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  3. German poll: Majority for return to nuclear energy

German poll: Majority for return to nuclear energy

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  • ? Guest

    Hate to break it to you, bud, but energy is already priced according to how expensive it is to provide.

    It's not about "this energy source vs. that energy source." It's about increasing the supply of available energy.

    Read a book on energy and you'll quickly realize that as we produce more energy, we consume more. Right now, our energy needs are not being met even with fossil fuels + nuclear + renewables.

    F This user is from outside of this forum
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    wrote on last edited by
    #114

    Hate to break it to you, but with a limited amount of money you can only increase your generation so much. Choosing a power source that's less efficient from a monetary perspective means you can displace less fossil fuel.

    Read a book on mathematics if you don't believe me.

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    • ? Guest

      How does the cost compare to the starting and operating a coal mine?

      What about oil wells and refineries?

      halcyon@discuss.tchncs.deH This user is from outside of this forum
      halcyon@discuss.tchncs.deH This user is from outside of this forum
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      wrote on last edited by
      #115

      We've got other alternatives. I was not proposing to build coal mines.

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      • ? Guest

        It's not an either-or.

        We need as many sources of energy as possible to increase the available supply and reduce the cost.

        ? Offline
        ? Offline
        Guest
        wrote on last edited by
        #116

        I would usually accept. But looking at the cost of production and how the pricing is set (highest price sets the bar), nuclear is the worst. Its so expensive that no supplier even wants to take the grants to build it. A waste of money… building storage capacities and evolving smart grids would be better investments.

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        • ? Guest

          It's not an either-or.

          We need as many sources of energy as possible to increase the available supply and reduce the cost.

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          wrote on last edited by
          #117

          Said like someone who has never encountered the concept of opportunity costs.

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          • F [email protected]

            Chernobyl shouldn't have happened due to safety measures, yet it did. Fukushima shouldn't have happened, yet it did. The common denominator is human error, but guess who'll be running any other nuclear power plants? Not beavers.

            P This user is from outside of this forum
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            wrote on last edited by
            #118

            Fukushima's reactors were extremely old, even at the time. We're not even talking about the same technology. Shit has come a very long way.

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            • sexy_peach@feddit.orgS [email protected]

              The countries without nuclear will deindustrialize and the countries with nuclear will outcompete them.

              Where is the evidence for that claim?

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              wrote on last edited by
              #119

              Germany is the obvious evidence for that claim. Their once great industry is doing really bad due to high energy prices. Which is why even they are second guessing the Energiewende.

              Despite insane levels of investment in renewables, they are still stuck on gas en lignite and have very high energy prices.

              Merkel's bet that Russian gas could always be depended on didn't work out.

              T sexy_peach@feddit.orgS 2 Replies Last reply
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              • S [email protected]

                How is a nuclear meltdown not the fault of nuclear power? Of course you can prevent it by being super careful and stuff, but it is inherent to nuclear power that it is super dangerous. What is the worst that can happen with a wind turbine? It falls, that's it.

                P This user is from outside of this forum
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                wrote on last edited by
                #120

                Because the shit they were using in the Fukushima plants was so old that it might as well be completely different technology. Same with Chernobyl.

                People are referencing shit that does not even apply to modern nuclear power.

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                • E [email protected]

                  Statisticians have found that for many types of surveys, a sample size of around 1,000 people is the sweet spot—regardless of if the population size is 100,000 or 100M.

                  T This user is from outside of this forum
                  T This user is from outside of this forum
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                  wrote on last edited by
                  #121

                  Wouldn't it depend a lot on how many of those people consume the exact same information sources on topics like this where the average person has no real clue at all to make their own judgement?

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                  • R [email protected]

                    This is just straight up fear mongering. Say what you will about the economics, but the idea that there's no safe amount of radiation is ridiculous (we don't know, but presumably it's okay in some amounts since you're getting radiation doses every day even not living near anything nuclear).

                    The idea that NPPs are some unsafe technology just waiting to explode is dramatic and untrue.

                    W This user is from outside of this forum
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                    wrote on last edited by
                    #122

                    The idea that NPPs are some unsafe technology just waiting to explode is dramatic and untrue.

                    You're the first person to mention exploding here. GP was saying that they make for a good target in war time to turn into a dirty bomb, either intentionally or not.

                    ...but the idea that there's no safe amount of radiation is ridiculous (we don't know, but presumably it's okay in some amounts since you're getting radiation doses every day even not living near anything nuclear).

                    "We don't know"??? Sorry, but we do know.

                    There's no 100% safe level because any level carries some risk. Higher levels means higher risk.

                    Background radiation has some risk, but it's a risk we accept. X-rays, plane flights, etc all have increased risk (hence people exposed to lots of x-rays wearing leads) but we accept them. Material from decommissioned nuclear plants is way higher on this scale.

                    Nuclear power has downsides as well as positives. Depending on your perspective (e.g. do you work cleaning up the aftermath, or just benefitting from the energy) one will outweigh the other.

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                    • R [email protected]

                      That was mostly when they were rushing to shut down nuclear plants. Getting them operational again will be insane cost opposed to them keep on running like before.

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                      wrote on last edited by
                      #123

                      You can't get them running again. They're gone.

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                      • ? Guest

                        It's not perfect, but to forego nuclear energy while still burning fossil fuels is retarded.

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                        wrote on last edited by
                        #124

                        As opposed to thinking we could replace fossil fuels with nuclear power faster than we can replace them with renewables which is obviously a totally sane belief given how large construction projects are going... /s

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                        • A [email protected]

                          Germany is the obvious evidence for that claim. Their once great industry is doing really bad due to high energy prices. Which is why even they are second guessing the Energiewende.

                          Despite insane levels of investment in renewables, they are still stuck on gas en lignite and have very high energy prices.

                          Merkel's bet that Russian gas could always be depended on didn't work out.

                          T This user is from outside of this forum
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                          wrote on last edited by
                          #125

                          The sabotage of solar and wind energy by Altmaier during the CDU government has had a bigger impact than the removal of the few percent of power we got from nuclear. Not to mention that nuclear fuel has the exact same problems as fossil fuels in that major sources of nuclear fuel are in Russia.

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                          • P [email protected]

                            Fukushima's reactors were extremely old, even at the time. We're not even talking about the same technology. Shit has come a very long way.

                            T This user is from outside of this forum
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                            wrote on last edited by
                            #126

                            That must be why you people are suggesting to turn the extremely old German reactors back on that have had limited maintenance under the assumption that they would be turned off for decades now.

                            P 1 Reply Last reply
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                            • P [email protected]

                              Fukushima's reactors were extremely old, even at the time. We're not even talking about the same technology. Shit has come a very long way.

                              F This user is from outside of this forum
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                              wrote on last edited by
                              #127

                              Sure, and the next catastrophe will have some good reason too, yet it will happen due to human error and greed.

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                              • ? Guest

                                How does the cost compare to the starting and operating a coal mine?

                                What about oil wells and refineries?

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                                wrote on last edited by
                                #128

                                It's not a binary nuclear or coal choice.

                                Take 50 billion Euros, you want to invest in clean energy and have the biggest impact you can. You don't buy one nuclear power plant, that's for sure. You probably build multiple wind farms (around 10bn each) which, while intermittent, will each provide similar total energy over a year.

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                                • ? Guest

                                  It's not perfect, but to forego nuclear energy while still burning fossil fuels is retarded.

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                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #129

                                  Nobody is arguing for fossil fuels here.

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                                  • T [email protected]

                                    That must be why you people are suggesting to turn the extremely old German reactors back on that have had limited maintenance under the assumption that they would be turned off for decades now.

                                    P This user is from outside of this forum
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                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #130

                                    That must be why you people are suggesting to turn the extremely old German reactors back on

                                    Is that what I did? Well that's news to me!

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                                    • F [email protected]

                                      Sure, and the next catastrophe will have some good reason too, yet it will happen due to human error and greed.

                                      P This user is from outside of this forum
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                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #131

                                      Unlike the complete safety of fossil fuels.

                                      F 1 Reply Last reply
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                                      • K [email protected]

                                        I have been working in decomissioning npps in germany for over a decade now which is why I feel so strongly about the knee-jerk conservative BS. no, there are not -a million ways- to make waste from nuclear power plants safe. even material released from regulations (concrete from decomissioned buildings for example or soil from the ground) has some residual radioactive particles and just like alcohol in pregnancies: there is no safe amount of exposure to radiation, just a lower risk of provoking potentially fatal genetic mutation that european regulators deem acceptable. but that in and of itself is not really problematic. It is just that we cannot assume ideal conditions for running these plants. while relatively safe during a well monitored and maintained period in the power producing state of a npp that changes radically if things go south. Just look at what happened to the zhaporizhia powerplant in ukraine they actively attacked a nuclear site! And all the meticulous precautions go out the window if a bunch of rogues decide to be stupid - just because. and tbf whatever mess the release of large amounts of radioactive particles does to our environment, economy and society i would rather not find out. as others have laid out here, there are safer and better suiting alternatives that are not coal.

                                        I This user is from outside of this forum
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                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #132

                                        there is no safe amount of exposure to radiation,

                                        Here's how I know you're a lying piece of shit.

                                        There is literally a massive, unshielded nuclear reactor in the sky every single day.

                                        We ARE nuclear waste.

                                        D K 2 Replies Last reply
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                                        • I [email protected]
                                          • 10 km which direction? If it's buried 1km down, you can stick it directly below my home for all I care.

                                          • not sure who told you that nuclear reactors cost half a trillion dollars to build, or are you thinking they would be building 30+ reactors?

                                          • closed loop cooling of reactors is a thing. There's zero reason to ever have drinking water restrictions.

                                          • this doesn't make sense. Why would the price of electricity double to maintain the status quo? I thought you were paying for the reactors out of income taxes?

                                          Long story short, there's plenty of valid reasons to argue against nuclear power. Use those reasons, not made up bullshit.

                                          T This user is from outside of this forum
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                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #133

                                          not sure who told you that nuclear reactors cost half a trillion dollars to build, or are you thinking they would be building 30+ reactors?

                                          Are you under the impression that a single nuclear reactor would make a dent in Germany's energy requirements?

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