More Resources on Reactors:NIRS Public Citizen IEER Alliance for Nuclear Responsibility updated daily |
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Reactor Facts More reactor links |
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Why Nuclear Power Cannot Be A Major Energy Source It takes a lot of fossil energy to mine uranium, and then to extract and prepare the right isotope for use in a nuclear reactor. It takes even more fossil energy to build the reactor, and, when its life is over, to decommission it and look after its radioactive waste. As a result, with current technology, there is only a limited amount of uranium ore in the world that is rich enough to allow more energy to be produced by the whole nuclear process than the process itself consumes. This amount of ore might be enough to supply the world’s total current electricity demand for about six years. Moreover, because of the amount of fossil fuel and fluorine used in the enrichment process, significant quantities of greenhouse gases are released. As a result, nuclear energy is by no means a ‘climate-friendly’ technology. Read more |
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Nuclear waste recycling is costly.
Reprocessing spent nuclear fuel rods is being promoted as a better alternative to simply storing the highly radioactive waste from power plants in repositories. Read more |
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1/31/07
Principles for Safeguarding Nuclear Fuel National Geographic: After Oil: Powering the Future. Chernobyl disaster killed more than 1,000 British babies Greenpeace International Report- Chernobyl + 20 Insurmountable Risks: The Dangers of Using Nuclear Power to Combat Global Climate Change by Brice Smith IEER Press 2006 519 pp. |