Currently in the USA, natural gas is the cheapest means to create electricity, with Nuclear directly behind it. Nuclear is, however, the most effective and environmentally friendly (uranium is a naturally occurring element and can be recycled and reused to reduce waste). One metric tonne of uranium (nuclear fuel) produces 44 million kilowatts of electricity. It takes 20,000 metric tonnes of Coal and 8.5 Million cubic meters of gas to create the same amount of electricity.
I like this conversation. We are bouncing off arguments without getting too emotional and retarded about it... Believe me, I've been in many conversations that drifted into that direction!
Speaks for PG's players...
Anyway, I looked into nuclear recycling. Currently, the US does not recycle its nuclear fuel. Europe, Russia and Japan are doing so.
I am aware that nuclear reactors appear to run clean, but I know of enough sites in Germany where nuclear waste from reactors are dumped deep in the earth with some of them barrels leaking (reported in German press a few years ago). In my own experience, I remember being in Kindergarten in Munich, Germany and we were not allowed to play outside for a while. My parents later explained to me that because of the radioactive fallout that came from Chernobyl, I was not allowed to go out.
Now you may say: "But that was some dodgy eastern block country and technology is much safer and better nowadays!" - I partly agree! But Japan is not a dodgy country and leaders in high-tech, safety and sticklers for almost anything! And still, it happened. Sometimes it is not in our control.
Nuclear reactors don't have to be built next to a city. You can build it in Death Valley, but you'll feel the fallout nonetheless. Even if the chance for a nuclear meltdown is 0.001%, there is Murphy's Law... That is not putting into account natural causes, crime, terrorism, blatant retardedness, etc.
These areas are contaminated for many decades. If that would happen in central Germany, it would be a massive disaster. Not only environmentally but also economically and social.
I've been to Fukushima this year by the way. I didn't go into the danger zone though!
https://www.technologyreview.com/s/5368 ... ecialists/ (Article about chances of nuclear meltdown till 2050)
http://www.economist.com/blogs/democrac ... ear_energy (Nuclear article about casualties)
I'm very mixed in my view of nuclear tech producing energy. I think there are lots of potentials but also drawbacks. Like with all forms of energy production. Coal, Oil and Gas are finite. Not to mention it took billions of lifeforms to make over millions of years and we burn it like there is no tomorrow!