America's $35BN New Nuclear Power Plant

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MegaBuilds

MegaBuilds

Күн бұрын

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@MegaBuildsYT
@MegaBuildsYT 4 ай бұрын
Do you think we need more nuclear power plants? ☢️ Which topics should we cover next? 🤔👇
@JamesTyrrellOnline
@JamesTyrrellOnline 4 ай бұрын
safest form of power in existence, just had very bad press from particular groups. You seem to have lifted all your information on Nuclear accidents from those sources unfortunately. Can't believe you don't mention France, which has more nuclear plants than most countries and the lowest Carbon Capita and has had no major incidents, ever.
@bobsimmons1470
@bobsimmons1470 4 ай бұрын
​@@JamesTyrrellOnline So if it's info contrary to your echo chamber it's all some vast conspiracy
@billynomates920
@billynomates920 4 ай бұрын
yes. dunno.
@WonderZwane
@WonderZwane 4 ай бұрын
Yes, the world does.
@n7y8c7
@n7y8c7 4 ай бұрын
The T is silent: Plant "Vogel." This area is very familiar with nuclear energy. It's near the Savannah River Site which produced tritium for nuclear warheads. It's now focused on environmental clean up.
@maxvanorden2850
@maxvanorden2850 4 ай бұрын
So basically what your are saying is that nuke power plant accidents are extremely rare, not particularly deadly, storage of nuclear waste takes up very little space, and massive power generation can also take up little space and runs 24 - 7 and is thus more efficient and economical than "renwables." OH and almost forgot equally or more green than renwables. Did I get that right?
@pindapoy1596
@pindapoy1596 3 ай бұрын
@maxvanorden2850 Are those serious questions or are you trying to be funny about the subject? --- nuke power plant accidents are extremely rare: Yes --- not particularly deadly: It depends; some can be contained in the control room of the plant and some can be terrible. France, Switzerland, Germany, Sweden, Spain, the UK, etc, never had any serious accident with fatalities. --- storage of nuclear waste takes up very little space: No, but space is not the problem. The possibility of radioactive leaks is the important issue. --- massive power generation can also take up little space: Not much more space than a thermal power plant but definitely MUCH LESS than a wind farm. And a hydro plant, if you consider the surface of the dam and spillways takes quite some space also. --- runs 24 - 7: Nothing new, a hydro plant or a thermal power plant can run 24/7. I am not sure that solar runs at night. Don't you think so, at least in our galaxy? --- is thus more efficient and economical than "renewables." Yes and no, thermal power plants have (by thermodynamic principles) a limit to their efficiency and that includes nuclear. But solar panels and wind turbines cannot be compared to other plants because they do not work 24/7 and the comparison over a year for example would put the renewables very low compared with all the other power generating plants --- more green than renewables. Yes and no. That is tricky because when you dismantle a wind turbine (at the end of its useful life) you are left with a concrete foundation forever because it is so massive that even dynamite controlled explosions will not get rid of it while solar need of rare earth and other metals causes huge pollution problems (much more than making steel and cement). --- Did I get that right? NO and it was not even humorous or intelligent.
@Birdofgreen
@Birdofgreen 3 ай бұрын
There have been 0 nuclear power related deaths in the US as well. Fukushima had 1. Chernobyl, the worst disaster in history, had about 50. Thats it.
@pindapoy1596
@pindapoy1596 3 ай бұрын
@@Birdofgreen Of course. Train derailments or busses going downslope can have worse consequences. Mr @maxvanorden2850 wrote a collection of hypothetical disasters that have been answered a long time ago but people like to keep harping on the same subject on and on.
@xlZENlx
@xlZENlx 3 ай бұрын
Correct but the big oil lobbyists are vehemently against them. I wonder why…
@evanpnz
@evanpnz 3 ай бұрын
@@Birdofgreen No. Most of the deaths at Chernobyl were not related to the accident which only killed the operator. Everything else was government stupidity. As usual.
@StereoSpace
@StereoSpace 4 ай бұрын
In terms of deaths per kilowatt-hour, nuclear power is the safest power source.
@crhu319
@crhu319 3 ай бұрын
That's not a valid statistic. With the money wasted , tens of thousands of lives could have been saved.
@Chris-pl1wk
@Chris-pl1wk 3 ай бұрын
@@crhu319What?
@beringstraitrailway
@beringstraitrailway 3 ай бұрын
​@@crhu319 If we built 12 new nuclear power plants every year then the cost would fall by 95%
@evanpnz
@evanpnz 3 ай бұрын
By so far that you cannot even measure it! But it has been hog-tied in the US by the decision to put the anti-nuclear activists in charge of regulating the industry, which triples the cost.
@wayneheigl5549
@wayneheigl5549 3 ай бұрын
good you live next to a nuke . go to japan and ask them how they like it.
@oldguy4057
@oldguy4057 4 ай бұрын
A significant omission from your video is the French success with nuclear.
@loganmcewen7423
@loganmcewen7423 3 ай бұрын
Canada is mostly powered by nuclear power as well. It’s all about how the plant is operated.
@tariq_sharif
@tariq_sharif 3 ай бұрын
And the four APR1400 units now supplying 50% of UAE's electricity
@insanereindeer4081
@insanereindeer4081 3 ай бұрын
Besides a fuck up in TMI, the US has been fine as well which even this was fairly minor. Chernobyl is due to the USSR. Fukushima is nature and nobody would have guess the generator backup wasn't high enough to not eventually get washed away. Good luck taking down one of these AP-1000s. Nuclear power is great and we should not be getting rid of it.
@pbkid01
@pbkid01 3 ай бұрын
And the fact that since France has gone mostly nuclear its carbon footprint has dropped by 60%
@grantsmith3514
@grantsmith3514 3 ай бұрын
You mean standardize plans etc for lowest cost? That's why it works there.
@steveschlachter7682
@steveschlachter7682 4 ай бұрын
We've had nuclear air craft carriers and submarines for decades.
@CAHOBBES
@CAHOBBES 4 ай бұрын
Without ever any problems.
@bigtime4794
@bigtime4794 4 ай бұрын
Imagine when they get destroyed in battle!
@Mr_Bones.
@Mr_Bones. 4 ай бұрын
“Imagine”?… okay
@amarissimus29
@amarissimus29 4 ай бұрын
@@bigtime4794 I'd imagine It'll be exactly like every other incident. The world imagines apocalyptic radiation killing them from afar, while in reality one fish gets prostate cancer and is eaten by a crab. Or maybe you'd like to imagine a nuclear explosion, in which case you'd better be prepared to wait a while. Protons might start to decay first.
@bigtime4794
@bigtime4794 4 ай бұрын
@@amarissimus29 stop wasting your time
@loungingabout9134
@loungingabout9134 4 ай бұрын
I am pro Nuclear for power generation!
@eggos5074
@eggos5074 3 ай бұрын
I am pro nuclear but until we get a standardized design that we can replicate and field the technicians to run all those plants its fantasy. Era of high tech is to expensive. Low tech and low cost of electricity are more determining for successful development.
@TheAnnoyingBoss
@TheAnnoyingBoss 3 ай бұрын
I support strategic diversification so we arent soley dependant on any one source this our resource strain is limited. If nuke plants were as common as gas stations there would be way more meltdowns we live in a world where people worship islam or are confused on what restroom to use so there isnt exactly that many nuclear experts the literal nuclear waste manager biden put in was gender confused and was also insane in other aspects as well like he was stealing luggage from airports. Thats who is managing it now man itll only be worse it wont be well organized or well run it will be badly organized badly run when you have more plants the lercent of ones badly ran is higher tha. If you have less with more people paying attention to each. It has venefitd when its strategic and well taken care of but we also have issues of resources if we only have juclear the first thing that will happen is a fuel shortage and we will be sitting in the dark paying for nuke plants with no fuel they will build it and no fuel to put in in 25 years theyll say fuel gone because theres too many countries relying on 1 form. Its complex an island doesnt gave room for expansive solar panels they might not prodice any power at all without having to import a fuel to a plant they dont want nukes because storms islands its a bad mix they will do natural gas and stuff. Usa is big and we have room to not have too many reactors but have some really good ones so we dont get fukoshima but we also have areas that have lots of natural gas oil coal and they also have empty high sun areas with high wind in periods. We cant rely on only nuclear when we have few but key places where hydroelectric also works if we dont rely on only 1 we can limit the impact of each. You see when they put a giant feild of wind turbines up something goes wrong its its big wasted project or they put solar panels on the roof of their house and it hails and no one thought about that so they bust tbe panels and now you have to pay to replace panels high up on the roof. All these things are problematic and if we expand to a ton of nuclear reactors by morons who barely understand theyre really ignoring the major problems like the unlimted lifespan of the extremely toxic waste that is harder to deal with and costs more than things like coal. Coal has black lung nuclear has uranium lung much worse they dont want to talk about the dust problem in that industry a tornado a hurricane a tsunami. The meltdown in new york they want to downplay how that wasnt that bad as if the whole thing wasnt leaking radiation and nearly turned us into chernobyl in nyc because they tried to build a reactor on an island in the middle of nyc. Which seems like an okay space if you think about it but nyc is a bad place to gave any nuclear incident
@AKX-DTGRSMP
@AKX-DTGRSMP 2 ай бұрын
​@@eggos5074how much does a phone cost?
@joeschoenborn
@joeschoenborn 4 ай бұрын
First, it's pronounced Vogle. The "t"is silent. I was part of construction there and still live less than 20 miles from the site. I've also worked at several other nuclear plants as well as other power plants. Nuclear is the cleanest and safest form of power production. I would much rather live near a nuclear plant than any other type.
@snikies22
@snikies22 4 ай бұрын
Every time he utters the word "Vogtle" it makes me cringe
@mauij777
@mauij777 4 ай бұрын
This was hard to listen to
@johntrauger
@johntrauger 4 ай бұрын
I was there with Georgia Power Company doing the start up testing and maintenance on units 1 & 2. Hard to believe it was 40 years ago.
@kevinmccune9324
@kevinmccune9324 4 ай бұрын
thank you.
@kmichaelp4508
@kmichaelp4508 3 ай бұрын
Been there. Done that. People need to do their homework before doing these videos. I worked on it too. What a cluster…. But, build more.
@TheRocco96
@TheRocco96 4 ай бұрын
7 minutes of anti nuclear power propaganda before the video starts talking about the new plant.
@jimmurphy6095
@jimmurphy6095 4 ай бұрын
I agree. Showing rusted drums in place of the super secure, bulletproof canisters actually used, showed me all I needed to know about the author's bias. Storing canisters on the site of generation, like has been done quite safely for the past 40-50 years, and not "burying them in a hole." seems to be pragmatic and for the time being, an acceptable short term storage method.
@TheBEARofHIGHWAY1
@TheBEARofHIGHWAY1 4 ай бұрын
@@jimmurphy6095 nuclear waste is also pellets that look like Coin Batteries. Not Simpson green goo.
@davidkalisch7168
@davidkalisch7168 4 ай бұрын
Modern plants re-enrichment happens in the facility so zero hazardous waste ever leaves.
@GilmerJohn
@GilmerJohn 4 ай бұрын
Yep. This guy is somewhat of a jerk.
@AL-lh2ht
@AL-lh2ht 4 ай бұрын
This guy didn’t even read the wiki page. No scientists agree with his statements.
@skinnyvp4377
@skinnyvp4377 4 ай бұрын
Spent fuel is stored in casks not barrels
@PUNISHERMARKO
@PUNISHERMARKO 4 ай бұрын
nuclear energy is cleanest and safest energy
@MissilemanIII
@MissilemanIII 4 ай бұрын
No it's not. Let's talk about waste.
@ericchapman5975
@ericchapman5975 4 ай бұрын
Safest ? Worst case scenario and the Planet becomes Mars. What other energy source as the ability?
@beyondfossil
@beyondfossil 4 ай бұрын
No. But its the most expensive for sure!
@canadian97
@canadian97 4 ай бұрын
The amount of money and time spent building new nuclear power plants is unreasonable. There are better and faster alternatives, such as solar and wind energy with batteries, compared to nuclear power.
@kevinmccune9324
@kevinmccune9324 4 ай бұрын
@@ericchapman5975 fossil fuels?
@GilmerJohn
@GilmerJohn 4 ай бұрын
This is coming across as so much silly nonsense. Showing the cooling towers with radioactive symbols is just nuts. They are the least radioactive part of the plant.
@willythemailboy2
@willythemailboy2 4 ай бұрын
Not to mention the coal power plant shown has identical cooling towers.
@GilmerJohn
@GilmerJohn 4 ай бұрын
@@willythemailboy2 -- The only "validity" of the towers is that nuke plants aren't as thermodynamic efficient as coal fired plants. This translates into needing more cooling per kWh produced.
@richardbartley5906
@richardbartley5906 3 ай бұрын
@@GilmerJohnIs low thermal to electrical efficiency because of safety concerns being incorporated into the design?
@GilmerJohn
@GilmerJohn 3 ай бұрын
@@richardbartley5906 -- Indirectly. The max thermal efficiency is determined by the maximum temperature of the "working fluid" (steam/water) and the minimum temperature. In a nuke plant the steam that passes through the turbines isn't heated by the nuke reaction directly but indirectly through a heat transfer loop. That loop is routinely high pressure water but it could be hot gas or even a liquid metal or salt. Every so many years a "new design" is claimed but I don't follow these. But the lower efficiency practically translates into more cooling water needed for a giving amount of power. With nukes, the efficiency of the nuke heat source is a minor cost compared to the cost of the plant.
@richardbartley5906
@richardbartley5906 3 ай бұрын
@@GilmerJohn Does this apply to boiling water reactors too?
@MadgeEnthat
@MadgeEnthat 4 ай бұрын
Spent nuclear fuel (“waste”) is stored securely in extremely durable, shielded and sealed containers, not the oil drums shown in this video.
@youdontneedtoknow1154
@youdontneedtoknow1154 4 ай бұрын
Exactly! I wrote a comment about this. They should be ashamed of themselves for creating disinformation like that.
@brenthegarty3922
@brenthegarty3922 4 ай бұрын
And "waste" from existing light water reactors can be used in breeder or burner reactors and actually used up, leaving just a tiny amount of unusable waste that only needs to be stored for like 100-200 years...which is very easily doable.
@rayisland23
@rayisland23 4 ай бұрын
I just retired from a company that repaired bearings from hydroelectric and coal burning power plants. The repair was on bearings that were 60, 70 or 80 years old. New and more efficient power plants are a must .
@johnbeck8812
@johnbeck8812 4 ай бұрын
We always had a life time for nuclear power plants it was sixty year life based on all workers at the plant would be retired by then when the life span could easily be 120 years and we need to build hundreds more of them my son and I had a discussion on need when he was eight he’s now 30 years old and a nuclear engineer
@pindapoy1596
@pindapoy1596 3 ай бұрын
@rayisland23 Repairing bearings is just a small part of the biggest problem we are facing in this country We do not have anymore the industrial capability to produce the major components of power plants be it nuclear thermal or hydro. We have also lost our engineering abilities and our craftsmanship. Revival of nuclear plants is a very good plan but reviving manufacturing, engineering and construction will take a huge amount of time and preparation in addition to a market that needs to support all the new projects. And by the way, do you know of any US company that is today able to build some large hydro turbines or large electrical generators or high voltage substation equipment?
@csf1757
@csf1757 3 ай бұрын
@@pindapoy1596 GE continues to be a world leader in turbines. Not 'the' but a
@pindapoy1596
@pindapoy1596 3 ай бұрын
@@csf1757 Not excatly. GE is among the top of jet engines manufacturers. The GE most successful turbines are gas turbines based on the jet engine engineering and they are actually called "aero derivatives" . I am not sure that GE still makes steam turbines that are completely different. Nuclear power plants use, of course, steam turbines and because the GE boiling water reactor produces radioactive steam, the turbines in a GE nuclear power plant have to be of a very special design.. GE has never made hydro turbines but are now making wind turbines.
@bobdexter1029
@bobdexter1029 4 ай бұрын
Plants are different nowadays. 3 mile was caused by a valve that was stuck Open and they had no feedback showing it was open. It’s different now, everything has feedback, that’s why we never hear about any issues, because there hasn’t been any. We need more nuclear.
@elchibro93
@elchibro93 4 ай бұрын
13 years ago and you start with Fukushima... you are here to educate people and you just use fear for clickbait. I liked your content but please avoid propaganda for any further content. Do better than that man
@rcpmac
@rcpmac 3 ай бұрын
Your right, Fukushima was deep state fake news /s
@benr7294
@benr7294 4 ай бұрын
They started a nuclear factory in Finland this last year and I dropped wholesale electricity rates by 75%. Kind of weird that they can do nuclear in Europe no problem but here it's an issue.
@persnikitty3570
@persnikitty3570 4 ай бұрын
3:07 Why the nuke symbol on the cooling towers and not on the actual reactors? I get that it's a money-shot based on 3 Mile Island, but at least have some honesty and integrity here. All that those towers produce is steam. It's the smaller constructs between the cooling towers which have the most harm potential.
@jove1155
@jove1155 4 ай бұрын
Because he doesn't know any better. Just because someone makes YT videos doesn't mean they're experts on anything... or actually know anything.
@kmichaelp4508
@kmichaelp4508 3 ай бұрын
@@jove1155,and he doesn’t.
@ibbylancaster8981
@ibbylancaster8981 4 ай бұрын
Having lived close to Shearon Harris nuke plant in NC, all of its life, we’ve had no problems ( that any of us are aware of). As a pipe welder, I know a lot of guys that built it, and a good many that do work in there. I don’t really worry too much about it. There’s no greenhouse emissions and if they can figure out how to store the waste, it’s still way cleaner. We need to build more. Harris plant was supposed to be a 3 unit setup, but only one was built, basically due to the 3MI accident.
@kmichaelp4508
@kmichaelp4508 3 ай бұрын
Pipefitter here. Worked on many.
@Freesavh1776
@Freesavh1776 4 ай бұрын
IDC what people say. Nuclear power is the absolute best opinion for energy generation. Yes it can be dangerous. The 2 disasters mentioned are the exception. 1 being a natural disaster, & 1 being... Well, communism. 😂 I live here in Savannah & Vogtle is never a thought on majority of people's minds.
@delancre5858
@delancre5858 4 ай бұрын
Sorry for being that guy, but Ackchyually, both incidents are human made. Fukushima was not maintained good enough, there was couple violation of safety regulations, like not working water pump in the basement where backup power generation was located. So yea, it just dumb design + human ignorance.
@persnikitty3570
@persnikitty3570 4 ай бұрын
@@delancre5858 Main culprit was found to be a diesel generator to power that water pump, but was left outside and unprotected when the tsunami hit. Once identified, several men chose suicide.
@AL-lh2ht
@AL-lh2ht 4 ай бұрын
And then you remember how many people die each year due to oil and coal and the their long term health effects. Yea, it’s like saying surgeries should be banned because sometimes they die while in operation.
@user-pi6cs3ue4s
@user-pi6cs3ue4s 4 ай бұрын
@@delancre5858 I think ultimately It was cost cutting at the design phases and corruption with operation in both cases.
@TheFakeGooberGoblin
@TheFakeGooberGoblin 4 ай бұрын
Coal emissions kill more people per year than every nuclear energy related death in history including both atomic bombs COMBINED.
@ivanmadaris3671
@ivanmadaris3671 4 ай бұрын
Spending money to build the most reliable and cleanest form of energy supply, expensive. Sending billions around the world to other countries. Good investment. Can't make this stuff up.
@GarySmith-up1un
@GarySmith-up1un 4 ай бұрын
😂😂
@AL-lh2ht
@AL-lh2ht 4 ай бұрын
Nuclear is the most expensive form of energy production. That is the reason. Also nuclear also requires buying from other nations. Most of which hate the US.
@garebaregoof4226
@garebaregoof4226 4 ай бұрын
⁠@@AL-lh2htyou missed the point of the original comment. The point was we don’t have money to invest in building a robust nuclear energy infrastructure, but we do have hundreds of billions to send to other countries for war. Interesting. Also, the idea that we would rely on other countries to supply us with equipment to build these nuclear plants is laughable. If that is not what you mean by buying from other countries, I’m not sure what you’re trying to say. Nuclear is by far the most efficient and cleanest way to produce energy for humanity.
@tommurphy7611
@tommurphy7611 4 ай бұрын
Does it run on fentanyl?
@frankmaxwell2052
@frankmaxwell2052 4 ай бұрын
@@garebaregoof4226we’d have money for both if we weren’t so wasteful with these overblown budgets. We honestly don’t need to have a military budget that big.
@MCOult
@MCOult 4 ай бұрын
We need at least two dozen additional such plants in the USA.
@frankfahrenheit9537
@frankfahrenheit9537 3 ай бұрын
You get 10 of these plants by redirecting 50% of the military budget into the construction.
@kmichaelp4508
@kmichaelp4508 3 ай бұрын
@@frankfahrenheit9537, that is utterly stupid.
@frankfahrenheit9537
@frankfahrenheit9537 3 ай бұрын
@@kmichaelp4508 This is maths. You're good at it? Maybe not.
@kmichaelp4508
@kmichaelp4508 3 ай бұрын
@@frankfahrenheit9537 , 🤣🤣🤣🤣 and still you can’t understand what an utterly stupid statement that was.
@frankfahrenheit9537
@frankfahrenheit9537 3 ай бұрын
@@kmichaelp4508 Typical MAGA, 100% opinion, bad maths, zero reasoning. Tell me why its stupid, if you can. Can you?
@marciahenderson4396
@marciahenderson4396 4 ай бұрын
I live in Georgia, and would just like to advise you that the “t” is silent. So, it is pronounced vow-gull. You should also mention that it did have a lot of cost overruns. I should mention that as a Georgia Power customer, I do not regret it;s construction, even with the rate increases
@nicoresnik2943
@nicoresnik2943 4 ай бұрын
Build baby build
@MacDiggity
@MacDiggity 4 ай бұрын
Bruce Power in Ontario is the largest nuclear power station on Earth.
@stevealexander7772
@stevealexander7772 4 ай бұрын
Collectively, with 8 units. But these are all very small units putting out less than 900 MWe each. The entire site puts out 6,550 MWe. By comparison, Palo Verde produces 4,000 MWe with just 3 units.
@michaeljakus8373
@michaeljakus8373 4 ай бұрын
@@stevealexander7772 I work at Palo Verde and there is talk about adding another reactor in the near future.
@kennethkaminski3438
@kennethkaminski3438 4 ай бұрын
First off the t is silent, it’s pronounced “Vogel” Nuclear power is Clean safe, reliable and efficient. It’s the best source of energy for any country. It’s always on,not whether dependent, no greenhouse gases. We need 100 more Westinghouse a P 1000 nuclear plants built ASAP.
@campagnian
@campagnian 4 ай бұрын
Regis: In ideal world, they (countries) turn to a renewable sources (of energy) Germany: Hold my cheap coal that we mine by destroying large part of our beautiful landscape
@DrownedInExile
@DrownedInExile Ай бұрын
I'm all for renewable power. But it was an incredibly stupid short-sighted decision by Germany to throw away their nuclear industry.
@joey8567
@joey8567 4 ай бұрын
We have 2 in Texas. They're clean but folks talk ignorant about them. In Germany when "America" blew up the pipelines to Germany through Ukraine, we tossed up 3 with quickness. No problems here nor other countries giving up frozen money as oil is currency. Y'all are wrong about Germany. The 2 in Texas, one by gulf and 1 by Dallas. Inexpensive and still working.
@seanoleary4674
@seanoleary4674 4 ай бұрын
We CAN do nuclear safely. AND we can do solar. Together , we’d be more than energy independent. And THAT is a powerful thing to have to be successful as a country
@AL-lh2ht
@AL-lh2ht 4 ай бұрын
Nuclear elements usually come from other nations.
@user-pi6cs3ue4s
@user-pi6cs3ue4s 4 ай бұрын
@@AL-lh2ht Yeah, like Australia and France. The mortal enemies of the US. The enrichment in Russia also still made sense before the Biden administration.
@ianloy1854
@ianloy1854 4 ай бұрын
YES - it doesn't have to be one OR the other it can be BOTH - why different in America? Well there are reasons Solar safely - yes, and if used across the country can provide power at the right time for many areas - evening for east cost morning for west, but not so good the other way. Uses a lot of land - but can coexist with many farming types these days (vertical panels). Costs are low - and while they are made in China there is no ongoing risk. Greenhouse payback less than 1 year The USA could make them but it will only be to address importation - not cost. Unless a new style of panel is developed with better characteristics and put into production earlier than what China does. Nuclear safely? The operating plants are WAY safer than coal powered - particularly for the surrounding communities. The issue still is the waste, there still isn't a reliable way of ensuring the waste can be kept safe (out of the environment) for the time needed. Also the cost of this is NOT priced into the current use - rather it is a cost pushed down the road to consumers that don't get the electricity. I presume nuclear are more able to cope with variable loads than coal - if so they are better at load matching with solar for time of day variation. The cost is eyewatering (so would solar at that scale of power delivery, it would be interesting to see real comparison including ability to supply across 24hrs for solar (storage of some type) The impact of the amount of concrete and steel used in greenhouse emissions would be HUGE but at least is basically a one off emission Nuclear Fuel may well come from other countries - like Australia. But that isn't a real risk, unless USA wants to make it so, so its up the the USA really. USA is already energy independent for oil and awash with natural gas Wind doesn't make a lot of sense for USA - unlike many countries. I think the same applies to tidal and wave. So until something else shows up as being scalable in the USA context Solar and Nuclear are the biggest plays in town.
@augustopinochet42069
@augustopinochet42069 4 ай бұрын
Solar is a complete waste of time. Wind on the other hand.
@evanpnz
@evanpnz 3 ай бұрын
We can do solar, but why? It's short lived, intermittent, expensive and environmentally dirty. Oh, I forgot the Uyghurs work for nothing - that's a plus!
@Agislife1960
@Agislife1960 4 ай бұрын
France has showed the world how practical Nuclear power is.
@Birdofgreen
@Birdofgreen 3 ай бұрын
so much wrong in the first few minutes. lets see here... 1) In nuclear reactors you do NOT fire particle beams at unstable material to create the reaction, you reflect the emmissions from the material back onto itself. You use the energy it emmits to increase its own energy output, no intervention required. 2) When the atoms split they do not "leave behind" radioactive waste. They are already radioactive and what they split into is also radioactive. We can use that byproduct for even more energy generation, it just isn't as efficient. The waste part is from radioactive contamination. While running, the reaction spits out neutrons which can sometimes stick to non-radioactive elements causing them to become radioactive as well. While not ideal the type of radiation is typically not something worth worrying about. You get higher doses from an hour flight than you would sitting on a bench made from these materials for a year. 3) Sort of answered in 2, but the waste is not really that dangerous. In massive quantities it can be or if you eat it but really it is mostly low level. We are just REALLY good at detecting it. 4) "In the last few decades there have been a number of high profile accidents." 3, there have been 3 in the last 60 years. 5) Japan was hit by a magnitude 9+ earthquake. The nuclear plant survived this but the cooling pumps got flooded by the tsunami and failed. Importantly, this was a KNOWN issue that the plant operators were supposed to fix but did not. It should have survived a tsunami and a magnitude 9 earthquake, that is how safe nuclear plants are. 6) The last of the towns that were evacuated, Futaba, was opened again in 2022. There are no longer any areas outside the reactor itself that is closed to the public. So yeah, not another 40 years, people are living there NOW. 7) Nuclear waste is not packaged in barrels and put underground. The worst of it is encased in concrete then stored on site. They WANT to put it underground but that has not been happening for the most part. 8) "This waste will be releasing dangerous radiation for well over 1,000 years." No, it won't. It will be radioactive for that long but that is how radiation works. As an example, your bones will be releasing radiation for millions of years. Also, dangerous is a stretch as the dangerous radiation is the stuff that burns out in years not centuries. 9) A note on danger. Think of radiation as a bucket of sand. The half life is how long it takes to throw half that bucked of sand, one grain at a time, at you. You are only going to get dirty (effected by the radiation) if the bucket is particularly massive or if the half life is very short. If it is fairly small or has an massive half life, you are probably fine. So, any time you hear "it will be around for thousands/millions of years" know that it is probably safer than your average sunbathing session.
@amdenis
@amdenis 4 ай бұрын
Good video, but your assertion that the 1,000 sq kilometers is almost 20% the area of Georgia is very far off. Georgia is roughly 150,000 sq kilometers, so 1,000 sq km is less than 1% of Georgia’s area (actually about 1/2 of 1%).
@MrSummerbreeze01
@MrSummerbreeze01 4 ай бұрын
Wind power is pure ignorance: anti enviroment, extremely expensive, an eyesore, kills birds, makes noise, is ugly, non recyclable blades, expensive to maintain, and the kicker, the wind does not blow 24/7 so all other sources of power have to be 'hot', ready to assume the load.
@johnbeck8812
@johnbeck8812 4 ай бұрын
Now days we can build nuscale power plants developed in Oregon USA and use very little space and are stackable at affordable prices
@OfficerMcNastty
@OfficerMcNastty 4 ай бұрын
We have an abandoned power plant in Washington state near Elma. I don’t believe they ever used it but it still stands today
@deltavirusx4336
@deltavirusx4336 4 ай бұрын
Satsop! I visited there when I traveled through Washington and Oregon in 2020, I wish that plant and the others in Washington would’ve been completed instead of abandoned 😢
@daniellarson3068
@daniellarson3068 4 ай бұрын
Financing killed them. Interest rates went high quickly. WPPS 2 was finished and has produced a great deal of power over the years. (Columbia Station.)
@OndreaS123
@OndreaS123 3 ай бұрын
WPPS- say it "whoops!" decided to build five power plants. all with different designs. three north of Richland, WA one by Elma, WA & one more I don;t recall where... they got one finished then went bankrupt. instead of going with one design, getting one running and then doing a "copy/paste" four more times they decided to go bankrupt trying to go different directions. it was idiotic. The one in Richland is now owned by Energy Northwest and is doing great. the others are empty hulks slowly being torn down after having never operated. lesson: when building multiple of something like this, hit "copy/paste" and don't go bankrupt.
@jacobshahan6912
@jacobshahan6912 3 ай бұрын
Thank you for properly covering Three Mile Island, so many people make it into this horrible accident when in reality it was poor handling of information and bad communication between department's and the press. The safety measures put in place worked properly by venting high pressure gas to prevent any explosion/meltdown and the reactor shut down. What gas was vented quickly dispersed into the sky leaving nearly a blip on the background radiation readings nearby and no measurable upticks in local health complications.
@CalicoWoodworking
@CalicoWoodworking 4 ай бұрын
Over the life of a reactor nuclear power is the cleanest and cheapest out there. France is also putting a lot a of money in re building their nuclear reactors and plan upgrades. While Germany closed closed all of there plants and are now building Bio Fuel (wood) fired power plants.
@AL-lh2ht
@AL-lh2ht 4 ай бұрын
Well you see France gets nuclear materials almost for free because of neocolonialism (yea France never really stopped doing colonialism, seriously look it up, it’s messed up)
@jonathantan2469
@jonathantan2469 4 ай бұрын
Just read that they plan to build 10GW of natural gas power plants to provide backup when wind & solar cannot produce. And maybe more...
@johnhoffman8203
@johnhoffman8203 4 ай бұрын
Our submarine and aircraft carrier fleet are nuclear powered and are exposed to far more threatening criteria than a land based plant, and yet we build more of them. Nuc power satisfies all the snow flakes criteria for a clean environment (its not really their goal anyway) that is clean and efficient, not to mention the fact we need anti tank rounds also. I'm all for it in your back yard. .-)
@JohnHansknecht
@JohnHansknecht 4 ай бұрын
We have the technology to build self-regulating small scale nuclear reactors that would require no operators at all and would be fail-safe. Natural circulation, so no coolant pumps to fail, no valves to close. Decay heat after a scram easily contained within the pool.
@ThePeadar2211
@ThePeadar2211 4 ай бұрын
Good video. I particularly liked the bit around the 7 minute mark.
@AL-lh2ht
@AL-lh2ht 4 ай бұрын
Dude made a video that was full of lies that no scientific agrees with. Like, this is not even reading the wiki level of bad info.
@randywl8925
@randywl8925 4 ай бұрын
​@@AL-lh2htwhat video are you talking about about?
@sb86116
@sb86116 2 ай бұрын
How is this remotely controversial? Nuclear Power is by far our best "green" option
@markwilson3723
@markwilson3723 4 ай бұрын
Noticed natural gas was excluded from the list of "sources" of energy at the very start of your video....odd that the most prominent source was not mentioned.
@sydneysimpson3814
@sydneysimpson3814 4 ай бұрын
Thorium reactors and what the Chinese have done with graphite is a massive game changer. Chain reactions are neutralized that's the game changer and reactive fuel that doesn't degrade as much or become radioactive with graphite .
@persnikitty3570
@persnikitty3570 4 ай бұрын
I believe the Gen 5 reactors can recycle spent rods to boil water for the turbines. We have a LOT of nuclear waste which could generate heat sufficient for power generation.
@user-pi6cs3ue4s
@user-pi6cs3ue4s 4 ай бұрын
The problem with the Chinese reactors was cost cutting during the builds then kicking out the foreign operators. The original designs were pretty great though.
@OndreaS123
@OndreaS123 3 ай бұрын
several Chinese plants on the South China Sea put as much contamination ever year as Fukushima asked politely to let go in the Pacific over ten years. they are not an example to look to on the world stage when it comes to nuclear. they just cover it up to save face & point fingers....
@ThompsonAtomicRanch
@ThompsonAtomicRanch 4 ай бұрын
Nuclear all day!!! I think it’s insane that nuclear advances have almost come to a halt, when back in the 60s, it was the new hope for the future. Hopefully it makes a permanent come back :)
@delancre5858
@delancre5858 4 ай бұрын
@MegaBuildsYT Sorry mate, I think you cute some significant part from your video: First of all, why you didn't said that waste can be utilized and burnt in "slow reactors", while you was explaining waste part? It's very important, cause not a lot of people knows that for some reason and "eco activists" usually brought that as an example of waste and pollution. Also, worth mention, that there already a better solution of storing waste, then just "burrow it deep inside in some third world country", not everyone willing to use it tho. Second one - you didn't mentioned in "disasters" part, that both Fukushima and Chernobyl, was purely caused by violation in safety regulations and flaws in design. Even if we don't gonna speak about USSR disaster, cause it pretty much well known one by now, Fukushima one was similarly "man made" what don't mentioned at least once, flood and other stuff won't do anything if pumps and other stuff was working as intended. Third one - I don't think you mentioned "carbon free" part well enough. Not only other "green" solutions also requires to be build, maintained and becomes waste after short life cycle (The typical life span of a wind turbine is 20 years, with routine maintenance required every six months. The industry standard for most solar panels' lifespans is 25 to 30 years, but worth mention, that power output will decrease significant after time). While nuclear power plant can be operational from 20 to 40 years, and even after it pasts expiration date, it can be used at lower capacity to burn the rest of the fuel, like currently Chernobyl power plants operates. I'm not a nuclear physicist of some sort, (I'm actually pretty dumb and only finished college in russia, lol), but I heavily insist, that everything above is basic information (cause if even I know that, it sure is basic), that I didn't noticed in your video.
@youdontneedtoknow1154
@youdontneedtoknow1154 4 ай бұрын
It feels like they have a bias against nuclear power. Based on the bad info and downright disinformation, they are against nuclear power.
@stevenunua2118
@stevenunua2118 3 ай бұрын
MSR and thorium plants should be next for you to cover. The amazing thing is they can burn as fuel the waste from the old nuke plants.
@oldguy1528
@oldguy1528 4 ай бұрын
No mention of "clean burning" natural gas plants ???
@davidvelen9835
@davidvelen9835 4 ай бұрын
Exactly I was thinking same thing.
@aussiepete1
@aussiepete1 4 ай бұрын
X-Energy is developing a new U235 fuel (Tri-so). U235 is sealed in tennis ball-sized Silicon Carbide for use in upcoming small nuclear reactors. This would be an excellent topic for your series.
@thisismissem
@thisismissem 4 ай бұрын
Vogtle isn't entirely carbon free.. remember all that concrete and steel? That produced a heck of a lot of carbon. It *is* carbon free if you just look at the fuel & it's by products, but if you look at the entire lifecycle of the plant, it does have *some* carbon costs.
@TrendyStone
@TrendyStone 4 ай бұрын
Having humans and animals on the planet has some carbon cost. Good grief. The earth isn't dying.
@thisismissem
@thisismissem 4 ай бұрын
@@TrendyStone no, but for big infrastructure projects, especially in energy production, you need to look at the total carbon footprint, not just the footprint at a specific point in the project's life. So initially, the carbon footprint would increase during construction, then it'd stay constant during operations (or increase slightly), then potentially increase again at demolition & decommissioning. E.g., wind is fantastic, but has an ecological cost at the end of the life of the turbine because the blades are hard to recycle. The main point is that nothing is truly zero carbon, some things just produce a lot more carbon than others. (e.g., the carbon footprint of coal is massive, especially if you factor in the mining operations)
@Rockmaster867
@Rockmaster867 4 ай бұрын
@@thisismissem building a coal plant use a lot concrete too. You have to look at the complete live cycle to compare them
@garebaregoof4226
@garebaregoof4226 4 ай бұрын
@@thisismissemthe concept is simple. High cost in the beginning to have a very efficient and clean system in the long run. While you may produce lots of carbon in the beginning, you’ll pay that back over time with the difference between the energy produced and the total carbon emissions. For example, it’s like solar, where you pay a lot more to install this new source of power than you would if you kept paying the electric company. However, over time, your savings from the solar system will eventually pay back that investment, and then continue on afterwards saving you money. To bring that back to nuclear, you have a high investment of carbon to build the reactor and then over time, having a carbon free system will eventually bring the footprint to a net zero and then continue to be negative. If you were to invest the same initial carbon into a coal plant or some other type of non-clean energy, you’ll just continue to pollute the planet. The factories produced will likely never achieve net zero emissions because the power is unclean. Nuclear power is something that addresses the root of the problem and not just a bandage that covers it up for a spell.
@MC-ht6lw
@MC-ht6lw 4 ай бұрын
So what?
@77space-vt8wi
@77space-vt8wi 4 ай бұрын
Many European countries have done their nuclear safety due diligence along with a comprehensive cost vs effective value analysis. i.e., Finland has five of the new safe design nukes going, some completed and other near completion. As a result some are saying they may evolve into a substantial manufacturing center. What's also nice is the severing of Finlands depencey on Russia for electrical power accompanied by Putin blackmail. Everyone knows the wind and solar are unreliable and their no recycle disposal cost, soil damage (can't repair the desert once it's been bulldozed) cost of repair and significant cost of finding people who are willing to engage maintaining all those wind mill/turban moving parts and replacing blowing sand damage to solar panels and turbine blades-plus no one knows how to dispose of thousand of them them stacked up and abandoned out of sight in some desert. Ultimately everyone understands that safe nuclear is the only viable alternative.
@MotoKeto
@MotoKeto 4 ай бұрын
Build more Nuclear power. Build them safe as possible and as fast as possible.
@TGIFriday83
@TGIFriday83 Ай бұрын
I live in Ontario, Canada - a nuclear-heavy province, so I may be biased, but in 2014 we shut down our Nanticoke generating station, the largest single emitter of coal/carbon in North America at the time. That shut-down was made possible by the planning and execution of nuclear refurbishment projects such as the restart/refurbishment of units at the Bruce Nuclear Generating station, the largest nuclear site in the world, and the planned refurbishment of Darlington, another huge nuke station. In Toronto pre-2014 we used to record dozens of smog days every summer, which would come with health problems and related deaths, and after 2014 we have almost no smog days. I would argue that anything that reduces our carbon emissions, including nuclear, saves lives. We're really just left to debate which low-carbon technology is best, but we shouldn't be discounting any of them - each one has its advantages in different regions of the world. As a side-note I do find it funny that a lot of footage in this video is courtesy of CBC, meaning it's footage of Canadian plants which use a different design than anything in the US, including Vogtle.
@andrewauldridge2801
@andrewauldridge2801 4 ай бұрын
Great video! I work here and have seen your channel talk about Vogtle a few times. BTW its pronounced Vogle...the T is silent.
@evanpnz
@evanpnz 3 ай бұрын
The usual rules of pronuciation would make the g silent, but local convention certainly overules!
@lawrencesears7255
@lawrencesears7255 4 ай бұрын
Having worked in the Nuclear industry as well as the solid waste industry I can honestly say there are more dangerous options. Nuclear is more heavily regulated for safety than any other industry. Waste to energy plants are far more dangerous. The chemical industry is responsible for millions of deaths and some truly horrible accidents. Municipal and chemical waste have contaminated thousands of acres of land and water supplies. You don't here of the supper fund sites since the 80's but most of them were never cleaned up. Solar and wind generation are not totally green either nomatter what the government wants us to believe. Manufacturing the components for these systems requires the use of toxic chemicals and components. The reason batteries are not produced in the us is that companies can not comply with EPA and other manufacturing regulations and still be competitively priced. Disposal of hazardous waste is also a problem. Then, there is the reliance on rare earth elements, of which the US does not have a supply.The carbon footprint of the industries supplying these components from mining to manufacturing is also ridiculously large. When you look at the facts, the green energy that developed nations push is not any greener than fossil fuels Nuclear is.
@jasonlind6790
@jasonlind6790 4 ай бұрын
Renewables are unreliable and costly, fossil plants are a lot cleaner than 20 years ago so they have that going for them. Nuke plants are where it’s at as you explained the energy density that fission provides is much better than merely burning stuff to turn a turbine. Despite the few tragedies that have happened there are many more successful plants that have been online for decades without incident. I’m all for nuclear power.
@ACME_Kinetics
@ACME_Kinetics 3 ай бұрын
Renewables are reliable - as long as you did the math to know what to expect before installation. Other than hydro they aren't typically baseload capable sources. Fact is they're already cheaper than you think, but they're nowhere near a 100% solution, at least not yet.
@pindapoy1596
@pindapoy1596 3 ай бұрын
@jasonlind6790 Yes but you are dealing with irrational people brainwashed by unscrupulous politicians.
@tigre2236
@tigre2236 2 ай бұрын
Pretty good video. You got a couple details wrong. 1st, many people have demonstrated that the area around Fukushima, while irradiated during the melt down, quickly returned to normal levels of radiation. 2nd, the radiation exposure in Chernobyl was easily and effectively treated with Iodine tablets. You failed to mention that the new reactors are gen 3+, a sweet new upgrade to reactor design, never before seen in the USA.
@boroblueyes
@boroblueyes 25 күн бұрын
@@tigre2236 AP-1000 is a sweet design.
@rickoliveira3807
@rickoliveira3807 4 ай бұрын
Far too many of these pieces focus on the "dangers" of nuclear power but don't give enough attention to the "compared to what" issue. The number of deaths each year caused by air pollution is staggering and the burning of fossil fuels to generate power is a big contributor.
@timnorton3336
@timnorton3336 4 ай бұрын
You need to do some research on salt rather than liquid coolant reactors. They can’t melt down and are much cheaper to build thus eliminating both of your concerns with nuclear power.
@Thomasjcolbert82
@Thomasjcolbert82 4 ай бұрын
It’s the cleanest form there is I thought? How else are they going to feed this green new future?
@domtweed7323
@domtweed7323 4 ай бұрын
Yeah, nuclear is marginally lower carbon than wind/solar, cause it uses less materials. But the bigger benefit is having less need for storage.
@johansjournal
@johansjournal 4 ай бұрын
green is not about pollution, it's about being against the west, the humans and people having jobs/making money
@domtweed7323
@domtweed7323 4 ай бұрын
@@johansjournal Depends which ones you talk to. You should read Limits to Growth, its a completely engineering-based assessment of the resource limits on human society. If you want everyone to be healthy and wealthy, including the West, we need to stay within the physical limits physics and geology place on us.
@AL-lh2ht
@AL-lh2ht 4 ай бұрын
@@johansjournallet me guess, Trump is your idol?
@johansjournal
@johansjournal 4 ай бұрын
@@AL-lh2ht i'm not american
@TL-wy1nk
@TL-wy1nk 2 ай бұрын
Nuclear is the answer to our energy needs, period.
@High-Tech-Geek
@High-Tech-Geek 4 ай бұрын
Surprised you didn't mention that after Germany switched away from nuclear and moved to gas and oil imports, they were in a real bind when Russia invaded Ukraine and cut off the supplies.
@DougNoOnions
@DougNoOnions 4 ай бұрын
Unsubscribing because you didn't make your homework about nuclear power plants, you have no idea how nuclear waste is handled.
@youdontneedtoknow1154
@youdontneedtoknow1154 4 ай бұрын
Agreed. No research done AT ALL for this. They just had a preset bias and made a video from opinion, not facts.
@dannyzidelis1488
@dannyzidelis1488 4 ай бұрын
Build more nuclear power plants! Having a robust electric grid of nuclear power, solar power, wind power, hydro power, and ocean power will help us end our dependence on fossil fuels for electricity and help us up our grid to handle more electric cars in the future.
@jefflarsen29
@jefflarsen29 Ай бұрын
We need to build about ten of these around the country. It's clean. It's safe. And it's the most efficient source of power known to man.
@freetorobandloot
@freetorobandloot 4 ай бұрын
Like most infrastructure projects in the usa, the initial projected cost is usually only 1/3 or 1/4 the actual cost. This it is usually due to inefficiency, mismanagement, and possibly corruption. I wouldn't be surprised if the final cost will be $100+ billion. Edit: had to edit my comment because YouTurd keeps hiding my comment because of certain keywords that they are trying to censor.
@evanpnz
@evanpnz 3 ай бұрын
Legal interference from "environmental" groups is the biggest cause of delays. And the fact they turned the regulation of the industry over to nuclear hating activists. US reactors typically cost three times the world average.
@CoffeePlus_CAT
@CoffeePlus_CAT 3 ай бұрын
Атомные электростанции ещё очень очень долго не уйдут из нашей жизни. ☕+👍
@MosquitoValentineNH
@MosquitoValentineNH 20 күн бұрын
Fearing nuclear power and shutting down plant production/operation because of Chernobyl is like fearing your washing machine and closing down all laundromats because a wave of jackasses died eating Tide pods.
@princethawani1351
@princethawani1351 3 ай бұрын
Germany closed 3 of their 4 powerplant but do your research they are now using the so called closed plants...
@roberte.bennett8327
@roberte.bennett8327 3 ай бұрын
There was no mention of the VC Summer Nuclear Station in Jenkinsville, South Carolina that was operated by South Carolina Electric & Gas. With one reactor already in service, the plan was to build two more. The work began in 2013 but by 2017 after billions were spent, it went belly-up due to cost over-runs. SCE&G went with it after being purchased by Dominion Energy.
@jonathanalligood4202
@jonathanalligood4202 4 ай бұрын
Three mile Island unit 2 not unit 1 had the partial meltdown
@scipioafricanus2
@scipioafricanus2 4 ай бұрын
there's absolutely nothing controversial about nuclear fission power. it is by far the most efficient, cheapest form of energy with with modern designs completely fail-safe.
@bradcoddington1679
@bradcoddington1679 3 ай бұрын
You forgot a couple of nuclear power plants. Both in Illinois one was in Zion Illinois, now decommissioned. The other is in Byron IL and is still operating today.
@robertward9864
@robertward9864 2 ай бұрын
What you also don't mention is that a very large portion of the coast to build a plant is the permitting cost, even before one ounce of concrete is poured a company will spend a few billion in permits.
@ElijahAngwin
@ElijahAngwin 4 ай бұрын
I worked at VC Summer 2 and 3 Pretty sure that was a 9B $ fail. The amount of documentation and QC and manpower that is invested in a nuclear plant is absurdly astounding- incomprehensible, that is why they are so expensive to build. There are compounding fail safes for everything that is dangerous. Not only for construction but for operation.
@frankfahrenheit9537
@frankfahrenheit9537 3 ай бұрын
Maybe we should combine the standards and building knowledge of the 70ies with modern control and design technology to make these reactors safer than ever before.
@evanpnz
@evanpnz 3 ай бұрын
@@frankfahrenheit9537 That is exactly what has been happening. Most reactors that have been around for forty years have had their control and safety systems upgraded numerous times. Tepco was lazy and did not follow the recommended upgrades, also removed a sea wall that would have prevented all the standby coolant pump generators from flooding because thay thought it gave the wrong impression to the public. An almost identical plant 20 km up the coast lost 3 out of four standby generators for the cooling pumps but because the workers trusted the manager and worked hard for three days to run new cables and get generators back online they had no damage.
@ClashWithJ
@ClashWithJ 4 ай бұрын
nuclear power plants arent bad, but most people just dont want it close to you (NIMBY) the big problem is where to put it so that it is save even if it goes wrong
@JarrodR84
@JarrodR84 2 ай бұрын
I'm really impressed at the channel. They make great content!
@paulriguccini3416
@paulriguccini3416 3 ай бұрын
The UK's flagship Hinkley nuclear power plant was announced in 2007 with a completion date of 10 years, and to cost £9 billion. It remains unfinished, latest estimated completion date 2031, with a revised cost of £92.5 billion. (AU$171billion) and still won't produce enough power.
@robertparnofiellorealestat6550
@robertparnofiellorealestat6550 4 ай бұрын
Isnt thorium another option ?
@Jimsathome
@Jimsathome 2 ай бұрын
Somebody incorrectly said most of Canada's Electricity is generated by nuclear power. Hydroelectricity accounted for 60% of all electric generation in Canada and is the largest single source. The second-largest single source of power (15% of the total) is nuclear power, with several plants in Ontario generating more than half of that province's electricity, and one generator in New Brunswick. This makes Canada the world's sixth-largest producer of electricity generated by nuclear power. Fossil fuels generate 18% of Canadian electricity, with sources like Wind, Solar, etc. making up the remainder. Just thought I should nip it in the bud.
@johnvincent9022
@johnvincent9022 21 күн бұрын
An enormous omission on your tally of nuclear plants are those right on your northern border, the Ontario Candu plants. They continue to run, have never had a major failure and can be fuelled on line with natural uranium rather than enriched uranium. The Pickering A plant has been going since 1970, and is still churning out the MW's on a daily basis. Not only that, none of the Canadian plants use cooling towers, another enormous expense, whose purpose is misunderstood by the public.
@barrykennedy9947
@barrykennedy9947 3 ай бұрын
Just think, our government spent $7.5 billion to build 8 EV charging stations. They want to build 500,000. $35 billion doesn't seem like much. The conversation about green energy or clean energy is ridiculous if you don't consider nuclear energy.
@csf1757
@csf1757 3 ай бұрын
misinformation above .. they budgeted $7.5, funneled that thru each state who decide on the rules of distribution, and as of ~ 6 months ago only 8 had been built. $7.5B is the total $ budgeted for the 500K expected to be built and subsidized
@PhilipMurphyExtra
@PhilipMurphyExtra 4 ай бұрын
Hooray, It's MegaBuilds video time
@davidgeary490
@davidgeary490 Ай бұрын
You said alternatives were coal and oil....but oddly did not mention combined-cycle natural gas - which is only one sixth (1/6!) the capital costs of new nuclear (see Wiki). It's plentiful, tried and true, builds are on time and on budget and gas does not have the security, sabotage, exclusion zone, routine radioactive emissions, and toxic high level waste management issues that plague nuclear. Nowadays they infuse biogas and, increasingly, hydrogen into the natural gas fuel to make a MUCH cleaner burn. In fact, if a full accounting were done today it would easily meet so-called 'Net Zero' requirements.
@sam_i_am2026
@sam_i_am2026 2 ай бұрын
I am fairly certain they’re not the first to come online in 30 years. Watts Bar had at least one go in-service in 2016.
@brokenarrow2835
@brokenarrow2835 Ай бұрын
You are wrong they did build a nuclear power plant in the eighties ,it was River Bend Nuclear plant in St. Francisville Louisiana. I worked on that project. It was built under Stone & Webster Engineering. It was a union work force who built it.
@Jon-ky6st
@Jon-ky6st 4 ай бұрын
I wonder how long it will take to ROI on that 35 billion?
@boroblueyes
@boroblueyes 4 ай бұрын
The two new units will have a minimum life span of 80 years. Each unit running at 100% power will generate between $1.5 to 2 million dollars in gross revenue each day. They're expensive to maintain, but very profitable. It should pay for itself in 15-20 years.
@robertmcmahon1221
@robertmcmahon1221 3 ай бұрын
Really good and logical presentation. My only opinion contrary to your report would be, the accidents were mismanagement not accidental. The French have used nuclear power for years and they do it well. One of their smart ploys is to build the same reactor each time they build a power plant it can be run well because the safety measures are exactly like the others. the safety measures are thoroughly understood: and there is no: "how do we fix this new problem?" Consequently less risk.
@Yair44
@Yair44 2 ай бұрын
Shutting down Germany's nuclear reactors was a huge mistake for them, and they realize it now. Japan is actively developing nuclear technology and is doing it quite well. Nuclear waste is much less problematic with proper storage, increasing the efficiency of uranium utilization, fuel recycling and the use of non-fissionable waste in thermal reactors, in fast neutron reactors.
@sachinchauhan7775
@sachinchauhan7775 4 ай бұрын
India is going massive on Nuclear power. We will be activating 1 new power plant each year till 2030.
@factnotfiction5915
@factnotfiction5915 3 ай бұрын
Smart!
@paulwelch7558
@paulwelch7558 3 ай бұрын
Great to see that they realize nuclear power is the most efficient source of energy. We need more people to realize it.
@godbluffvdgg
@godbluffvdgg 3 ай бұрын
IT'S ABOUT A DAMN TIME!...it's the SAFEST form of power generation too...
@Shaq94701
@Shaq94701 2 ай бұрын
I’m genuinely curious how much emissions are put into the atmosphere by the construction of nuclear power plants. Of course, once online it’s emissions free, but as mentioned in this video it took tons of steel and concrete to build, which we know are intensive processes that have high emissions.
@williamrogers4290
@williamrogers4290 3 ай бұрын
The AP1000 Toshiba/Westinghouse design used at Vogtle has been built in numerous countries around the world. The cost overruns can be blamed on the NRC addition of a hardened exoskeleton encasement and Georgia Power's (Southern Company) decision to try to re-engineer Toshiba's design.
@gary4507
@gary4507 3 ай бұрын
Small Modular Reactors,(SMR's) are the best option to increase power that's vital for the build-out of HPC.
@harryniedecken5321
@harryniedecken5321 29 күн бұрын
Reality is that data centers and EVs will need so much power, that site should start working on building the next reactor.
@matthewmatheny2412
@matthewmatheny2412 3 ай бұрын
Nuclear is safe and clean! The only problem is they don't know what to do with waste however the waste is secure. Most nuclear plants in the US are so safe that I would live on property if I could. Nuclear plants also release nothing into the atmosphere but steam. And they discharge hot (temperature) water back into rivers/streams. Also, it is Plant (Vo-gule) just said quickly.
@danboren6567
@danboren6567 3 ай бұрын
First, Vogtle is pronounced with the "t" being silent. Second you all but ignored the two nuke plants in TEXAS. Those being Commanche Peak (1993 began operations) and the South Texas Project (1988 began operations) nuclear power plants. You did ignore St. Lucie nuclear power plant (1976 began operations) in Florida.
@iowayoder6040
@iowayoder6040 4 ай бұрын
These countries that are shutting down their nuclear power plants they can afford to shut down because their country is the size of one of our states so I personally believe nuclear power is the way to go just my thoughts because our states are larger than most peoples countries that’s a lot of power consumption, especially with electric cars now and all that Solar panels and wind turbines are just not beneficial for a large country like ours
@ericmoore2236
@ericmoore2236 3 ай бұрын
Thorium as the fuel is safer and produces much less waste. Nuclear power is the safest way to go if run properly.
@adamclabaugh1945
@adamclabaugh1945 3 ай бұрын
Nuclear energy is the only energy source where we actually store the waste rather than dumping it into the air
@robgell455
@robgell455 3 ай бұрын
what was missing from your presentation was how efficient the new plants are at burning their fuel. i have it said that 98% is not uncommon. If you burn 1,000kg, you are left with 20kg.
@kurtschumacher5853
@kurtschumacher5853 3 ай бұрын
Nuclear Power can be safe. The biggest misconception is that all nuclear plants can melt down or leave behind waste for 1,000's of years. There are better ways to run reactors besides using Uranium and Plutonium. We should be exploring those options. Otherwise every single nuclear accident could have been prevented with today's modern monitoring equipment and automation. They were mostly user error, and mechanical/monitoring failures compounded by user error.
@JB-vg1jz
@JB-vg1jz 4 ай бұрын
EVERYTHING comes at a risk. The only way to avoid risk is to live in a bubble or not live at all.
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