http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/opinion/la-op-monbiot11jun11,1,45211.story
From the Los Angeles Times

TOMORROW'S FORECAST

A few more nukes!

Environmentalists need to face the fact that nuclear power is less
dangerous than fossil-fired global warming.

By George Monbiot
George Monbiot writes an environmental column for the Guardian of
London (www.monbiot.com). His book "Heat: How to Stop the Planet
Burning" will be published in Britain in October.

June 11, 2006

WHEN I TELL my "green" friends that I am rethinking nuclear power,
they respond with outrage. I am an environmentalist, and, to a large
extent, the green movements in the developed world arose from public
concern about atomic energy.

For about 30 years we have seen nuclear power as dangerous, its
radioactive wastes as unmanageable, the industry as incompetent and
untrustworthy. In the environmental camp, any softening of this
opposition is seen as a betrayal.

But climate change and falling energy reserves demand that we reopen
the question. The nuclear industry now claims that nuclear power is
the most reliable answer to the global warming caused by the overuse
of fossil fuels. It argues that new technologies make it safe and
cheap.

I've spent the last year searching for a way to cut carbon emissions
by 90%, which is necessary to prevent runaway global warming. One of
the hardest problems is how to generate enough electricity. My
sympathies lie with renewable power. Alongside a massive
energy-efficiency program, it plainly provides part of the answer. But
it cannot supply all of our electricity needs. The rest must come from
somewhere, and to dismiss nuclear power without considering what the
alternatives involve would be irresponsible.

I still detest the nuclear industry and its efforts to hoodwink the
public about its costs, its dangers and its record. But I've
reluctantly concluded that some of its arguments have merit.

It is true, for example, that a disaster on the scale of Chernobyl is
highly unlikely to happen again because no new power station will be
built without a containment vessel, which prevents most radiation from
escaping in an accident. But the mining, processing and use of uranium
will continue to be accompanied — as they always have been — by leaks
into the environment.

It now looks as though radioactive waste can be stored safely. The
Finnish authority responsible for nuclear waste disposal has developed
a method that looks foolproof. The problem is that it is expensive,
and the nuclear industry has a long record of cutting corners. One
British company was caught throwing nuclear waste into open shafts it
had dug above crumbling coastal cliffs. Another admitted that it had
been keeping plutonium in uncovered ponds for more than 30 years.
Workers at the U.S. Geological Survey, which is responsible for
testing the Yucca Mountain waste repository in Nevada, falsified the
rates of water percolation, apparently to make the site seem safer
than it is.

After reading reams of conflicting data, I now also believe that
global supplies of uranium are not the limiting factor many feared. On
the other hand, the threat of nuclear terrorism can never be wholly
dismissed, and the more fissile materials that are extracted and
refined, the more opportunities there will be for people to obtain
them. But although the radiation released by accidents or terrorists
could kill hundreds or perhaps thousands of people, climate change
caused by burning fossil fuels threatens hundreds of millions.

Though nuclear power is plainly less dangerous than climate change, I
would still like to avoid building new plants if possible. But the
real danger is this: If we oppose nuclear power without demonstrating
that there are viable alternatives, we become, in effect, lobbyists
for the coal industry. In Eurasia, there are still abundant supplies
of natural gas, but in North America, gas production has already
peaked and is in long-term decline. Already, coal supplies 32% of U.S.
electricity, while natural gas supplies 24% and nuclear power 10%. As
90% of remaining U.S. fossil energy reserves take the form of coal,
gas generators are likely to be replaced by coal plants. The same
applies to aging nuclear generators, if they are not replaced by new
ones.

If you believe that burning coal sounds more benign than nuclear
power, I invite you to turn on your computer and search for images of
the "mountaintop removal" being carried out by coal-mining companies
in the Appalachians. It looks as if a nuclear disaster already has
happened. The forests have been flattened, the hilltops blown off, the
valleys filled with sterile rubble. Coal is also the worst of all
fuels as far as climate change is concerned. It contains 40% more
carbon per unit of energy than gas.

But if fossil fuels and nuclear power are bad choices, could 90% of
the electricity in the United States be generated by greener means?
There is no doubt that, if it could be harnessed, the U.S. has enough
ambient energy to provide all the electricity it now uses. Amory
Lovins of the Rocky Mountain Institute points out that the wind in a
few counties in the Dakotas is, in theory, sufficient to supply the
entire nation with electricity. Though no one is suggesting that all
U.S. energy should be drawn from one source, the development of cheap,
high-voltage direct current, or DC, lines of the kind now used in
Brazil, Sweden and Australia would permit even the most remote sources
to be exploited. The problem with transporting power has been that the
electricity load carried by traditional alternating current, or AC,
systems declines as the distance increases. But DC systems don't
suffer such "line losses." In principle, DC lines could open up wind
and wave power across the entire U.S. continental shelf, and solar
electricity throughout its deserts.

What about the cost? Although estimates vary widely, electricity from
large-scale wind farms appears to be cheaper than electricity from
either nuclear power or coal, and its costs are falling fast. Even
solar thermal electricity, a more expensive technology than wind, is
now cost-effective in some places. A report published last year showed
that during times of peak demand in Southern California, the cost of
electricity produced by solar thermal plants is roughly equal to the
wholesale price of conventional power. Peak demand in sunny places,
driven by air-conditioning, coincides with maximum solar output.

The problem with alternative energies is that the coincidence of
demand and supply is by no means guaranteed. Power companies can fire
up their standby coal plant when demand rises, but they can't turn on
the wind or ask the sun to shine. This problem can be partly overcome
by using long-distance DC cables: When there's a flat calm in New
York, there could be a gale blowing in Chicago. The wider the net from
which electricity can be drawn, the more reliable ambient power
becomes. But beyond a certain point — perhaps 50% or so of total
supply — power from intermittent sources cannot be guaranteed. Part of
the remainder could be supplied by burning biomass such as straw or
wood. But farm waste is limited, and mass planting of fuel crops has
implications for water tables and the global food supply.

So, with gas growing scarcer, where do Americans find the rest of
their power? It seems to me that the U.S. has only two choices: either
to build a new generation of nuclear plants or to find a genuinely
acceptable, nonpolluting means of mining and burning coal.

Such a means might exist, if underground coal gasification fulfills
its early promise. In principle, you can partly combust underground
coal seams, capture the gas they produce and scrub the pollutants from
it, producing either methane or hydrogen. The methane can be burned in
power stations and the carbon dioxide in their exhausts extracted and
buried, reducing greenhouse gas emissions by about 90%. The hydrogen
could be piped to people's homes and used in mini-generators to
provide both electricity and heat. But unless great care is taken,
underground combustion could contaminate supplies of groundwater.

Picking "clean coal" or nuclear power is not a choice I would like to
make. But if there is one thing I have learned in studying our energy
systems, it is that there are no painless solutions.
--
Jim Devine / "The decadent international but  individualistic
capitalism in the hands of which we found ourselves after the war is
not a success. It is not intelligent. It is not beautiful. It is not
just. It is not virtuous. And it doesn't deliver the goods." -- John
Maynard Keynes.

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