Keith,
   What sort of impact has been made by the use of ISL (in situ leaching)
methods of uranium extraction on the overall disturbance and pollution of
uranium 'mining'.  Does this method reduce the impact?

-Joey

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of Keith Addison
Sent: Monday, July 11, 2005 12:03 PM
To: Biofuel@sustainablelists.org
Subject: [Biofuel] Deconstructing the Nuclear Power Myths


The Institute of Science in Society

Science Society Sustainability
http://www.i-sis.org.uk

ISIS Press Release 11/07/05

Deconstructing the Nuclear Power Myths

Peter Bunyard disposes of the argument for nuclear power: it is
highly uneconomical, and the saving on greenhouse gas emissions
negligible, if any, compared to a gas-fired electricity generating
plant

Peter Bunyard will be speaking at
<http://www.i-sis.org.uk/SWCFA.php>Sustainable World Conference,
14-15 July 2005.

References to this article are posted on <http://www.i-
sis.org.uk/full/DTNPMFull.php>ISIS members' website.
<http://www.i-sis.org.uk/members.php>Details here

Limitations due to the quality of uranium ore

A critical point about the practicability of nuclear power to provide
clean energy under global warming is the quality and grade of the
uranium ore. The quality of uranium ore varies inversely with their
availability on a logarithmic scale. The ores used at present, such
as the carnotite ores in the United States have an uranium content of
up to 0.2 per cent, and vast quantities of overlying rocks and
subsoil have to be shifted to get to the 96,000 tonnes of
uranium-containing rock and shale that will provide the fresh fuel
for a one gigawatt reactor [1].

In addition, most of the ore is left behind as tailings with
considerable quantities of radioactivity from thorium- 230, a
daughter product of the radioactive decay of uranium. Thorium has a
half-life of 77 000 years and decays into radium-226, which decays
into the gas radon-222. All are potent carcinogens.

Fresh fuel for one reactor contains about 10 curies of radioactivity
(27 curies equal 1012 becquerels, each of the latter being one
radiation event per second.) The tailings corresponding to that
contain 67 curies of radioactive material, much of it exposed to
weathering and rain run-off. Radon gas has been found 1 000 miles
from the mine tailings from where it originated. Uranium extraction
has resulted in more than 6 billion tonnes of radioactive tailings,
with significant impact on human health [2].

Once the fuel is used in a reactor, it becomes highly radioactive
primarily because of fission products and the generation of the
‘transuranics' such as neptunium and americium. At discharge from the
reactor, a tonne of irradiated fuel from a PWR (pressurized water
reactor such as in use at Sizewell) will contain more than 177
million curies of radioactive substances, some admittedly
short-lived, but all the more potent in the short term. Ten years
later, the radioactivity has died away to about 405 000 curies and
100 years on to 42 000 curies, therefore still 600 times more
radioactive than the original material from which the fuel was
derived [3].

Today's reactors, totalling 350 GW and providing about 3 per cent of
the total energy used in the world, consume 60 000 tonnes of
equivalent natural uranium, prior to enrichment. At that rate,
economically recoverable reserves of uranium - about 10 million
tonnes - would last less than 100 years. A worldwide nuclear
programme of 1 000 nuclear reactors would consume the uranium within
50 years, and if all the world's electricity, currently 60 exajoules
(1018Joules) were generated by nuclear reactors, the uranium would
last three years [4]. The prospect that the amount of economically
recoverable uranium would limit a worldwide nuclear power programme
was certainly appreciated by the United Kingdom Atomic Energy in its
advocacy for the fast breeder reactor, which theoretically could
increase the quantity of energy to be derived from uranium by a
factor of 70 through converting non-fissile uranium-238 into
plutonium-239.

In the Authority's journal [5], Donaldson, D.M., and Betteridge, G.E.
stated that, "for a nuclear contribution that expands continuously to
about 50 per cent of demand, uranium resources are only adequate for
about 45 years."

The earth's crust and oceans contain millions upon millions of tonnes
of uranium. The average in the crust is 0.0004 per cent and in
seawater 2 000 times more dilute. One identified resource, the
Tennessee shales in the United States, have uranium concentrations of
between 10 and 100 parts per million, therefore between 0.1 and 0.01
per cent. Such low grade ore has little effective energy content as
measured by the amount of electricity per unit mass of mined ore [6].

Below 50 parts per million, the energy extracted is no better than
mining coal, assuming that the uranium is used in a once-through fuel
cycle, and is not reprocessed, but is dumped in some long-term
repository. Apart from the self-evident dangers of dissolving spent
fuel in acid and keeping the bulk of radioactive waste in stainless
steel tanks until a final disposal is found, reprocessing offers very
little if at all in terms of energy gained through the extraction and
re-use of uranium and plutonium in mixed oxide fuel (MOX) [7].

To date, nuclear power has been built and subsidised through the use
of fossil fuels, which have provided the energy for mining,
extraction, enrichment and construction. Hence, nuclear power cannot
be considered to be free of greenhouse gas emissions. Use of the next
grade down could lead to a greenhouse gas inventory every bit as bad
as for a gas-fired electricity generation plant, and considerably
worse than for a gas-fired co-generation plant, in which both
electricity and end-use heating are produced.

As Jan Willem Storm van Leeuwen and Philip Smith point out in their
document [6], the cumulative energy produced by a nuclear plant
compared with the energy expenditure shows a relatively small net
gain over the course of 100 years, which incorporates the time needed
to get a handle on the costs of final disposal of the radioactive
waste, including the radioactively contaminated structural materials
of the reactor. Poor grade uranium will result in a net deficit of
energy. Hence a massive worldwide nuclear programme, based on the use
of poor grade uranium ores, will add cumulatively to energy demands,
rather than resolving them.

Gas- fired plants better than nuclear plants

On that basis, comparisons between the carbon dioxide emissions
resulting from the full once-through cycle of a nuclear plant and an
equivalently sized gas-burning plant, indicates that with the poorer
uranium ores, below 0.02 per cent, the gas-fired plant comes out
better, with lower overall carbon dioxide emissions. Indeed, the
efficiency of a combined- cycle gas plant can now achieve
efficiencies of 56 per cent, more than double that achieved for
nuclear power. With gas, the costs of electricity generation have
therefore reduced in real terms.

If that gas-fired plant were to be used in co-generation, with the
simultaneous production of electricity and useful heat, it would win
hands-down for all but the best uranium ores, such as are in use
today.

Quite apart from the relative paucity of good uranium ores, if the
world were to embark simultaneously on the construction of nuclear
plants to replace all coal-fired power plants, that would require one
gigawatt-sized (electrical) nuclear reactor to be built every two and
a half days for 38 years. Total nuclear capacity, according to
Worldwatch's 1989 State of the World, [8] would be 18 times greater
than today, at an annual cost of $144 billion (1989 money).

In his 1990 report for Greenpeace [9] William Keepin came up with
similar numbers in terms of requirements but at a more pessimistic
annual cost. He pointed out that 5 000 nuclear plants would be needed
to displace the 9.4 TW of coal equivalent estimated to be necessary
in electricity generation in the world by 2025. Again he figured on
the need to begin construction on a new plant every couple of days,
assuming a favourable six-year completion time. On the basis of
highly optimistic assumptions concerning capital costs and plant
reliability, total electricity generation costs (1990 money) would
average $525 billion per year.

Nuclear power has an appalling record for long drawn-out construction
times. The last reactor to come on line in the United States took 23
years to complete. Fifteen years has been the average time taken in
many Eastern European countries using USSR technology. In France, the
average time taken for construction to operation is 8 years.

We must also not neglect the considerable and proportionately
increasing impact of other greenhouse gases to global warming. The
use of nuclear power, even to its best advantage, would not make a
jot of difference to the emissions of both methane and nitrous oxide
since they are primarily derived from agriculture and in particular
from deforestation in the tropics.

France - a test case

There are other costs in running nuclear power plants. Even the
nuclear industry now admits that the generation of electricity that
originates from nuclear power is not wholly free of greenhouse gas
emissions. France provides a useful background to review the
efficiency of power generation and consumer preference. In 1999,
France generated 375 TWh from its nuclear stations. EdF (Electricité
de France) estimates that the cost in CO2 emissions of operating its
nuclear plants amounts to 6 g CO2 per kWh [10].

France's electricity board provides an estimate that includes
construction, removing the spent fuel, reprocessing and the storage
of wastes. On that basis the total CO2 emissions per year from the
operation of its nuclear plants amounts to 2.25 million tonnes. That
estimate does not include the mining and preparation of the fuel and
hence is not dependent on the quality of the ore.

On the other hand, the Öko-Institute of Germany, taking the full fuel
cycle costs into account, comes up with an average figure that is
nearly 6 times higher - 35 g/kWh - compared with EdF's, in which case
the total CO2 emissions would amount to 13.125 million tonnes of CO2
equivalent [11].

In 1990, France emitted 144 million tonnes of CO2 equivalent.
Therefore, nuclear power's contribution to the total emissions
amounted to 1.6 percent on EdF's estimates and 9.1 percent, according
to the Öko-Institute, both numbers being significant and far from
trivial. Nevertheless, banking on the naivete of the public, the
nuclear industry exaggerates the advantages of nuclear power in terms
of avoided greenhouse gas emissions by comparing its relatively low
emissions compared to a coal-fired plant of the same generating size.
On that basis, nuclear power comes out 300 times better than coal
[12].

As Mycle Schneider, director of WISE (World Information on Safe
Energy)-Paris, points out, those seemingly low percentages of carbon
dioxide emission from nuclear power plants hide an elemental truth,
that the use of nuclear power in France has to be augmented, because
of consumer preference, by the use in the home of natural gas-based
heating systems, both for hot water and space-heating. For
home-heating purposes electricity from whatever source is an
expensive and inefficient option, and basically the public, let alone
industry, prefers to turn away from it.

In an average French household, aside from transport, two-thirds of
the energy consumed is for heating and just one-third for
electricity. Consequently, if we are going to make any comparisons as
to the carbon-economy of nuclear power versus fossil-fuel systems, we
should do so only by taking the end- use preferences into account.

First, the differences of any one system lie in its efficiency to
provide end-use energy whether for heating or electricity Nuclear
power stations are built away from population centres They are
relatively inefficient from a thermodynamic point of view, losing as
much as two-thirds of the energy produced as heat to the immediate
environment (a body of water or cooling tower). The one-third
remainder of electricity must be transmitted into a central grid
system, where the losses can amount to as much as 10 per cent The net
result is that about one quarter of the energy originally released
gets to the consumer.

If the consumer were to obtain both electricity and heating from a
single co-generation system; the efficiency returns can amount to as
much as 90 per cent of the original energy and, therefore, some three
to four times better than if nuclear generated electricity were to be
the sole source of energy in the home.

A proper evaluation of greenhouse gas emissions therefore demands
that the method of production gets taken into account when estimating
the total release of greenhouse gases. Both coal and fuel oil used in
a co-generation plant are still inferior by a factor of two to a
nuclear power/natural gas combination in terms of greenhouse
emissions. But that figure is already far- removed from the 300 times
advantage so heralded by the nuclear industry and its supporters.

Meanwhile, a natural gas co-generation system is level-pegging with
the nuclear power/natural gas combination again in terms of
emissions, while being far cheaper to the consumer simply because of
the three fold better efficiency in delivering end-use energy. And
what about a co-generation system based on biogas? The Öko-Institute
estimates that it emits seven times less greenhouse gases in
providing end-use energy compared to a nuclear power/natural gas
combination [11].

Although concern over the consequences of accidents, such as at
Chernobyl or Three Mile Island impinges on the issue, the high,
uneconomic cost of nuclear power, more than any other factor, has
brought about the industry's failure to make its mark as a major
source of energy in the world. Increasingly too, local ‘embedded'
generation, such as from a wind farm, or a co-generation plant, is
becoming an important competitor against the notion of single large
power plants attached to a central grid. In a world ever more
competitive in terms of reducing cost, an inefficient, high capital
cost nuclear power plant is increasingly an anachronism.

If nuclear power were the answer to a cheap source of energy, why has
there been a massive turning away from nuclear power since the 1970s?
In the United States, where nuclear technology originated, all
civilian nuclear reactors were ordered in the ten-year period between
1963 and 1973, all with huge subsidies from the federal government,
including so-called turn-key contracts. No new ones have been ordered
since 1973, six years before the accident at Three Mile Island, and a
string of cancellations in the 1970s and 80s plus permanent shutdowns
meant that total electricity generated by nuclear power went down
rather than up. In 1989, the cancellations and shutdowns exceeded
those coming on stream by a considerable margin, 4 GW compared to
10.4 GW.


This article can be found on the I-SIS website at
http://www.i-sis.org.uk/DTNPM.php


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