My original point, that got lost in all this, is that we shouldn't over-react and insist on some insanely unreasonable level of safety such as we did post TMI.
Originally Posted by pjorourke
Ah, gentle PJ. Now you have fallen into my trap.
We actually
can build reactors that are nearly fool-proof and we can do so for reasonable additional cost. The problem is that the definition of "reasonable" varies greatly. To the utility industry "reasonable" means "none".
The Swedes have a design called PIUS that is, quite literally, immune to meltdown. The core is regulated by natural physical forces rather than through control rods and artificially circulated water. You can literally just walk away from the thing and it will shut itself down and cool itself without any help. PIUS designs, however, would add about $100M to the cost of every new plant so the system was scrapped as being too costly. If a PIUS design had been in place at TMI or Japan we wouldn't even be talking about those incidents here.
There's also a German design called a Pebble Bed Modular Reactor (PBMR) that has actually been built and demonstrated. This kind of reactor
could have a meltdown, but the design is such that it would take days for a meltdown scenario to develop rather than the minutes or even seconds that it takes a light water reactor to ruin your day. That gives the operators more than enough opportunity to address the problem and prevent serious accidents. Again, though, the design adds costs so we don't build them.
So my point is that we already
can build reactors that are much, much safer than current commercial designs. We don't do so simply because it's easier to build cheap and roll the dice on who pays for a massive cleanup than it is to add the cost of inherently safe plants up front. Either way we're paying the cost of safety. It's a social decision as to which of those two roads it's better to take. I think you can guess which side I"m on.
Cheers,
Mazo.