this post was submitted on 30 Aug 2023
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[–] [email protected] 15 points 1 year ago

Good stance, though part of the problem is that we hopped off nuclear, but not quite.

So we recognized risks of the nuclear plants and we started doing fixes, but most critically, we largely stopped making reactors. So instead of migrating to newer, fundamentally safer designs, we keep duct taping the existing ones.

We already have much better technology understanding, but because new nuclear is scary, and somehow old nuclear got grandfathered in, we are generally living with 70s limitations. Fukushima failed in a way a more modern design would probably have done in a 'failsafe' way. Same for waste, we have knowledge on how to have reactions that end with much less problematic material (though still not great, at least with a more manageable half life).

So we should make sure we address the concerns, but have to balance that against letting perfect be the enemy of the good. So far we've been so reluctant about safety of new reactors, we ironically are stuck with roughly 70s level safety.