
Jeff W. Eerkens, Ph.D
August 18, 2008 at 3:02 a.m.Adjunct Research Professor,
Nuclear Science and Engineering Institute
University of Missouri, Columbia