ENVIRONMENT AND TECHNOLOGY
Column / Rudolf Skarics
May 19, 2023, 15:31
Germany is in the process of shutting down its last nuclear reactors. This doesn't really sound all that logical in view of the increasing demand for electrical power, on the one hand to supply the rapidly growing electromobility with energy, and on the other hand to replace natural gas. At the same time, coal-fired power plants continue to operate.
Not economical
It would be logical to continue using nuclear power, which is largely CO2-free, to save the climate. However, most nuclear power plants in Europe are approaching the end of their planned useful life or are already beyond it. That makes them dangerous. At the same time, safety upgrades are extremely costly.
But from a free-market point of view alone, nuclear power has no future: It is the most expensive way of providing energy, affordable only with extremely large amounts of tax money. There is little interest from private investors. No insurance company wants to insure it.
No success story
If you take the money and put it into the further development of other forms of energy and energy-saving measures, it is possible to reduce CO2 emissions much faster than by upgrading old nuclear power plants and building new ones.
And nuclear power is not a success story anyway: Despite huge lobbies in the background, its share of global energy supply is only five percent. The only thing that has any radiance here is the nuclear waste we are leaving behind for millennia. Besides, as drought increases, it becomes more and more difficult to cool nuclear power plants. (Rudolf Skarics, 5/19/2023)
Source (derstandard.at) | Archive
Nuclear power without perspective
Although shutting down the last nuclear power plant in Germany sounds illogical at first glance, it is nevertheless justifiedColumn / Rudolf Skarics
May 19, 2023, 15:31
Germany is in the process of shutting down its last nuclear reactors. This doesn't really sound all that logical in view of the increasing demand for electrical power, on the one hand to supply the rapidly growing electromobility with energy, and on the other hand to replace natural gas. At the same time, coal-fired power plants continue to operate.
Not economical
It would be logical to continue using nuclear power, which is largely CO2-free, to save the climate. However, most nuclear power plants in Europe are approaching the end of their planned useful life or are already beyond it. That makes them dangerous. At the same time, safety upgrades are extremely costly.
But from a free-market point of view alone, nuclear power has no future: It is the most expensive way of providing energy, affordable only with extremely large amounts of tax money. There is little interest from private investors. No insurance company wants to insure it.
No success story
If you take the money and put it into the further development of other forms of energy and energy-saving measures, it is possible to reduce CO2 emissions much faster than by upgrading old nuclear power plants and building new ones.
And nuclear power is not a success story anyway: Despite huge lobbies in the background, its share of global energy supply is only five percent. The only thing that has any radiance here is the nuclear waste we are leaving behind for millennia. Besides, as drought increases, it becomes more and more difficult to cool nuclear power plants. (Rudolf Skarics, 5/19/2023)
Source (derstandard.at) | Archive