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#1
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posted to rec.boats
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![]() "Doug Kanter" wrote in message ... "Calif Bill" wrote in message ink.net... We have a cure for the energy problem. NUCLEAR POWER PLANTS! But the enviro's got the building of same, outlawed. No knee-jerk reactions, OK? Forget Yucca Mountain. As it stands now, we are unable to control nuclear waste. I did not say "dispose of". I said "CONTROL", meaning assure that is secured against misuse. When we can do that, then MAYBE we can build nuclear power plants the was Starbucks builds coffee shops. What do France and Japan do with their nuclear waste? I believe that 80% of France's electricity is generated from nuclear power plants and I believe that Japan's is somewhere above 30%. |
#2
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posted to rec.boats
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On Tue, 31 Jan 2006 07:43:04 -0500, Bert Robbins wrote:
What do France and Japan do with their nuclear waste? I believe that 80% of France's electricity is generated from nuclear power plants and I believe that Japan's is somewhere above 30%. They haven't solved the problem, either. France reprocesses the nuclear waste. This retrieves the energy it can, and condenses the waste. It then, either "stocks" it, or ships it abroad. http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontl...gs/french.html http://www.ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=31466 |
#3
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posted to rec.boats
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![]() "Bert Robbins" wrote in message . .. "Doug Kanter" wrote in message ... "Calif Bill" wrote in message ink.net... We have a cure for the energy problem. NUCLEAR POWER PLANTS! But the enviro's got the building of same, outlawed. No knee-jerk reactions, OK? Forget Yucca Mountain. As it stands now, we are unable to control nuclear waste. I did not say "dispose of". I said "CONTROL", meaning assure that is secured against misuse. When we can do that, then MAYBE we can build nuclear power plants the was Starbucks builds coffee shops. What do France and Japan do with their nuclear waste? I believe that 80% of France's electricity is generated from nuclear power plants and I believe that Japan's is somewhere above 30%. I don't know what they do with it. In some cases, they (and other countries) got fuel from us, and for some years, there's been an effort underway to have them voluntarily return the spent fuel so (in theory) we can store it safely. The program's moving too slowly, not because of any political resistance, but simply because politicians are too busy with more exciting things that hold the public's interest. The February 2006 issue of Scientific American contains the best article I've ever seen on the subject. It's definitely worth your effort to run out and find it today. I'd summarize it for you, but I haven't finished reading it. My son keep sticking the magazine in his book bag and taking it to school to read during lunch. Excerpt from web site - but it's hardly the juicy part: Thwarting Nuclear Terrorism Many civilian research reactors contain highly enriched uranium that terrorists could use to build nuclear bombs By Alexander Glaser and Frank N. von Hippel The atomic bomb that incinerated the Japanese city of Hiroshima at the close of World War II contained about 60 kilograms of chain-reacting uranium. When the American "Little Boy" device detonated over the doomed port, one part of the bomb's charge--a subcritical mass--was fired into the other by a relatively simple gunlike mechanism, causing the uranium 235 in the combined mass to go supercritical and explode with the force of 15 kilotons of TNT. The weapon that devastated Nagasaki a few days later used plutonium rather than uranium in its explosive charge and required much more complex technology to set it off. Despite the production of more than 100,000 nuclear weapons by a few nations and some close calls during the succeeding 60 years, no similar nuclear destruction has occurred so far. Today, however, an additional fearful threat has arisen: that a subnational terrorist organization such as al Qaeda might acquire highly enriched uranium (HEU), build a crude gun-type detonating device and use the resulting nuclear weapon against a city. HEU is uranium in which uranium 235, the isotope capable of sustaining a nuclear chain reaction, has been concentrated to levels of 20 percent or more by weight....continued at Scientific American Digital |
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