Comment by testing22321

Comment by testing22321 2 hours ago

2 replies

I agree, but if a developed country could get the price down to $15 billion a pop in the next two decades it would be a miracle.

Not to mention you wouldn’t generate a single kW for 20+ years from today.

In theory they’re fantastic. In reality not so much (which, incidentally, is the same story for the CA HSr)

bastawhiz an hour ago

In April Reuters reported that China approved ten plants for $27B (total):

https://www.reuters.com/sustainability/boards-policy-regulat...

Whether they run over budget (or whether this is an under inflated figure) is yet to be seen, but it would seem that China is bringing the cost down, and substantially.

I'm not a nuclear expert by any means, but from the reading I've done, they're largely designing and building the reactors themselves these days. And it seems that to help keep the cost low (among other reasons), they're also helping other countries build them.

  • testing22321 an hour ago

    Yes, China have a good shot at doing it because they are building 33 simultaneously now and they have questionable workers rights and environmental policies.

    As I said, if a developed country can do half what they’re doing (ie twice the price and double the construction time) in the next 20 years it would be a miracle.