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The True Face of the Anti-Nuclear Movement

thebreakthrough.org

11 points by missinfo 4 years ago · 4 comments

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h2odragon 4 years ago

Oil industry funded anti-nuclear efforts and groups for years. The fact that some of them now decry the oil industry doesn't necessarily mean they're enemies; the oil industry enjoys high prices more than they hate bad PR.

credit_guy 4 years ago

I am as pro-nuclear as they come, but I find the tone of this article a bit too inflammatory. I used to think the NRC's licensing process is so complex only because of, you know, stupid bureaucracy. But I looked into the actual documents posted for the safety evaluation of the NuScale SMR, which you can find at [1]. I am not specialist, but there are plenty of topics that do appear to me to require serious consideration.

Here's an example from the final report [2] , something about "boron dilution"

  We are concerned especially about boron dilution in the downcomer by steam condensation from the steam generators or the vessel wall because it may provide a source of unborated coolant that can migrate to the core following a perturbation. 
  This could lead to a rapid return to power event (reactivity insertion accident) with the possibility of core damage.
Now, it probably depends on pronunciation, but to me "core damage" rhymes a little with Chernobyl. I am glad that the NRC took their time to evaluate this risk, and numerous other like that.

[1] https://www.nrc.gov/reactors/new-reactors/smr/nuscale/ser-op...

[2] https://www.nrc.gov/docs/ML2021/ML20212L586.pdf

fsflover 4 years ago

See also: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=26603464

EU experts to say nuclear power qualifies for green investment label: document (reuters.com)

482 points by accountinhn 7 months ago | 552 comments

Also: https://www.ans.org/news/article-1392/robert-anderson-antinu....

flerovium 4 years ago

It's hard not to ignore the fact that anti-nuclear weapons rhetoric has significantly picked up steam recently.[1]

After the pandemic, people seem to have more attention for low-risk high-impact possibilities.

[1] See Ken Follet's Never, op-eds about disarmament, and political science research interest.

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