freediver wrote on Jun 24
th, 2024 at 10:09am:
Belgarion wrote on Jun 24
th, 2024 at 9:44am:
Nuclear power is so expensive and inefficient that there are 440 nuclear power plants operating in 32 countrys. It is so expensive that even Bangladesh is able to afford them.
If you look at the plots I gave,
nuclear was the cheapest option a while ago, especially if you do not consider the cost of managing the waste.
Did you mean the
dearest option?
You wrote in the OP:
If we limit ourselves to the immediate costs, nuclear is still by far the most expensive option. The attached figure shows the trend in levelised cost of electricity from various sources since 2009, from here:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cost_of_electricity_by_source#Cost_metrics
Wind and solar cost about 5c/kWh, while nuclear costs about 20c/kWh. Wind and solar are rapidly getting cheaper, while the cost of nuclear is going up. Quote:Do you really want a government that wastes trillions of taxpayer dollars without thinking it through?
If indeed AGW-CO2 is threatening to destroy us,
"taxpayers' $trillions" will be the last of our problems.
And even if Oz can go 100% renewables backed with pumped-hydro storage (and I think we can, though Lee doesn't), many other countries can't do it without nuclear, which is why the US is deciding to recommence research into nulclear power, after falling behind China (which is currently operating the world's first SMR).
Note: the treasuries of currency-issuing governments can create money out of thin air (just like private banks do, when they write loans for credit-worthy customers), so 'taxpayer money' needn't be the concern, when it comes to converting the globe to a zero emissions economy.
Resource mobilization, not money, is the problem to be solved.