Comment by JumpCrisscross

Comment by JumpCrisscross 5 hours ago

5 replies

> soon the west has to copy chinas tech

Thorium MSRs don't make sense for the Americas, Europe or Australia. We have plenty of uranium.

Nuclear is receiving solid research backing in both America and China. (India is playing too. Austrlia is having an identity crisis.) Our different geologies mean there will probably be one solution for China, India and North Africa, on one hand, and the rest of the world, on the other hand.

stubish 3 hours ago

I don't think Australia is having an identity crisis. There won't be research backing from Australia as the Nuclear agenda one party is pushing is essentially a cover story for replacing antique coal plants with gas plants. A genuine Nuclear plan for Australia would include realistic timelines and budgets, and use of other renewables to replace coal plants that are failing today while meeting climate targets. And meeting climate targets is important, because if we don't care about them then coal and gas will remain cheaper than Nuclear for Australia due to having large reserves.

  • JumpCrisscross 43 minutes ago

    > I don't think Australia is having an identity crisis

    That was tongue in cheek. It's being indecisive. I guess that's conserved across the Anglosphere.

hunterpayne 2 hours ago

The cost of the fuel is less than 0.1% of the cost of running a NPP. The cost of the fuel has almost nothing to do with the economics of nuclear power. And considering a liquid fueled reactor makes heat in the 900C range and a AP1400 makes heat in the 300C range, they aren't really substitutes for each other. The amount of incorrect information in this thread is truly shocking. For example, you can make synthetic fuel from a LFTR, you can't from a BWR or a PWR. That might be a valuable feature, don't you think.

  • JumpCrisscross 2 hours ago

    > cost of the fuel has almost nothing to do with the economics of nuclear power

    Who said this?

    > considering a liquid fueled reactor makes heat in the 900C range and a AP1400 makes heat in the 300C range, they aren't really substitutes for each other

    Nobody said this either.

    There are more reactor designs in the world than LFTR, PWR and BWR, particularly if we're talking at the demonstration scale like this reactor.

    • hunterpayne 16 minutes ago

      I don't know of a production NPP that isn't a PWR or BWR online today. One could exist but it would be very very old.