• @Ibuthyr@lemmy.wtf
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    -97 months ago

    Most people who are against nuclear power, have the following reasons:

    • it’s the most expensive form of energy due to massive regulations
    • the power plants take way too long to build
    • nuclear waste is a problem, no one wants to have it buried near their homes
    • the fissile material is already rare and difficult to come by, mostly sourced from politically difficult regions, such as fucking Russia

    Nuclear power is not a solution.

    • @afraid_of_zombies@lemmy.world
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      87 months ago

      nuclear waste is a problem, no one wants to have it buried near their homes

      No one? My basement is available. Go right ahead and pay me and store it. I don’t want to hear a single person make this claim when I am inviting the industry to pay me for my basement.

      • @jubilationtcornpone@sh.itjust.works
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        27 months ago

        You jest, but long term nuclear waste storage really is a problem. The public at-large tends to get all NIMBY about it. In the 1980’s, the federal government was working on a long term underground storage facility in rural Nevada, near the Nevada Test Site (aka in the middle of fucking nowhere) and of course the locals threw a giant fit and got the project shut down. As a result, spent nuclear fuel is routinely held at naval shipyards and power plants around the country without a final destination.

        Not a good enough reason to not invest in nuclear power, but a problem nonetheless.

        • @ForesterOP
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          7 months ago

          Anywhere that has the proper rock formations is a suitable long-term internment location. But as the other guy suggests, yeah you could stick it in his basement in a nuclear cask short term

    • Tlaloc_Temporal
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      47 months ago

      Russia is 12th in Uranium exports, with 0.001% of global exports. Kazakhstan is first at 59%, but there’s Canada with 30%, France with 8%, and the US with 2%. There’s plenty of politically easy Uranium, especially if people start buying it over Kazakhstan.

      India, Brazil, Australia, and the US are also slated to have the most Thorium resources, which could be a more significant nuclear fuel with modern and near-modern reactors.

    • @ForesterOP
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      37 months ago

      it’s the most expensive form of energy due to massive regulations

      So deregulate to the same standards Fossil Fuels are regulated at

      the power plants take way too long to build

      because of all of the red tape from your last point, as well as fossil fuel organized NIMBYS

      nuclear waste is a problem, no one wants to have it buried near their homes

      Again because disinformation spread by fossil fuel organized NIMBYS

      the fissile material is already rare and difficult to come by, mostly sourced from politically difficult regions, such as fucking Russia

      Breeder reactor