By
Lee S. Gliddon III
Nuclear
power is becoming recognized as a “green energy” source more and more each
day. As environmentalists and the public
at large become more educated in regards to nuclear power, the positive
perception of nuclear power grows.
Considering
the cost, emissions, carbon footprint, renewable aspects, and the improvements
already present in new nuclear technology; nuclear power as a whole is an
environmental advantage for countries that champion and move forward with it as
a source. These same countries are
realizing an economic boom, while those abandoning nuclear power are falling
into difficult economic times. When
economies falter, the environment often suffers greatly, this offers yet
another reason for countries to embrace nuclear power.
Cost
of Power
Nuclear
power has been determined to be an inexpensive energy source in regards raw
materials required and cost to produce.
All
energy production requires raw materials to create usable electricity. Nuclear power, by a factor of millions
provides the greatest multiplier from raw material to usable energy. That fact; makes nuclear power incredibly
“green”.
The
actual cost of Nuclear Power to produce is significantly less than Solar, Coal,
and Natural Gas with only Wind Power as a rival. However, Wind Power does not offer the
reliable and quantity of energy which Nuclear Power provides.
Electric
Vision' by Robert Preston Sept 7, 2005 using figures from US Department of Energy,
September, 2005.
Environmental
Performance Index – Energy Source Matters
When
countries pay more for their energy, it necessarily means there is less revenue
for environmental projects and green regulation enforcement. One of the first casualties of poor economies
has been environmental issues. A visit
to any second or third world country where energy is expensive will reveal a
poor environmental result. However,
countries with abundant natural Hydro energy fare well. Countries that are not as fortunate can employ
the great equalizer, Nuclear Power.
According
to Yale University’s Environmental Performance Index for 2012, the top countries:
1.
Switzerland (Hydro 56% and Nuclear 39%)
2.
Latvia
(Hydro 62%)
3.
Norway
(Hydro)
4.
Luxembourg
(Hydro 66%)
5.
Costa
Rica (Hydro 82%)
6.
France
(Nuclear 72%)
7.
Austria
(Hydro 68%)
The
bottom countries:
126.
Kuwait (99% Oil and Gas)
127.
Yemen (99% Oil and Gas)
128.
South Africa (Coal 88%)
129.
Kazakhstan (Oil and Gas 88%)
130.
Uzbekistan (Oil and Gas 97%)
131. Turkmenistan (Oil and Gas 99%)
132. Iraq (Oil 96%)
Switzerland
and France have “leapfrogged” the competition with the adoption of nuclear
power. No other country in the world has
gained such an excellent EPI raking as France without substantial Hydro Power. France’s energy model is a lesson for the
rest of the world on how to improve the environment absent natural Hydro
resources.
Source: Data from IEA
On the
contrary; the use of coal, gas, and oil as an energy source is the worst
direction a country can take in considering the environment. Many
of the Middle Eastern and Central Asian countries realize the worst environmental
results as they consume coal, gas, and oil for energy production. When compared to conventional energy sources
Nuclear energy is clearly the green alternative.
Source: “Life Cycle Assessment of Electricity
Generation Systems and Applications for Climate Change Policy Analysis, “Paul
J. Meier, University of Wisconsin-Madison
The
carbon footprint of solar, hydro, nuclear, geothermal, and wind are excellent
in comparison to conventional energy sources.
Negative
Ecological Impact of Green Energy Sources
An often
ignored or unknown element of green energy is the ecological footprint of green
energy sources. The actual space
required, noise, intrusion on nature, and impact on humans are considerations
often over looked.
Per 100
hundred acres of nuclear power millions of homes, however solar and wind
require tens of thousands to do the same.
The footprint difference is significant.
The smaller the footprint of an energy source the less impact on the
immediate environment and local ecological systems will occur.
Solar’s
Negative Impact
Solar
power is a positive addition to the power grids throughout the world. It has it’s pitfalls due to weather and time
of day light conditions. There are also rarely
discussed environmental issues with solar power. Due to the nature of solar panel creation
there are numerous events of Chinese plants dumping toxic byproducts into water
sources and land.
In many
areas, valuable water sources carry the burden to clean dust, pollution, and
bird droppings from the panels so they may operate. In desert areas it has been
noted that the dust accumulated from one month reduces the panel’s energy
output by 35% and the approximately 40,000 liters of water per day are required
to clean the panels. In some cases the energy required to bring the
water to arid solar panel farms cost more than the actual power created. New technology is proposed, but exceedingly
expensive.
With the operation of solar farms, coolant liquids
need changing every 2-3 years. Special
handling is required because the byproducts are/can be: anti-freeze, glycol, nitrates, sulphates,
aromatic alcohols, chromates, and other harmful materials. Like Nuclear there are some dangerous
byproducts which must be managed.
Not only
do the actual solar farms take up significant space displacing wildlife, but
the factories that produce the solar power components have a poor environmental
record. Costly and valuable clean water
is required in arid regions. The
byproducts are also hazardous. Solar is
not the environmental utopian power supply that many proponents claim it to be.
Wind’s
Negative Impact
Like nuclear
and solar, wind has a minimal carbon footprint compared to fossil fuel
sources. Other issues with wind should
be noted. Noise, visual, and avian
concerns have been voiced. The physical
footprint of a wind farm is a vast expanse of land. Overall, wind is a very environmentally
positive energy source. The issue with
wind power is its inability to provide consistent base load energy at an
inexpensive rate. Wind is costly and
unreliable, but a good addition to augment the power supply.
Nuclear Impact and Improvements
Chernobyl
and Fukushima happened. Extreme,
preventable human error created havoc on the environment in both cases. With new technologies and practices; such
events with nuclear power will be highly preventable if not almost
impossible. With the new technologies
the ecological impact of modern nuclear will be minimized greatly.
Chernobyl
and Fukushima both occurred due to the inability to get cooling water to the
nuclear fuel. Fukushima was compounded
with the failure of politicians to allow the plant to vent of pressure and
Hydrogen. The Hydrogen combusted and
blew apart the containment structures.
Beyond the new plant design technology, a simply solution is already
available for existing plants. Water
towers based on gravity can provide enough water to the reactors in an
emergency offering reactors enough time to shut down. New plant technology will not require this
simple and inexpensive solution.
Other
nuclear impact is waste. Currently,
nuclear waste has been a problem for nations around the world. In the U.S.A. a bold solution has been in
progress with the building of the Hanford, Washington Waste Treatment
Plant. This plant processes nuclear
waste and turns it into a much safer glass.
The current Generation III reactors being produced have a substantial grace period. After a shut down; the plant requires no active intervention for approximately 72 hours. The plants have a higher “burn-up” rate using fuel more fully and efficiently significantly reducing the amount waste along with a greater use of burnable absorbers to extend fuel life. The results are a far safer, more efficient, more powerful, and less waste producing plant. Generation IV reactors are estimated to be available in 2030. These include molten salt (Thorium) reactors that have virtually no meltdown potential.
Thorium may come to reality even sooner with India and other countries embracing the technology. Thorium reactors present no proliferation risk, solve safety issues, are scalable in size, transportable, and inexpensive as they can be put in standard industrial buildings making them the likely next step in clean, green, reliable, safe, and powerful energy production.
Avoided
Emissions by Green Energy Sources
All energy sources releases some
sort of greenhouse gases in their life cycle. Construction, manufacturing, obtaining
necessary raw materials, transportation, are just some of the activities green
energy sources must partake to become a reality. The green energy sources avoid massive
amounts of emissions.
Reviewing the positive impact of
green energy in the United States illustrates the positive impact for the
environment.
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency - 2007
Nuclear power has offered the
greatest positive impact in reducing CO2 emissions by more than twice all other
green power sources combined.
Summary
Nuclear power’s position as the current top green
energy solution is undeniable. It offers
an inexpensive, yet reliable base load of energy. When compared to not just green energy
sources, but also conventional fossil energy sources, nuclear is less expensive
and incredibly reliable. Outside of the
few countries blessed with the natural resources of hydro; no other green
energy source is reliable to maintain the necessary base load of energy
required regardless of weather or time of day.
The single impactful factor that countries
throughout the world have been able to employ to significantly improve their
environmental performance index has been to embrace nuclear power. Countries unwilling or unable to realize nuclear
power and continue on predominantly fossil fuel sources have the worst
environmental performance indexes.
New nuclear technology already in use has provides
even greater quantities of power, using less fuel, with more renewable
properties, and is far safer than the older plants. Inexpensive, green, and safer generations of
nuclear reactors will provide our planet’s residents an even better environment
in the years to come.
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