Nuclear power
Nuclear power | |
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Interest of | • Crispin Aubrey • Chris Busby • Ian Butterfield • Lawrence Hafstad • Hilda Murrell • Nuclear Regulatory Commission • UK/Atomic Energy Authority |
Official narrative
"Too cheap to meter", anyone? That was quite a while ago.
Problems
The Guardian reported in 2017 that “Nuclear power is facing existential problems around the world, as the cost of renewable energies fall and their popularity grows. “The maths doesn’t work,” says Tom Burke, former environmental policy adviser to BP and visiting professor at both Imperial and University Colleges. “Nuclear simply doesn’t make sense any more.”” [1]
Risks
The nuclear power industry has never been separate from the production of nuclear weapons, for which reason governments have tended not to perform serious accounting of the potentially disasterous ecological risks.
Waste
It has never found a satisfactory long term storage solution for nuclear waste. As of 2015, only one country, Finland, has seriously addressed the problem of permanent storage.[2]
See Also
Related Documents
Title | Type | Publication date | Author(s) | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|
Document:Chris Busby Wiki Introduction | profile | 1 February 2013 | Chris Busby | This is Busby's own introduction to a comprehensive resume of his life and career to date. It clearly outlines the corrupt nature of the modern scientific research and peer review in areas of science that affect powerful government, military and industrial interests. |
Document:Dishonesty and the Science-Policy Interface | presentation | 1 November 2011 | Chris Busby | A hard-hitting indictment of Western Scientific Establishments in glossing over the issue of nuclear safety, and attacking those, such as Busby, who are independently researching the effects of ionising radiation on human health. Powerful interests clearly feel threatened by Dr Busby's work and are seeking to suborn the scientific process to their own ends whatever the catastrophic effects on human health of disasters such as Fukushima. |
Document:Suppression of dissent in science | paper | 1999 | Brian Martin |