No, you're the expert. You're informing us that Finns are leading the way in waste disposal, but that only seems to mean that Finns have decided not to dump it in the sea but instead dump it far undergound. Credit to them for that decision to use their own territory, but I fully expect house prices around the area chosen to plummet in 50,000 years or so. Or possibly even earlier, when news about leaking cans leaks.This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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11-08-2024 09:39 AM #691
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11-08-2024 10:04 AM #692This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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11-08-2024 10:36 AM #693This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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11-08-2024 11:22 AM #694
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The problem is it isn't a nil sum game. So you say don't have nuclear because they might be mistaken when they say they can store it safely for a hundred millenia. You have to admit that instead of choosing nuclear you are choosing to burn fossil fuels. Burning fossil fuels isn't a maybe something could go wrong it causes deaths simple as. The BMJ estimated that burning fossil fuels kills 5 million people per year so I'm glad that countries like China are investing massively in nuclear power as if they can switch completely then 5 million less deaths per year is better than who wants to live next to a nuclear waste facility. The planet is dying also and we simply have to get to net zero. Once there hopefully we can transition to purely renewable, in the meantime people are dying
https://bmjgroup.com/air-pollution-from-fossil-fuel-use-accounts-for-over-5-million-extra-deaths-a-year/#:~:text=deaths%20a%20year-,Air%20pollution%20from%20fossil%20fuel%20use%20ac counts%20for,million%20extra%20deaths%20a%20year&t ext=Air%20pollution%20from%20using%20fossil,publis hed%20by%20The%20BMJ%20today.
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11-08-2024 02:47 PM #695
Nuclear is the safest fuel source we have. I’m all for it but for the price. It’s too expensive for Scotland given our renewable options but for other countries then they should go for it.
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11-08-2024 03:12 PM #696This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
https://www.forbes.com/sites/christi...aste-disposal/
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11-08-2024 07:30 PM #697
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Also until battery storage catches up we need another power source when renewables aren't enough.
Last year 56% of the electricity we used was from renewable, 30% from nuclear, 14% from burning fossil fuels. We produced 97% of what we use from renewable but at certain times so loads got exported. Some on here would be surprised how much we already rely on nuclear but one more small reactor would make us completely green and fossil fuel free when it comes to electricity.
The problem is with cars going electric and hopefully heating we are going to need more electricity and at all times including night or winter.
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11-08-2024 07:47 PM #698This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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11-08-2024 07:52 PM #699This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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11-08-2024 08:05 PM #700
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Imagine the planning in the UK for new nuclear and they objections meetings ha. Other countries just get it done
https://worksinprogress.co/issue/building-back-faster/
1,961. That’s the number of documents contained within a single planning application for a wind farm off the northeast coast of England – capable of powering around 1.5 million homes. The environmental impact assessment and environmental scoping documents alone totalled 13,275 pages. To put that into context, that’s 144 pages longer than the complete works of Tolstoy combined with Proust’s seven volume opus In Search of Lost Time.
UK’s National Highways agency spent £267 million preparing a planning application to build a 23-kilometer road. The planning application, which featured 30,000-plus pages of environmental documentation, was the longest ever prepared.
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11-08-2024 08:11 PM #701
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As I say it's not a nil sum game the alternative is using co2 to extract gas from the seabed get it to a refinery, transport it to a gas power station and then burn it into the air. We can still create co2 and use fossil fuels and be net zero but we should be pushing to be net negative in the next 50 years
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11-08-2024 08:34 PM #702
The other thing on nuclear power. When has the UK ever built a nuclear power plant which was non-concurrent with a nuclear bomb programme? Without looking, probably never.
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11-08-2024 08:44 PM #703
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11-08-2024 09:01 PM #704
hinckley c taking 10-14 years to be built and commissioned? When does the green energy kick-in given all that fossil fuel being used during the build? Or does that get written off as negligible too?
Costing £46B at the moment.by 2030, if its finished, even more.
A wind power farm can be up and running in a year.
BTW am not convinced in any way that nuclear is green energy at all. Never have been and it seemed disingenuous when it began being labelled as such. So many lies were told about Torness's output when it was out of action, I just don't trust the people in charge.
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11-08-2024 09:11 PM #705
Torness is coming to the end of its life.
Waste facilities at Sellafield...
https://www.theguardian.com/business...ilings-nuclearThere is no such thing as too much yarn, just not enough time.
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11-08-2024 09:18 PM #706This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
Seems an obsolete shambles looking at that article.
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11-08-2024 09:29 PM #707
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Hinckley is costing 3 times Finlands Olkiluoto 3 and 5 times what south Korea builds its reactors for.
There wasn't much fossil fuels used in 14 years as most of the years it was planning, meetings, objections, meetings.
As I've said its the same with all projects in the uk hs2 3 times the price than Europe, tram projects almost double.
The green energy kicks off immediately a plant like Sizewell will save 3 gigawatt of fossil fuels being burnt per year! It's one or the other you need to choose. It's simply sometimes dark like just now and not always windy so until we progress storage we need another source. Right now its 30% is nuclear and 14% is fossil fuels.
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11-08-2024 09:38 PM #708
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The article shows its cyber security is poor although seems like everyones is nowadays reading about attacks including UK gov
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11-08-2024 09:38 PM #709This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
The green energy kicks off immediately
....but it doesn't though, does it.
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11-08-2024 09:54 PM #710
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And of course it does its a green energy. No power is co2 free but nuclear is near the top. In its complete life cycle from planning to end of life nuclear omits half of hydro and solar and similar to wind. This is the median of multiple studies
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Life-cycle_greenhouse_gas_emissions_of_energy_sources
Coal – PC 910
Gas – combined cycle 490
Biomass – Dedicated 230
Solar PV – Utility scale 48
Solar PV – rooftop 41
Geothermal 38
Concentrated solar power 27
Hydropower 24
Wind Offshore 12
Nuclear 12
Wind Onshore 11
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11-08-2024 10:06 PM #711This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
Also they never run at full capacity and those in charge
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12-08-2024 05:27 AM #712
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Renewables are the way forward and when battery capacity moves forward Scotland will be at the front of renewable power and a net exporter. In the meantime 44% of our power has to come from somewhere else what % do you want it to be nuclear and what burning gas. It's 30% to 14% just now. Should we do as Germany do close the nuclear early and go 44% gas or replace both with a new nuclear power station. Our stations were made before I was born I'd prefer a new higher technology small reactor personally and stop burning fuel for our electricity.
People are worried about what it's with nuclear but in the meantime 5 million die every year due to fossil fuels, makes the world's current wars look a small danger to life in comparison
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13-08-2024 10:08 AM #713
Ok I looked around yesterday for a story that was in Evening News and Scotsman yesterday but to no avail.
I don't doubt the figures for the output you have listed. When I said they lied about their output it was regarding literature at the Torness visitor centre which overestimated their output, conflating potential with actual, which came at a time Torness wasn't generating any. In the literature they also claimed nuclear was 100% green, which it isn't. No conspiracy theory but I failed to find the story, so...
Sent from my SM-A528B using TapatalkLast edited by Kato; 13-08-2024 at 11:56 AM.
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13-08-2024 11:52 AM #714
I did the tour of Torness about 10 years ago. Quite an eye opener. Armed police with machine guns patrol 24/7 365 days a year. A control room that looked like something out of a Roger Moore era Bond film with modern computer monitors etc bolted onto it.
The info from the tour guide would have done North Korean propaganda proud and if you knew nothing about nuclear power and the cost of building new ones, short life of the power stations, huge costs involved in decommissioning etc you’d think there should be one in every corner of Scotland.
Solar, wave and wind power far superior. Pump the £20bn+ that a replacement for Torness would cost into these, grants for heat pumps, insulation etc."Washing one's hands of the conflict between the powerful and the powerless means to side with the powerful, not to be neutral.' - Paulo Freire
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13-08-2024 02:38 PM #715
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We are already 30% nuclear. It's the 14% gas we could do without. I actually believe there is some in Scotland that would close Torness now and stop that 30% from nuclear, the German way. A paper in Germany estimated them keeping their nuclear running would have meant a reduction in co2 of 73% in 2022 and a 50% reduction in costs of energy
https://x.com/AdamBlazowski/status/1800499047750590772
Every single person would choose replacing nuclear with other green energy. The fact is it'll be replaced by fossil fuel burning mostly. I don't know what the greens in Germany were thinking.
Thankfully this is just chat on a football forum and the rest of the world has agreed at copd to push massively to nuclear. The world's capacity will triple in 25 years
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13-08-2024 03:01 PM #716
https://electricityproduction.uk/in/scotland/
That's a live generation source.
Today 9.2% is nuclear and 83.1% is wind. 2.9% is gas.There is no such thing as too much yarn, just not enough time.
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13-08-2024 04:19 PM #717
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Gas is up to 11.6 in your link as of now, polluting Scottish air when it didn't need to happen
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13-08-2024 07:47 PM #718
Rather than typing it out or copying and pasting, here are the reasons why I’m 100% against nuclear power:
https://www.oneearth.org/the-7-reaso...limate-change/
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13-08-2024 08:56 PM #719
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Almost all these deaths are from fossil fuels. So is he saying we just click our fingers and stop using fossil fuels right now and there will be no deaths. And what's it to do with nuclear. Utterly bizarre. Most of the co2 produced is from motor vehicles and that isn't going to change soon so I'm afraid most of those deaths are baked in. Just a totally bizarre paragraph
He'd have voted for the German nuclear reactors to be closed and would sit with his mouth open when co2 rocketed and energy prices rose due to it. They just don't get it, it isn't nuclear vs wind. We must build every bit of wind and solar we can. The only conversation just now is what do you chose nuclear or burning fossil fuels for the rest. If you say no nuclear then no problem but your choosing fossil fuels and the deaths and co2 that comes with it. If it gets to the point where the choice is nuclear vs renewable I and every sensible person will chose renewable.
SSE Peterhead gas station is the biggest polluter by far in Scotland 1.6 million co2 tons per year, 3 times the amount of Mossmoran or Ineos Grangemouth. It will be great when we don't need gas but it won't be in the next few decades. In fact Scottish Government are going to build another gas power station next to Peterhead.
https://news.stv.tv/north/climate-activists-protest-against-plans-to-build-second-gas-burning-power-station-in-peterhead
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13-08-2024 11:37 PM #720
I'm just against it as a pure gut feeling that it's deeply bad juju that we shouldn't be arseing around with. When Torness went up I just saw an abomination.
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