This article appears in the blog on Arnie Gundersen's Fairewinds website.  
Gundersen is a nuclear engineer with an AEC fellowship and master's in nuclear 
engineering and forty years experience in the industry,during which time he 
managed projects in 70 US nuclear power plants.  His website is an excellent 
source of information on the Fukushima disaster, as well as TMI and other 
"events." 

Romi

P.S.  There is also some excellent information on this site about the current 
NRC decision about San Onofre.


Thorium Reactors
http://www.fairewinds.org/content/thorium-reactorsPosted by: peggy


Thorium Reactors?
by Peggy Conte
 
The latest nuclear power industry proposals focus on smaller reactors and 
the possibility of thorium fueled reactors. As the nuclear industry 
explores other fission products, Fairewinds Energy Education has been 
peppered with hundreds of questions regarding the feasibility and safety of 
thorium reactors that the nuclear industry is touting as a newer 
safer form of nuclear power. 
The Liquid Fluoride Thorium Reactor (LFTR) is being sold as a “market based 
environmental solution” and advertised by the nuclear industry as 
cheaper than coal. Molten Salt Reactors (MSR) use a molten salt mixture 
as the primary coolant, and sometimes the molten salt is even mixed 
directly with thorium in the reactor fuel.
Since Fairewinds has received so many questions regarding Thorium Reactors, 
let’s look at the facts about Thorium:
 


Photo:The Johnsville News
September 21, 2011

According to questions we have received, proponents claim that thorium reactors 
produce less waste and its half-life is “only” a few hundred years 
rather than thousands. That still means hundreds of years of waste. 
However, contrary to proponent’s claims
If the spent fuel is not reprocessed, thorium-232 is very long lived 
(half-life: 14 billion years) and its decay products will build up over 
time in the spent fuel. This will make the spent fuel quite radiotoxic, 
in addition to all the fission products in it. It should also be noted 
that inhalation of a unit of radioactivity of thorium-232 or thorium-228 (which 
is also present as a decay product of thorium-232) produces a 
far higher dose, especially to certain organs, than the inhalation of 
uranium containing the same amount of radioactivity. For instance, the 
bone surface dose from breathing an amount (mass) of insoluble thorium 
is about 200 times that of breathing the same mass of uranium. 1
 
And there is still no geologic repository for the waste in the USA and most of 
the world, and even if there was, the encapsulation process designed to hold 
the waste has recently been shown to last only 100 years.
On the question of safety, here is how the Union of Concerned Scientists in its 
Statement on Thorium Fueled Reactors, answers: 
Some people believe that liquid fluoride thorium reactors, which would use a 
high-temperature liquid fuel made of molten salt, would be 
significantly safer than current-generation reactors. However, such 
reactors have major flaws. There are serious safety issues associated 
with the retention of fission products in the fuel, and it is not clear 
these problems can be effectively resolved. Such reactors also present 
proliferation and nuclear terrorism risks because they involve the 
continuous separation, or “reprocessing,” of the fuel to remove fission 
products and to efficiently produce U-233, which is a nuclear 
weapon-usable material. Moreover, disposal of the used fuel has turned 
out to be a major challenge. Stabilization and disposal of the remains 
of the very small "Molten Salt Reactor Experiment" that operated at Oak 
Ridge National Laboratory in the 1960s has turned into the most 
technically challenging cleanup problem that Oak Ridge has faced, and 
the site has still not been cleaned up. 2
 
Another claim thorium proponents make is that a thorium reactor is nearer to 
closing the nuclear fuel cycle. In an interview discussing that topic, 
Arnie Gundersen said,
 
The French, and actually the Japanese bought into this. No one has really 
what we call closed the nuclear fuel cycle. The Japanese tried for years and 
spent trillions of yen or hundreds of billions of dollars in trying to 
reprocess fuel and it failed every time. My point is if we had spent that money 
on alternative energy sources, we would be much more likely 
to have a solution right at hand that is really cheap. And instead we 
put all our money on the wrong horse in this race.3

 
Following a review, even the U. S. Department of Energy has concluded placed 
Thorium Reactors in the same category as all other nuclear power 
reactors.
 
The choice between uranium-based fuel and thorium-based fuel is seen 
basically as one of preference, with no fundamental difference in 
addressing the nuclear power issues [of waste management, proliferation 
risk, safety, security, economics, and sustainability]. Since no 
infrastructure currently exists in the U.S. for thorium-based fuels, and the 
processing of thorium-based fuels is at a lower level of technical 
maturity when compared to processing of uranium-based fuels, costs and 
RD&D [research, development and deployment] requirements for using 
thorium are anticipated to be higher. 4

 
Thorium 232 is not fissile, that means it can't split and create power. 
 Thorium 232 needs a uranium reactor to get it started by sending out 
neutrons that the thorium 232 can absorb.  When that happens, the 
thorium 232 changes to U233, which is fissile.  So behind every thorium 
reactor there still is uranium and plutonium that must be disposed of!
 

BraveNewClimate
 
To date, Fairewinds has seen no evidence that Thorium Reactors are ready 
for prime time. Thorium Reactors face the same environmental risks as 
the current fleet of nuclear power plants. And as Hurricane Sandy has 
proven, those issues will be even more challenging as global warming and its 
subsequent impact on weather patterns throughout the world 
continues to impact energy production. Nuclear power plants like Thorium 
Reactors need a stable geological location as well as long-term storage 
solutions.
As climate change becomes impossible to ignore, the nuclear industry is 
attempting to market itself as a cleaner alternative to fossil fuels. 
While nuclear reactors do not generate sooty particles that wind up in 
the atmosphere, the heavy dependence on cooling water for nuclear power 
plants makes nuclear power unfeasible as water temperatures rise around 
the globe. Additionally, mining and transporting uranium are carbon 
heavy activities. Finally, studies in Sweden have shown that the ceramic 
encapsulation, the anticipated solution to keep waste secure for 
hundreds of years will not even last 100 years, so there currently is no long 
term viable storage solution for nuclear waste.
 
In a joint project between the Nuclear Policy Research Institute and the 
Institute for Energy and Environmental Research (IEER), nuclear 
physicist Dr. Arjun Makhijani has written: Carbon-Free and Nuclear-Free: A 
Roadmap for U.S. Energy Policy. A former energy policy analysist for President 
Carter, Dr. Makhijani understands nuclear power and energy forecasting. Read 
the executive summaryand the whole book will give you some of the energy 
answers you are seeking.
 
#



 
1 Thorium Fuel: No Panacea for Nuclear Power 
By Arjun Makhijani and Michele BoydA Fact Sheet Produced by the Institute for 
Energy and Environmental Research and Physicians for Social Responsibility
2 Union of Concerned Scientists Statement on Thorium Fueled Reactors
 
3 Capital Forums’ Tom Ritter interviews Arnie Gundersen
http://www.fairewinds.org/content/capitol-forum-japanese-demonstrators-continue-major-civil-disobedience-action-against-nuke-r
4 Roald Wigeland et al, "AFCI Options Study," Idaho National Laboratory, 
INL/EXT-10-17639, September 2009.
Available at http://www.inl.gov/technicalpublications/Documents/4480296.pdf

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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