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#nuclear#more#energy#power#don#per#https#should#renewables#scale

Discussion (51 Comments)Read Original on HackerNews

ggmabout 4 hours ago
TRISO fuel so.. pebble bed? Is there a reluctance to market on this? The Chinese were all-in.

Great to see engineering deliver on time. I wonder if Rolls Royce will also have a smooth ride. It's a PWR.

chickenbigabout 4 hours ago
Prismatic (or cylindrical) TRISO also makes sense. There are lots of potential problems using pebble beds (circulation, grinding), whereas doing regular refuelling cycles avoids them, in exchange for down-time to refuel.
pfdietzabout 2 hours ago
TRISO increases fuel cycle costs. It's harder to make, harder to dispose of, and (IIRC) uses higher enrichment.
coldteaabout 2 hours ago
That's just what we needed! Nuclear autotune.
cadamsdotcomabout 2 hours ago
We need progress, not a decade per step.

That distinction matters because nuclear.

Let that sink in for a moment.

kibibu23 minutes ago
(psst autotune is made by a company called Antares)
seanhunterabout 4 hours ago
Congrats to everyone involved. This is a pretty awesome milestone
mDyJzDPmBdGabout 3 hours ago
To add a bit of context there were 11 companies participating in program and only 2 achieved critiality, and the deadline included in "DOE Reactor Pilot Program" was "July 4, 2026", and Aalo Atomics is the only one that might also make it in time.
apiabout 1 hour ago
Is anyone working in the US on a waste solution that isn’t a big hole with a straight out of cyberpunk sci-fi warning plaque?

The French reprocess and recycle fissile material but that’s kind of a gnarly industrial process. Still they do it and it works.

The long term solution is to create a second kind of reactor that has a higher burn fraction which means a more fuel efficient fast reactor. Those would be, ideally, the big base load plants if we did this rationally.

yabones26 minutes ago
I don't see the issue with dry cask storage medium term, and deep geological storage long term. Spent fuel isn't really that dangerous once it's been cooled down and for a couple decades before putting it in the ground, to the point that there are far more dangerous natural things you can dig up.

What concerns me is that 250 years of fossil fuel energy continues to store its waste products in my lungs and the water I drink. That's the issue we need to solve with urgency.

quirkot31 minutes ago
Europe has about 60,000 tons of nuclear waste storage[1], so lets say the global nuclear waste quantity is 2-3x or 120,000 to 180,000 tons. That sounds like a lot, however it's less than 2 weeks of coal deliveries to a coal plant (at 1 train of 115 cars each with 116 tons of coal = 13,340 tons delivered per day[2]). To take another approach, the average landfill size is 600 acres[3].

The "eh, just bury it" approach is really not a bad one. Its not even that much stuff to bury

[1] https://worldnuclearwastereport.org/

[2] https://www.eia.gov/todayinenergy/detail.php?id=16651

[3] https://www.colorado.edu/ecenter/2021/04/15/hidden-damage-la...

pfdietz37 minutes ago
IMO, the long term solution will be to simply launch the waste into space. With low enough launch costs the extra mass needed to armor the waste against accidents becomes tolerable.
hgoel14 minutes ago
Probably not worthwhile. If you just leave it in orbit you're going to have to track it and worry about debris/micrometeoroid strikes. The ideal would be to stick it in some permanently shadowed crater on the Moon, it'd be a stable environment without wild temperature swings and much lower risk of somehow ending up where people are. But that's a long way to go and a lot more risk to take for now.
api19 minutes ago
Economically absurd, much more expensive than reprocessing or fast waste burning reactors.
jampekka23 minutes ago
Can't wait for one of those launch rockets to explode in the atmosphere!
hgoel18 minutes ago
The requirements for a rocket to be allowed to fly nuclear material tend to be even more stringent than those for flying humans.
Traubenfuchsabout 3 hours ago
I am still quite confused on the scientific consensus:

Should we double down on renewable energy and solve its issues with lots of batteries or should we invest in next generation nuclear energy?

Both at the same time?

Does anyone know?

datakanabout 3 hours ago
Both at the same time. I don't see how putting all our eggs in a single basket benefits us.
Tade0about 2 hours ago
China does: all of the above, where it makes sense.

Renewables and batteries to keep your AC, workplace EV charger, stove, pool heater and (since recently) green ammonia producer going, nuclear to prevent e.g. aluminium smelters from seizing up.

Also the cheapest way to make renewables work 24/7 is to build HVDC lines - they cost as much as a highway per unit length and even undersea cables would deploy for less and faster than equivalent nuclear.

The total length of HVDC lines just in China is currently more than 40k km, so they've literally deployed enough of them to wrap around the globe.

apiabout 1 hour ago
China is also still building coal and has passed Europe and will (if they don’t change course) soon pass the US and Canada and the other big ones on a per capita emitter basis. They already passed everyone as top emitter in an absolute sense.

https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/co-emissions-per-capita

Not saying they’re not also building renewables and nuclear, but it seems like the policy is more “build anything and everything to satisfy demand” than a focused effort.

BTW: if you look at US emissions, the data center bubble hasn’t had much if any effect. They are still trending down. There’s reasons to dislike that industry but I’m sick of the mindless echo chamber doom on that issue. They’re not that significant in the grand scheme of things.

atwrk30 minutes ago
Coal is already shrinking in the China (in absolute terms, not just as share of production) [1], and share of wind + solar is already larger than in the US [2], so I doubt China will ever reach US proportions in CO2 emissions per capita.

An additional data point to support that is that emissions intensity per GDP is clearly falling fast for China [3].

[1] https://ember-energy.org/data/electricity-data-explorer/?ent...

[2] https://ember-energy.org/data/electricity-data-explorer/?ent...

[3] Chart 75 from here: https://robbieandrew.github.io/GCB2025/

sehansenabout 2 hours ago
If your location already has a well-run nuclear energy sector (Finland, Sweden, South Korea): invest in nuclear energy.

If you don't: stick to renewables.

And it also depends on what you mean by "we". As a Dane, I don't think us Danish taxpayers should invest in nuclear energy, but I'm perfectly happy that private Danish investors invest in Seaborg/Saltfoss and Copenhagen Atomics.

bevekspldnwabout 2 hours ago
When it comes to avoiding the worst impacts of the current catastrophic path we’re on, “nothing will work, but everything might”.

Do it all.

pfdietzabout 2 hours ago
Nuclear is not on a trajectory to do more than supply a minor amount of world energy. A (say) 10% nuclear, 90% renewable world is not an easier challenge than a 100% renewable world -- the intermittency/seasonality issues aren't eased by having 10% nuclear running as baseload, and keeping it as backup makes its cost per kWh explode.

Nuclear really has to go big (supply most of the world's energy) or go home. But supplying most of the world's energy means burner reactors are inadequate -- there isn't enough cheap uranium. Burner microreactors have even worse neutron economy, so this argument applies even more so to them.

fssys36 minutes ago
nuclear takes longer to come online though vs renewables can be very quick, so it makes sense to do both as a short-long term strategy
rayinerabout 1 hour ago
That's a political and economic question, not a scientific one. Science can provide input information, but the decision involves weighing all sorts of facts and considerations outside the scope of science.
mohamedkoubaaabout 1 hour ago
Exactly. Waiting for a scientific consensus on a question that is very clearly not posed as a scientific question is oddly cultish
preisschildabout 3 hours ago
Government should tax / provide incentives based on negative externalities such as environmental impact and let the free market decide

https://unece.org/sites/default/files/2022-04/LCA_3_FINAL%20...

I think a low carbon mix will result in the cheapest, most reliable and cleanest energy grid.

pfdietzabout 2 hours ago
Nuclear partisans like to call renewables ideological, but I think this is another example of "the accusation is a confession".

The empirical evidence has nuclear being uncompetitively expensive. The current focus on variant reactor designs appears to be something of a Hail Mary attempt to get around this sad state of affairs.

You sometimes see them making an argument about energy density, which goes back to Vaclav Smil. But Smil used this argument to massively mispredict how solar would be go in the market. We don't hear him much anymore.

Nuclear advocates increasingly resort to conspiracy theoretic reasoning to explain away the failure of their technology to compete. This should be a red flag.

rayinerabout 1 hour ago
> The empirical evidence has nuclear being uncompetitively expensive.

France nuclearized 75% of its grid in the 1980s while the solar folks were faffing around. It's not a cost issue, it's that anti-nuclear folks have choked out the industry.

We need to take the boot off the neck of nuclear. Wind and solar aren't an avenue to moving up the tech tree of civilization, which will involve using vastly more power.

pfdietzabout 1 hour ago
We don't actually know how much that cost France, sine it was mixed in with their military nuclear effort. French auditors threw up their hands trying to figure out the actual costs.

What we do know is their attempt to build more NPPs now has gone spectacularly tits up, with costs completely out of control. This should make one view their earlier efforts with great suspicion. Have they become much worse, or were earlier problems concealed?

rs_rs_rs_rs_rs30 minutes ago
>The empirical evidence has nuclear being uncompetitively expensive

I have a solution, take the subsidies spent on "renewables" and put them into nuclear! Easy peasy!

bryanlarsen9 minutes ago
Too late, governments have already subsidized nuclear more than they've subsidized renewables.
krunckabout 2 hours ago
next generation nuclear energy = fusion
pfdietz34 minutes ago
Fusion's main accomplishment will likely be to make fission look cheap in comparison, due to fundamental issues of power density in the nuclear island. Why make a huge complex low power density radioactive thing when you can make a much smaller simpler high power density radioactive thing?
apiabout 1 hour ago
Both.

We should be investing in all non carbon emitting sources and we should have been doing it since the 1970s when we figured out pretty conclusively that this would be a problem.

Instead we had right wing fossil fuel shills on one shoulder and unscientific woo woo greens on the other, the net effect being that we kept burning more carbon. We still have them, Trump with “beautiful coal” and greens now opposing even solar power and batteries, but climate change is no longer possible to ignore. Some still manage it but those people are nuts.

If we hadn’t stopped improving nuclear we’d probably have emitted half the CO2 we have. It would have become cheaper and safer and more scalable and then when China industrialized they would have copied that instead of burning so much coal.

France with its nearly zero carbon grid is the existence proof.

It wasn’t until the 2010s that solar and wind became grid scale in a big enough way to matter. That was too slow.

Whether someone is at least open to nuclear power is my litmus test for whether they take climate change seriously.

I do. If we hit 600, 800, 1000 ppm CO2, which is possible if the world keeps developing on the back of fossil fuels, we are entering existential risk territory. Earth has had those CO2 levels before, and higher, but our species was not alive then.

We already passed the FAFO threshold for ppm CO2 and now we will FO. But that’s not X-risk yet. I’m talking about the next threshold, which may start around 600 but really kicks in near 1000. This is where you actually start asphyxiating. You get lowered IQ and impaired judgement to a small degree, but across the globe at a time when we really don’t need it.

sfn42about 3 hours ago
> "The Trump administration is proud to support the rebirth of America’s nuclear industry and ensuring Americans have access to affordable, reliable and secure energy for generations to come."

> "The demonstration and the licensing pathway it establishes represent a key step toward deploying electricity-producing microreactors for U.S. military installations by September 30, 2028."

So which is it? Power to the people or power to the military? This microreactor concept doesn't seem very well suited for commercial use.

roenxiabout 3 hours ago
Why would microreactor concepts not be suitable for commercial use? History is overwhelmed with examples of large, rare and expensive tech being produced in small cheap packages and becoming massive commercial successes that make the old way look primitive.
pfdietzabout 2 hours ago
> Why would microreactor concepts not be suitable for commercial use?

Crippling diseconomies of scale.

sfn42about 2 hours ago
Because large scale production is generally more scalable and efficient. And you probably don't want dozens of "microreactors" scattered across cities.
usrnmabout 2 hours ago
> Because large scale production is generally more scalable and efficient

Rooftop solar is an example of small scale decentralized energy production, maximum efficiency is not the only relevant metric.

> And you probably don't want dozens of "microreactors" scattered across cities

Why not? If they're considered safe and pass all inspections, what's the problem?

IsTomabout 2 hours ago
On the other hand you can scale production of reactor themselves. And I don't think the idea is to scatter them around, but to have a power plant with dozens of them in one place (instead of 3-4 regular reactors in a regular nuke power plant).
seanhunterabout 2 hours ago
I think that may be exactly wrong. The small scale may make it easier for a reactor to be “walk away safe” ie shut itself down absent external activity. I know that is a design goal of some of the Chinese micro reactors and those are used for civilian power generation.

Secondly although generating large amounts of power is more efficient in terms of generation, generating power close to the point of use is significantly more efficient in terms of power loss on the grid as I understand it.

roenxiabout 2 hours ago
Large scale production of commodity goods is generally more efficient. Which is why microreactors don't seem to have any inherent disadvantages. The efficiencies tend to kick in with the raw number of items produced.
ablationabout 3 hours ago
"Antares is a nuclear fission energy company developing compact microreactors for defense and space applications"