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#41
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posted to rec.boats
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On Jan 29, 9:22*am, "John" wrote:
THAT IS the problem - nobody wants the old rods, they remain radioactive for 200,000 years and would make a dandy terrorist dirty bomb. Just a thought, what would be the overall ecological impact if they were dropped down in the bottom of the mariana trench? would that make ugly fish uglier? and would the brine desolve the rods into nothing over a shrt period of time? just wondering. |
#42
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posted to rec.boats
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![]() You know the type. Mostly women who wear their hair in long braids, never shave their legs and make their own dresses dyed with cranberry juice or squished blueberries. Pentecostals? |
#43
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posted to rec.boats
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On Tue, 29 Jan 2008 21:28:03 -0800 (PST), Tim wrote:
On Jan 29, 9:22*am, "John" wrote: THAT IS the problem - nobody wants the old rods, they remain radioactive for 200,000 years and would make a dandy terrorist dirty bomb. Just a thought, what would be the overall ecological impact if they were dropped down in the bottom of the mariana trench? would that make ugly fish uglier? and would the brine desolve the rods into nothing over a shrt period of time? just wondering. Would be better to recycle them and use the energy therein. This reduces the potency of the waste and provides energy. Here's a little info on the subject: "But there may be an even better solution: Recycle spent fuel rods to produce even more greenhouse-gas-reducing nuclear energy. Over the past four decades, America's reactors have produced about 56,000 tons of used fuel. Jack Spencer, research fellow for nuclear energy policy at the Thomas A. Rowe Institute for Economic Policy Studies, says this "waste" has enough energy to power every U.S. household for a dozen years. As we've noted, France long ago achieved energy independence by relying on nuclear energy for most of its power needs. But it also leads the world in processing this waste to create even more energy. The French have reprocessed spent nuclear fuel for 30 years without incident. There have been no accidental explosions, no terrorist attacks, no contribution to nuclear proliferation. Their facility in La Hague has safely processed more than 23,000 tons of spent fuel, or enough to power the entire country for 14 years. The U.S. pioneered the technology to recapture that energy decades ago, then banned its commercial use in 1977. An energy plan that does not involve continued and even increased use of nuclear power is no plan at all. And even if we closed all nuclear plants tomorrow, the waste problem would remain. " Actually, the whole article is worth reading, even if it does come down a little hard on some Democrats. http://tinyurl.com/35aa2d -- John H |
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