Tom
I am a FH squatter
- Joined
- Dec 22, 2003
- Messages
- 17,354
SIXTY SEVEN BILLION
So four times what people in the UK spend on fags. Big deal.
SIXTY SEVEN BILLION
Deep geological storage has been found the world over to be an unmitigated joke.
So four times what people in the UK spend on fags. Big deal.
Oh, I'm sorry rynnor. I was unaware that disgust at a taxpayer-funded SIXTY SEVEN BILLION (and rising) bill was disproportionate and hysterical rather than sensible and well-considered.
You're a denialist on a lot of things aren't you - even in the face of sixty seven billion pounds of fiscal evidence that nuclear is perhaps "a bit expensive".
It's 67 billion pissed up the wall Tom. And we're thinking of increasing that pissing up the wall - literally getting zero value from that spend. Absolutely NOTHING back from that spend (not even the ability to smoke fags - free fags for smokers would be arguably better than what we're doing with it).
If we can pack the nuclear waste somewhere that will not harm nature, water resources and will not be interrupted for generations to come, where's the "joke"?
Giant infrastructure projects like the alternative generating projects? You know - ones that employ people, produce electricity, have no waste decomissioning issues yadda yadda yadda.Giant infrastructure projects do tend to employ people back out in reality scouse...
Giant infrastructure projects like the alternative generating projects?
The waste exists - it must be dealt with - end of.
We've currently got a £67 billion pound bill (that's going to end up in the hundreds of billions). That needs to happen. It's self-evident that we should NOT be adding to it.
Nuclear does not need to be "part of the mix".
If you dont want to add to it then you are immediatly banning x-rays, NMR, CAT scans, barium meals etc. etc. I take it ?
Logic fail. That's the bill for previous stuff not future stuff. Gimme your figures for upcoming reactors before ascribing costs to the future of generation in the uk.Oh, I'm sorry rynnor. I was unaware that disgust at a taxpayer-funded SIXTY SEVEN BILLION (and rising) bill was disproportionate and hysterical rather than sensible and well-considered.
You're a denialist on a lot of things aren't you - even in the face of sixty seven billion pounds of fiscal evidence that nuclear is perhaps "a bit expensive".
What gives better energy output than Nuclear? Lets face it, it's the way to go.
Logic fail. That's the bill for previous stuff not future stuff.
which is where the overwhelmingly large slice of our massively expensive waste issues come from.
And we will always be producing radioactive waste - its just a fact.
How many times to I have to explicitly state that I understand and accept that before your brain will assimilate it?
Once is enough for me - well done
We still have no safe method of storage. Period. We're heads in the sand about it.
If you vitrify it and bury it deep in an impermeable clay layer like the oxford clay/kimmeridge clay or gault clay well below the water table I think you'd be fine for potentially millions of years.
All I'm saying is "lets not add to that"...
That'd be great Toht. But so far it's been proven to be a fantasy.
Every deep geological storage facility has come a-cropper once they've been used - despite rafts of people saying exactly the same about their storage facilities that your government is saying about yours.
And they've not failed 2 or 3 hundred years in (never mind the tens of thousands they need to work for) - they've failed in decades.
Well you can't know anything for a 100%, but as stated there it would take such an event to dig out those canisters(sealed with best tech we got, encased in bedrock etc) that the nuclear waste would be a smallscale problem at that point.
When it's complete, there's no reason for people to go there and they probably won't even know(outside history books) that the storage even existed.
100k years is good enough for me as a solid storage
What gives better energy output than Nuclear? Lets face it, it's the way to go.
63 billion sounds a rather high quote tbh - if you just buried it deep on-site it wouldnt cost a fraction of that but the costs are all driven up by enormous planning procedures etc. and all the hand wringing.