I did not say that. I am not against nuclear energy, but its current incarnation lacks a lot to be desired. Smaller plants just spread the problem out. Logically, anytime you have that caustic of an environment to deal with it is going to be expensive to maintain the safety of the operation for an indefinite period of time.
I have no issue with the Yucca burial site. It has to be put somewhere.
No offense warhed, I am only playing the devil's advocate here because nuclear is not as rosy a solution as some would paint it to be.
No offense taken sir, there is not enough real discussion going on with the public about nuclear. As I alluded to, I place almost all of the blame on the nuclear industry for that. They have not done enough to make their case.
As far as new plants and safety...We are running huge plants right now with technology developed in the 1950s and 60s. The designs for the new plants (being built all over the world) is like comparing a F1 racecar to a Model-T.
Right now, at least at my plant, we run between 30-40% efficient, almost 60% of the heat we create is wasted. The newer designs are around 80%. The newer plants are also much much smaller than the beasts we have now. Smaller, more efficient, cheaper.
A nuclear plant in operation, even with our current plants, basically runs itself. A control room is manned, most of their work is constant checking of safety and proper running. All other systems and employees are for efficiency and security. A new plant would be even more automated, even more clean (in the radiation sense of the word). No American employee has ever died due to radiation. We are the safest form of energy to human health at this time.
Shutting down a nuclear plant is expensive because of regulations (not a bad thing.) If we had a central site to start sending our spent fuel to, a nuclear plant could be shut down and brought to a completely safe state as far as public health goes.
I understand the concern about spent fuel being with us for so long, but we already have it and have had it for 40 years. We need Yucca.
I honestly do not believe this country is ever going to have a strong nuclear industry again, it's just not in our blood anymore. The rest of the industrialized world is far ahead of us already. I can't see anything other than the status-quo for the next few decades: Costly repair to a failing grid, mining more coal, building more coal plants, and talk of free\clean energy that is never going to replace coal.
Nuclear Power these days has a lot of hurdles to overcome, and I just don't think the powers that be or the American people are going to invest in it.
Imagine a country with a new high tech grid, small efficient nuclear plants supported by clean renewable power plants, with a small number of coal and natural gas. That would be something to be proud of. Our current situation is a failing grid soon to be drawing more energy than is being put in (put in by a majority of polluting power plants, with almost Zero renewable resource plants.)