La Cucaracha by Lalo Alcaraz for March 29, 2011

  1. Brockmonarch100
    ronebofh  about 13 years ago

    This alarmism is crap. Far more radiation is released on a daily basis by coal-burning plants, not to mention greenhouse gases.

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  2. Cat29
    x_Tech  about 13 years ago

    Now there’s an idea. Put the nuclear plants on Mars and beam the energy to Earth. OOPS Overload Scorched Earth

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    cdward  about 13 years ago

    ^^Let’s not over simplify or underestimate the problems with nuclear. Nobody has yet to solve the spent fuel storage problem, for example. This is not alarmist - its prudence. That’s not to say there is no place for nuclear, but if alarmists bother you, nuclear cheerleaders bother me, overlooking anything that makes them look not so good. Just ask the folks in Sendai what they think of all that cheap, clean power.

    Still, you are correct about coal fired plants - they are a serious problem. Wind, geo-thermal, and solar are going to be important elements of our future energy, and they could be much more efficient and much more quickly mainstreamed if government and energy companies put their might behind them.

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  4. What has been seen t1
    lewisbower  about 13 years ago

    I think we should have women expend all the energy.

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  5. Flash
    pschearer Premium Member about 13 years ago

    Four 40-year-old, poorly designed nuclear reactors endure one of the worst earthquakes in history, followed by a devastating tsunami, and nobody has died from the nuclear accident compared to tens of thousands from the natural disaster. Perspective, people, perspective!

    As for spent fuel, that problem would have been solved decades ago but for the disproportionate political power of the state of Nevada and the generally anti-technology stance of the the Greenies who have turned against every form of energy they ever once advocated.

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  6. Cicada avatar
    Dirty Dragon  about 13 years ago

    People aren’t losing perspective, it’s just that comparing the tsunami damage to the nuclear plant damage are apples and oranges. Of course there was a massive loss of life and property from the water, but strictly speaking you can clear the land with bulldozers and rebuild if society wants to.

    (It’s a separate point to consider if you want to do that in a valley that sits on a major fault line so close to the ocean. Same argument could have been made for New Orleans, or at least they might have chosen to build Denmark-quality defenses against a future water surge.)

    The thing about the nuclear situation in Japan is that for all that’s gone wrong, it’s still been largely contained. But on the other hand what the so-called ‘alarmists’ want you to consider is that if the final containment casing were to fail, and there was a total meltdown released into the atmosphere - you could have a 50-mile radius of land contaminated to the point where it would have to be abandoned for hundreds of years, a la Chernoybl.

    That’s the question some people consider when talking about new nuclear installations. As we’ve seen in this case “the chances are a million to one” isn’t quite true. In Japan, it feels like the chances of a major, life-changing environmental disaster have dropped to less than the chances of VCU winning the NCAA tournament. People should take this example, and decide if they are comfy with a nuclear plant 30 miles up the road.

    Low energy prices are a fair consideration, but the risks shouldn’t be swept under the rug when making the choice.

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