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bilekastoday at 5:13 PM5 repliesview on HN

Switzerland has an amazing opportunity to be the standard setter in the EU with nuclear though. The technology is so unbelievably safe and efficient these days. It a real shame to leave it all on the table because of poorly designed and managed disasters.


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TheCondortoday at 6:47 PM

Did waste management become a solved problem?

In Colorado they shut down their last reactor (a very modern, at the time, thorium unit) in 1989 and there is still tons of waste product onsite since Yucca mountain was the designated target for it and it never came online. It's in a river basin and the containment facility is supposedly insanely robust (can withstand 300mph winds, etc..) but it's still there and I think the deadline to move it is still nearly a decade away.

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jltsirentoday at 5:38 PM

Political will is not the actual bottleneck.

Finland has given the initial permit for three nuclear reactors in the past 25 years. One was eventually built after massive delays and cost overruns. Another was canceled, because the company chosen to build it first proved to be incompetent and later also politically undesirable. As for the third reactor, the company that got the permit determined that it makes more sense to invest the money in something else.

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Gudtoday at 5:17 PM

Switzerland is not in the EU.

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thomasmgtoday at 6:45 PM

Solar, wind and hydro are all much cheaper, far safer and more efficient these days.

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esarbetoday at 5:19 PM

It's also incredibly expensive and brittle and cannot be moderated without additional costs[1].

At this point nuclear is just a dead horse. It hasn't managed to displace fossil fuels in over 70 years - a feat that renewables have done within 20 years. Nuclear is too slow and too expensive.

https://www.reuters.com/sustainability/climate-energy/france...

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