The Nuclear Power Thread

In summary, the author opposes Germany's plan to phase out nuclear power and argues that the arguements against nuclear power are based primarily on ignorance and emotion. He also argues that nuclear power is a good solution to a number of issues, including air pollution, the waste situation, and the lack of an available alternative fuel. He also notes that the research into nuclear power has been done in the past, and that there are potential solutions to the waste problem.
  • #841
Three Mile Island at center of debate: Let nuclear plants die or save them
http://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/three-mile-island-at-center-of-debate-let-nuclear-plants-die-or-save-them/ar-AAqfyOu

Relatively inexpensive gas makes some nuclear plants less cost competitive.

Some of the issues:
The danger PJM sees is that each new subsidy creates a precedent for government intervention. The uncertainty makes it harder for investors to determine what sort of power generation is a sound investment in the region, Bresler explained. Those investors could simply decide to put their capital to work in other energy markets where the regulatory outlook is more stable, ultimately leading to under-investment in places where government intervenes, he added.

PJM believes longer-term, regional approaches are more appropriate. It has produced research that outlines how coal plants and nuclear energy, which provide the type of stable energy that is still necessary for reliable power supply, could play a larger role in setting prices. It is also preparing to release a report on how to put a price on carbon emissions in all or parts of the regional grid.

Three Mile Island could be viable if natural gas prices rose from below $3 per million British thermal units to about $5 per mmBtu and if a "reasonable" price were applied to carbon, according to Exelon's Dominguez. He is encouraged by the fact that that conversations around new pricing models and carbon pricing are gaining traction.

"The great part about this is everybody understands we have a major problem. We're losing some of the lowest cost, cleanest and most reliable resources in America," Dominguez said.
 
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  • #842
Astronuc said:
Three Mile Island at center of debate: Let nuclear plants die or save them
http://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/three-mile-island-at-center-of-debate-let-nuclear-plants-die-or-save-them/ar-AAqfyOu

Relatively inexpensive gas makes some nuclear plants less cost competitive.

Some of the issues:
True, but new plants must attract investors and bond holders. The investor asks, "how much might the rules of the game change before I get my money back?". That makes regulatory uncertainty a major obstacle.

It also favors short term investments (5-10 year ROI instead of 40 year ROI).

I would focus nuke research on factory-built, intrinsically safe, unmanned, maintenance-free, sealed units, that are discarded at EOL rather than refueled. A black box with no access hatches, no pipes, just 2 (or 3) wires coming out. Even better, zero wires - a district heating reactor.

Unfortunately, that offers no employment for ops/maintenance.
 
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  • #843
anorlunda said:
I would focus nuke research on factory-built, intrinsically safe, unmanned, maintenance-free, sealed units, that are discarded at EOL rather than refueled. A black box with no access hatches, no pipes, just 2 (or 3) wires coming out. Even better, zero wires - a district heating reactor.

Why? Why do you hold actinide power to such standards and not other means of generating electricity?

https://www.treehugger.com/clean-te...-billion-in-additional-health-care-bills.html

"Coal Pollution Will Kill 13,200 Americans This Year & Cost $100 Billion in Additional Health Care Bills"

EDIT: Here's a better link than the one above
http://www.externe.info/externe_d7/If regulatory burden on nuclear is preventing it from supplanting the coal-powered generators, then we need to change the regs. Maybe hold the coal burners to the same standards, if you just can't bear to reduce the rules on the nukes. Of course, that will never happen, since the coal burners are protected by the mining and railroad interests. Ironically, the almost negligible fuel cost for uranium-fired plants means there is no "deep pockets" in their corner.
 
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  • #844
gmax137 said:
Why do you hold actinide power to such standards and not other means of generating electricity?

Who says I don't? I'm not talking about rules and regulation here, but rather making a product that appeals to investors. Every product of every kind must meet that test.

People forget that government can mandate that utilities purchase adequate capacity to keep the lights on. But investors (including bond holders) have no such obligation. They are free to choose where to place their investments, including the freedom to shun power-related stuff entirely. They must be attracted by some mix of risks and rewards.
 
  • #845
The criterion that utilities need to be sensitive to the requirements of investors is quite important, as Anorlunda so correctly points out.
It acts as a reality check on the system, something often lacking in government administrations.
In nuclear, we now have several examples of financially hugely damaging operational and political developments tied to the current concept of nuclear power plants.
For US investors who have suffered the consequences, pointing to on schedule, on cost plant constructions elsewhere does not help. They will not buy this package any more, the risk/reward here is unacceptable.
It remains to be seen whether the industry still can muster the industrial and political capital to successfully reinvent itself.
There are still big plusses to nuclear, relatively very low environmental impact and no CO2 emissions, very reliable baseline power, low operating costs.
If it can be made more accident proof and easier/quicker to build, that might be enough.
 
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  • #846
russ_watters said:
I am STRONGLY against this. It is bad for scientific, economic, political, and environmental reasons.

In the course of discussions of the nuclear power issue, it seems to me that the arguements against nuclear power are based primarily on ignorance and emotion. I'm all for open scientific debate, but on this particular subject, I tend to take the approach of educating, not strictly debating. If that comes off as arrogant, I apologize, but this is a remarkably straightforward issue when you get down to the science of it.

I absolutely second what you said! My dad (and his brother and dad, too) work in a nuclear powerplant and people always give so much BS about that and I don't see where it's coming from. I always ask them so what do they now about nuclear power just to find out they now almost nothing at all, just that somebody told them it's super bad and dangerous (they usually go on telling me about the accidents). Since I've grown up knowing a lot about this just from asking my dad about his job, I usually try to explain some things to them and I watch their shocked faces.

I wish people knew more about this, not just the "dark side" but the whole reality.
 
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  • #847
Thank you Paja

As a Dad who worked in a power plant i am heartwarmed . I hope your Dad sees your post.
 
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  • #848
mheslep said:
Transatomic has PR statements out that they are now focused on establishing long term survival of its reactor vessel in the presence of the high temperature salt and neutronics, ie for decades. I wonder if the search for the perfect, lon lasting metal alloy for a salt tank is misguided. The chemical industry apparently has long settled on the solution of a 'freeze wall' of solid salt to act as a long term barrier between container (ceramic or metal) and corrosive molten salt. I would think a solid salt wall would also solve the problem of (radiation induced) free fluorine corrosion of the vessel.
Revisiting Transatomic, a couple of weeks after this post, MIT's Technology Review published the following article:

Nuclear Energy Startup Transatomic Backtracks on Key Promises
https://www.technologyreview.com/s/...artup-transatomic-backtracks-on-key-promises/
The company, backed by Peter Thiel’s Founders Fund, revised inflated assertions about its advanced reactor design after growing concerns prompted an MIT review.

I don't know if ORNL's review came before or after the concerns raised by MIT.

There are challenges to materials for molten salt concepts. Even though the primary systems operates a relatively low pressure, there is still need of some containment outside of the reactor vessel, since the primary system will be radioactive. The containment building provides shielding to plant personnel. In addition, if there was a breach in the primary system, e.g., a leak in the reactor vessel or piping, then one would have to be concerned about leaks of gaseous and volatile fission products, as well as interactions of fluoride or chloride salts with materials.

At some point, there has to be a heat exchanger from the primary system to a secondary power generation system, perhaps through an intermediate heat exchanger to isolate the systems. The power generation system, whether Brayton or Rankine has to be under pressure.

As for the primary system, it must necessarily be connected to a chemical plant to separate fission products from the fuel system. Among the problems will be disposition of Te, I, Xe, Cs isotopes, as well as Br and Kr isotopes. Outside of the core, there will be the issue of delayed neutrons and gamma radiation, and their effect on structural materials over the lifetime of the plant.

The NRC meets with various stakeholders in the nuclear industry, and they aware that non-LWR systems will have different technical bases, but the basic requirements in the GDCs will still apply: 1) preclude fission products from the environment, 2) maintain controllability of the reactor (nuclear process), 3) maintain coolability of the system. Requirements 2 and 3 help ensure Requirement 1.
 
  • #849
Astronuc said:
The company, backed by Peter Thiel’s Founders Fund, revised inflated assertions about its advanced reactor design after growing concerns prompted an MIT review.

It reads like a big mea culpa
https://www.technologyreview.com/s/603731/nuclear-energy-startup-transatomic-backtracks-on-key-promises/ said:
Smith stresses that the founders weren’t acting in bad faith, but he did note they didn’t subject their claims to the peer-review process early on.

“They didn’t do any of this intentionally,” Smith says. “It was just a lack of experience and perhaps an overconfidence in their own ability. And then not listening carefully enough when people were questioning the conclusions they were coming to.”

Nevertheless, they continue to have faith in the remaining conclusions that have not net been subjected to peer review.
 
  • #850
etudiant said:
Is that not a fair description of the current state of affairs for US nuclear?

Separately, it seems only logical to me that regulators take stock of the terrorism issue, We've seen a number of platoon sized assaults spearheaded by suicide bombers penetrating well guarded facilities in the past few years, nuclear plants surely must be seen as an attractive terror target.
I'd guess that ignorance might limit the damage the intruders could inflict, but someone skilled could surely steer a reactor into a disaster with external repercussions..

Actually none of this would be possible. Nuclear power plants have higher security than most military bases. As for a rogue employee. No single employee has the access required to pull off any devastating event. Even if they could their systems have so many layers of fail safes and backups that at best they could do is cause a trip which makes the plant automatically turn off. If any issue occurs affecting the operation of the plant dozens of people are immediately notified in multiple departments including the NRC located on site at all times. It's investigated, reports are filed, those reports are reviewed by multiple different review processes.

Even if they get past security, which is highly improbable. Here's a video that detail their next obstacle.


Nuclear power is the safest method out of every kind of commercial power production. Decades worth of constant criticism has made that a fact. If an employee gets so much as a paper cut carrying a cardboard box without proper gloves then a memo gets sent around to everyone in the plant. The stupid stuff that gets people hurt or killed at other plants doesn't happen at nuclear plants because it simply can't. Somebody falls off a ladder and breaks his leg at a natural gas power plant it's just an OSHA recordable injury. Somebody does the same at a nuclear plant it's because nuclear power is so dangerous.
 
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  • #851
Bigjoemonger said:
Actually none of this would be possible. Nuclear power plants have higher security than most military bases.

Color me skeptical.

I recall a case where protesters, one of them a nun, managed to come to a nuclear weapons plant's wall and bang on it with hammers for half an hour, and only after that they were arrested. Googgling...

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/feb/19/nun-jailed-break-in-nuclear-plant

Aw, I'm wrong. Not half an hour. "They were able to spend more than two hours inside the restricted area before they were caught".
 
  • #852
Bigjoemonger said:
Even if they get past security, which is highly improbable.

"Highly improbable"?

Let's think about this for a bit from a perspective of "If I would want to blow up the plant, and have $1B to finance it?".
How would one do it? Can this be done?
How much would it cost to hire or train 30-something squad of terrorists? To arm them with plenty of automatic weapons, sniper rifles, RPGs, breaching charges? Maybe even add a mortar team and a chopper with a machine gun.
I bet a lot less that one billion dollars.

You seriously think plant security is ready to face a real military assault team? After spending a decade doing only drills, not any real combat?

And if the attackers do defeat the defending security forces, blowing up a hole in concrete is almost trivial in comparison, especially that they know beforehand that they would need to do that - the physical parameters of nuclear plants are hardly a secret.
 
  • #853
Astronuc said:
basic requirements in the GDCs will still apply: 1) preclude fission products from the environment, 2) maintain controllability of the reactor (nuclear process), 3) maintain coolability of the system.
Surely 1 and 2, but why 3? The emphasis on cooling is intrinsic to light water moderated, solid fuel, water cooled reactors, and not molten salt reactors. The solution to overheating in the ORNL MSR experiment was a freeze plug and a dump tank, not multiple levels of redundancy to maintain cooling. Melt downs are not relevant. Steam explosions are not relevant to the nuclear island.

Edit:
...In addition, if there was a breach in the primary system, e.g., a leak in the reactor vessel or piping, then one would have to be concerned about leaks of gaseous and volatile fission products, as well as interactions of fluoride or chloride salts with materials.
The gaseous and volatile fission products are removed by sparging as they are produced. I expect they are chemically formed into liquids or solids and not stored under pressure.

. Even though the primary systems operates a relatively low pressure, there is still need of some containment outside of the reactor vessel, since the primary system will be radioactive.
Yes, secondary containment may be necessary, but it does not need to be a structure that can withstand a flash steam explosion from 160 bar primary water.

Below is a notional graphic for another MSR design from Thorcon, 557 MWth unit. The 'POT' is primary containment for the nuclear salt. Red piping is 704C salt. The blue PHX exchanges heat to a secondary salt loop leaving in green. The outer red 'silo' is secondary containment, which is turn 14 meters subsurface at its top. The technical description as submitted to IAEA is here:
https://aris.iaea.org/PDF/ARISThorCon9.pdf

thorcon5.png


MSR's are not the only design with inherent thermal safety. The EBR-II famously ran a cooling loop shutdown test. Start at 2mins:

 

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  • #854
nikkkom said:
You seriously think plant security is ready to face a real military assault team?
They don't operate forever alone. Plant security need only get the word out and delay the threat for some minutes.

"If I would want to blow up the plant, and have $1B to finance it?".

1. Whoever put up $1B to physically attack the country containing the plant has just declared war on that country.
2. The attackers are seriously mentally impaired if they believe they can do the worst damage to the country with their $1B by shooting up a nuclear plant.
 
  • #855
Another molten salt reactor company has fairly detailed video description out. Moltex, out of the UK.

Design highlights:
  • Fast reactor, no moderator
  • Separate fuel and cooling salts, where the fuel salt is still contained in fuel rod or cylinder. Moltex contends the IAEA will never countenance the molten fuel 'tank' and fuel salt = cooling salt designs proposed by others due to problems in tracking nuclear fuel inventories.
  • Fission product nobel gasses are allowed to separate from the fuel enabling improved neutronics, but are still contained in the fuel rod and thus in the core and so need not be managed.
  • Operating temperature similar to that of existing gas power turbines, so that common gas turbines can be used which are six times cheaper than nuclear plant turbines.

screenshot-by-nimbus61-1.png


 

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  • #856
40+ years ago - what the government thought about nuclear energy and the overall energy outlook in the US.

National Plan for Energy Research, Development and Demonstration (RD&D)
https://science.energy.gov/~/media/...earch_Development_Demonstration_ERDA_1976.pdf

Other documents of interest.
https://www.energy.gov/sites/prod/files/ERDA History.pdf

https://energy.gov/sites/prod/files/FEA History.pdf

https://inis.iaea.org/search/search.aspx?orig_q=RN:11562226

Comparative Analysis of the 1976 ERDA Plan and Program
https://www.princeton.edu/~ota/disk3/1976/7616.html
Chapter 3. Nuclear Issues - see pages 83-84 for MSBR
 
  • #858
Astronuc said:
Of interest is - NUREG-1226, Development and Utilization of the NRC Policy Statement on the Regulation of Advanced Nuclear Power Plants - particularly Commissioner Asselstine's comments at the end.

Help me. I followed the links you provided, plus the one below, but I can't find those remarks. Perhaps you could quote them here.
https://www.nrc.gov/docs/ML1325/ML13253A431.pdf
 
  • #859
anorlunda said:
Help me. I followed the links you provided, plus the one below, but I can't find those remarks. Perhaps you could quote them here.
https://www.nrc.gov/docs/ML1325/ML13253A431.pdf
Yes. Starting on page 64/76, Dissenting Views of Commissioner Asselstine

Asselstine later gave testimony to the House Committee on Science and Technology regarding
Opportunities and Challenges for Nuclear Power
https://science.house.gov/sites/republicans.science.house.gov/files/documents/hearings/042308_asselstine.pdf
 
  • #860
Astronuc said:
Yes. Starting on page 64/76, Dissenting Views of Commissioner Asselstine

Asselstine later gave testimony to the House Committee on Science and Technology regarding
Opportunities and Challenges for Nuclear Power
https://science.house.gov/sites/republicans.science.house.gov/files/documents/hearings/042308_asselstine.pdf
Asseltine comment in the dissent:
Nor is there guidance on what standards the balance of plant must meet.

What possible reasoning leads NRC commissioners to believe they should be the body that sets standards for non-nuclear balance of plant? IRC, nuclear BoP is far higher than seen at other thermal plants. Part of this due to the relatively low steam temperature requiring special turbines, and part of the cost is due to, well, the mind set of Asseltine.
 
  • #861
georgia psc votes to continue construction of plant vogtle:

http://www.ajc.com/news/local-govt-...truction-plant-vogtle/Tu0ja76KWtR3YGlhaFLTeM/More details
http://www.post-gazette.com/powerso...ators-rule-Vogtle-AP1000/stories/201712210105

The commission’s conditions in keeping Vogtle alive include a lower return on equity for Georgia Power, a division of Southern Co.; more money returned to ratepayers; a 5 megawatt solar array on plant property; and the possibility of reexamining the project once again if Congress doesn’t extend a production tax credit for nuclear power past its 2021 expiration date. Vogtle’s current in-service date is beyond that.
 
  • #862
etudiant said:
The criterion that utilities need to be sensitive to the requirements of investors is quite important, as Anorlunda so correctly points out.
It acts as a reality check on the system, something often lacking in government administrations.
In nuclear, we now have several examples of financially hugely damaging operational and political developments tied to the current concept of nuclear power plants.
For US investors who have suffered the consequences, pointing to on schedule, on cost plant constructions elsewhere does not help. They will not buy this package any more, the risk/reward here is unacceptable.
It remains to be seen whether the industry still can muster the industrial and political capital to successfully reinvent itself.
There are still big plusses to nuclear, relatively very low environmental impact and no CO2 emissions, very reliable baseline power, low operating costs.
If it can be made more accident proof and easier/quicker to build, that might be enough.

You're right, but I think you do have to have a little bit of regulation to guide the free market capitalism within certain boundaries to some extent. You can't just have everything "sensitive to investors" or they'll completely drive the climate and the environment into the ground with coal and gas combustion.

I know this sounds like the dirty word "socialism", but state ownership of the nuclear power build is what allowed France, for example, to deliver relatively fast, consistent and cost-effective deployment of a nuclear-based clean energy system at nation scale. The same goes for China, and the (originally state owned) power generation infrastructure such as the Snowy Mountains scheme in Australia. The Tennessee Valley Authority is another pertinent and interesting example too.

It's clear that there is real room for improvement with the economics and delivery of new US nuclear power projects. Just look at US nuclear power projects, and compare with say France, or China, South Korea, Taiwan etc and look at their delivery timelines and costs for relatively new nuclear projects. Or look at nuclear power in the US recently, and compare the costs to nuclear power in the US 40 years ago. (This is another reason why it's so important to keep existing plants open - a new US nuclear power plant isn't financially equivalent to an existing, already paid for, plant. Not by a long shot.)

What happened? What went wrong? These are valuable questions, and they're important to ask. They have been asked in the literature - for example Bernard Cohen's The Nuclear Energy Option, or Richard Rhodes' Nuclear Renewal. It has been recognized for a long time that this is a real problem that needs attention. Why are the costs out of control? If we can get US nuclear power back to where US nuclear power was decades ago, we'll be doing well. Part of this is due to the loss of momentum - the loss of the skilled industrial base with familiarity and practice in nuclear power construction.

Part is due to regulatory ratcheting - but nobody is saying there should be no regulation, or that safety and regulation are incompatible with cost-effective nuclear power. (This includes conventional LWRs, without radical technical changes to what a nuclear power plant looks like.) Nations such as France, China, South Korea or Taiwan deliver relatively fast, cost-effective nuclear power builds, but they do have standards, they do have government regulation of nuclear safety, and they do deliver very safe nuclear power which never hurts anybody, just like the United States.

nikkkom said:
"Highly improbable"?

Let's think about this for a bit from a perspective of "If I would want to blow up the plant, and have $1B to finance it?".
How would one do it? Can this be done?
How much would it cost to hire or train 30-something squad of terrorists? To arm them with plenty of automatic weapons, sniper rifles, RPGs, breaching charges? Maybe even add a mortar team and a chopper with a machine gun.
I bet a lot less that one billion dollars.

You seriously think plant security is ready to face a real military assault team? After spending a decade doing only drills, not any real combat?

And if the attackers do defeat the defending security forces, blowing up a hole in concrete is almost trivial in comparison, especially that they know beforehand that they would need to do that - the physical parameters of nuclear plants are hardly a secret.

OK, suppose you have your highly skilled, heavily armed terrorist army.
You go to the local nuclear power plant. You neutralize all the plant security and local law enforcement.

Now, what are you going to *do* at the nuclear power plant, where and how?
And what will happen, what will the effect be?

And with your resources, weapons and skilled soldiers, and a hypothetical determination to inflict death and evil on the United States (or pick whichever nation) as much as possible, what makes you think that targeting a nuclear power plant delivers good "bang for your buck" compared to targeting a chemical plant, oil refinery, crowded mall or national landmark, stadium, etc?

A nuclear power plant is the worst choice, and soft targets with larger consequences are much more abundant.

nikkkom said:
Color me skeptical.

I recall a case where protesters, one of them a nun, managed to come to a nuclear weapons plant's wall and bang on it with hammers for half an hour, and only after that they were arrested. Googgling...

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/feb/19/nun-jailed-break-in-nuclear-plant

Aw, I'm wrong. Not half an hour. "They were able to spend more than two hours inside the restricted area before they were caught".

The Y-12 thing really isn't relevant to nuclear power.

They never had any access inside any buildings, or access to the vaults inside those buildings where HEU is stored, etc.

I suspect the security contractors at Y-12 were able to rapidly identify the "threat" as unarmed, nonviolent flower power protesters and not armed commandos, and they triaged their response accordingly.
 
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  • #863
Since the release of the UK Draft National Policy Statement for Nuclear Power Generation, some 18 GWe of new gen 3 nuclear is planned in the UK, most of it to start construction by 2019. Four different designs are proposed, AP1000, EPR, ABWR, Hualong One. I suspect that design mix is two or three too many for economic success. If the French nuclear build-out in the 70s and 80s is any guide, success comes from building 50 reactors of one design (Areva PWRs in France), three size options, period.

http://www.world-nuclear.org/inform...tries-t-z/united-kingdom.aspx#ECSArticleLink3
 
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  • #864
mheslep said:
I suspect that design mix is two or three too many for economic success. If the French nuclear build-out in the 70s and 80s is any guide, success comes from building 50 reactors of one design (Areva PWRs in France), three size options, period.

One design sure simplifies spare parts inventory and training of operations & maintenance folks.
 
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  • #865
mheslep said:
...suspect that design mix is two or three too many for economic success. If the French nuclear build-out in the 70s and 80s is any guide, success comes from building 50 reactors of one design (Areva PWRs in France), three size options, period.

Agree in general, but would add that I hope they learned something about passively fail-safe design from the Fukushima fiasco. Novel and obscure principles such as avoiding reliance on external or fallible local power supplies and active devices.

Costly? Count the cost and compare it with the cost of lost land, infrastructure and other resources, never mind human life quality and lives and minds and political support, then come back and tell me about passive scramming, fuel dumping and similar costs.
 
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  • #866
minerva said:
OK, suppose you have your highly skilled, heavily armed terrorist army.
You go to the local nuclear power plant. You neutralize all the plant security and local law enforcement.
Now, what are you going to *do* at the nuclear power plant, where and how?

I would open the containment (say, by blowing up a hole in its wall), haul a few tons of C4 under the reactor (which by this time would presumably be in a shutdown state and on emergency cooling), and blow it up.

And what will happen, what will the effect be?

Major release of fission products and actinides. Several tens to hundreds of square kilometers rendered uninhabitable for about a century.
 
  • #867
Jon Richfield said:
Agree in general, but would add that I hope they learned something about passively fail-safe design from the Fukushima fiasco. Novel and obscure principles such as avoiding reliance on external or fallible local power supplies and active devices.
Agreed.

Costly? Count the cost and compare it with the cost of lost land, infrastructure and other resources, never mind human life quality and lives and minds and political support, then come back and tell me about passive scramming, fuel dumping and similar costs.
Seems clear to me that 1000 year tsunami risks and their consequences are far preferred over the ongoing alternative and its *daily* consequences:

Sydney (Platts)--3 Feb 2017 100 am EST/600 GMT

Japanese companies are planning to develop about 45 additional coal power plants in the next decade, as the country gradually ramps up its nuclear power generation following the Fukushima disaster in 2011, the US Energy Information Administration said Thursday

Replacement for idled nuclear: 14 new coal plants under construction as of July 17, and over 40 either announced, permitted, or under construction.
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  • #868
nikkkom said:
Major release of fission products and actinides. Several tens to hundreds of square kilometers rendered uninhabitable for about a century.
For about three months, the time for I 131 (half life 8 days) to decay out. Afterwards, the received dose is about that of an extra CT scan (10 mSv) spread over years, hardly uninhabitable.

Geraldine "Gerry" Thomas is a senior academic and Chair in Molecular Pathology at the Faculty of Medicine, Department of Surgery & Cancer, Imperial College London. She is an active researcher in fields of tissue banking and molecular pathology of thyroid and breast cancer.[1] Thomas is also a science communicator and has written opinion editorial pieces and provided comment to the media following the Fukushima nuclear disaster.
 
  • #869
mheslep said:
For about three months, the time for I 131 (half life 8 days) to decay out. Afterwards, the received dose is about that of an extra CT scan (10 mSv) spread over years, hardly uninhabitable.

I'm talking about Cs-137 and Sr-90, of course. If freshly shut down RPV would be blown up, the end result will be worse than Fukushima and approaching Chernobyl: open-air meltdown.
 
  • #870
nikkkom said:
I'm talking about Cs-137 and Sr-90, of course. If freshly shut down RPV would be blown up, the end result will be worse than Fukushima and approaching Chernobyl: open-air meltdown.
I don't think so. The Chernobyl reactor spiked to 30 GW before it destroyed itself. No amount of C4 can reproduce the nuclear power level delivered inside that reactor. The Fukushima accident involved three destroyed reactors. Also, the wide geographic distribution of Cs 137 comes about not because of some explosive force, but because it's parent fission product is Xenon, a gas which travels on air currents.

This also means BTW, that some of the new molten salt reactor designs which remove fission product gasses as an ongoing process would have less hazard potential even in the event of complete destruction of the reactor vessel.
 
  • #871
mheslep said:
I don't think so. The Chernobyl reactor spiked to 30 GW before it destroyed itself. No amount of C4 can reproduce that nuclear power delivered inside the reactor.

The purpose of explosives would be merely to crack RPV open and sever it from all piping. Then decay heating will do the rest.

The Fukushima accident was three destroyed reactors.

...inside intact containment.

Well-prepared nuclear terrorists can't be assumed to be so nice to leave containment intact.
 
  • #872
nikkkom said:
I would open the containment (say, by blowing up a hole in its wall), haul a few tons of C4 under the reactor (which by this time would presumably be in a shutdown state and on emergency cooling), and blow it up.

I've only been underneath one RPV, my late 60's PWR.
The activity you propose is one of those "Sounds great on paper but...".
......

Not arguing that knowledgeable punks couldn't make plenty of mischief. Hopefully 'knowledgeable' and 'punk-ism' are mutually exclusive.

old jim
 
Last edited:
  • #873
mheslep said:
14 new coal plants under construction as of July 17, and over 40 either announced, permitted, or under construction.

What ? My Peabody stock might come back ?
 
  • #874
jim hardy said:
I've only been underneath one RPV, my late 60's PWR.
The activity you propose is one of those "Sounds great on paper but...".
At my plant i doubt anything short of a "Bunker Buster" could blow a hole in the post-tensioned concrete containment building.

Today's run-of-the mill, light anti-tank RPG is designed to penetrate at least 500mm (half a meter) of rolled homogeneous armor. A few examples:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RPG-29 12 kg, 750mm RHA penetration, 1500mm reinforced concrete penetration
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AT4 7 kg, 500-600mm RHA penetration

Custom-made breaching charges can do better.
 
  • #875
jim hardy said:
What ? My Peabody stock might come back ?
Not from US consumption. But if they mine coal in China, or in Australia where Japan gets its coal ...
 

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