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Prospects for Nuclear Energy - International |
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| Dec14-06, 02:17 PM | #1 |
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Prospects for Nuclear Energy - International
There is already a thread on the Prospects of Nuclear Energy in the US, so I thought I would add one on the international scene.
IAEA maintains a policy board - http://www.iaea.org/OurWork/ST/NE/index.html There is an annual publication "Nuclear Technology Review". The 2006 edition is available - http://www.iaea.org/About/Policy/GC/...50inf-3_en.pdf (use 'save target as') Current generation nuclear plants are still being built, and some advanced plants, e.g. the EPR (Flamanville-3 and Olkiluoto-3), are now under construction or are planned. A major issue still remains the final disposition of spent fuel. |
| Dec29-06, 04:33 AM | #2 |
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With a little luck sweden will within 5 years or so decide to construct new nuclear power plants. Even the most stubborn politicians here have to realise sooner or later that wind cant replace nuclear.
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| Dec31-06, 09:18 PM | #3 |
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I live in Saskatchewan which produces about 35% of the world's Uranium and has the richest U ore (25% U content in the two richest deposits, MacArthur River and Cigar Lake). At current rates of extraction, known reserves will last 20-30 years. There may be a critical shortage of U in a few years because Cigar Lake has been flooded and it is going to several years to get it into production. So we obviously have a problem here with supplying enough U to meet demand even with nuclear providing a small fraction of our energy needs. I don't see how current nuclear reactor technology can be sustainable. As far as I can see, there is no future for nuclear power unless we get reactors that use much more of the energy in the fuel. The Generation IV reactors seem to make better use of fuel, but it will be a while before they will make an impact. AM |
| Dec31-06, 10:02 PM | #4 |
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Prospects for Nuclear Energy - InternationalGen IV reactors are still in design phase. It will be some time before there is 'proof of concept' which means testing materials in the environments in which they will ultimately operate. Several Gen IV concepts push the maximum temperatures beyond current experience. Materials resistant to degradation in radiation environments at those temperatures need to be demonstrated, especially when some materials are supposed to have a 60-year service life. |
| Jan1-07, 07:06 AM | #5 |
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Even if uranium prices gets 5 times as high the cost of electricity will only increase by 20% so I dont think we have to worry to much about uranium shortage. |
| Jan2-07, 12:44 PM | #6 |
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The Japanese can get U from seawater. It requires putting large mats in a suitable ocean current for 2 months in order to extract one kg of U. The world consumption is something like 16 million kg. The only way to supply the world's reactors with U from seawater (with present technology) is to reduce the rate of consumption dramatically. Granite has about 4 ppm of U (4 grams/tonne). That works out to about 4 billion tonnes of granite / year to grind up and chemically process to supply world demand. AM |
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