"Greens caused gigatons of carbon dioxide to enter the atmosphere from the coal and gas burning that went ahead instead of #nuclear. I was part of that too, I apologize." (Stewart Brand, 2009)
@kravietz This statement is telling the tale hat nuclar power is saving C02. But you need a lot of energy (which is from coal, oil and gas) to prepare the fule rods.
You need a lot of energy too to mine coal, gas, oil as well as rare earth metals required for manufacture of solar panels and wind turbines.
This is all quantified already - overall CO2 intensity of wind farm is 15 gCO2e/kWh, most of which is infrastructure, while nuclear is 5 gCOe/kWh *including* infrastructure, fuel and waste management.
@kravietz I have to admit that I'm not an export o this topic. But the graphs you showed are not really trustworthy for me. Esp. the second one might be from Vattenfall (and thus biased) as it is title "β¦ Vattenfall β¦".
Also on could admirably argu about whether the "decommissioning" really uses that less C02 - given that you actually recommision and not only burry it in e.g. Asse.
@kirschwipfel As for decommissioning - yes, you *could* argue. But when arguing let's present *data* rather than baseless whataboutism.
@kravietz "Don't trust any statistic you did not forge yourself." Without deep knowledge about which decommission scenario has been evaluated, this it hard to take as granted. And if the figures are from Vattenfall: They are biased for sure.
@kirschwipfel So you are not an exper, don't know anything about costs of decomission but you already know nuclear is *not* an option. Sorry, but this is very much a religious approach.
> solar and wind are not options
No, I'm not saying that. I'm saying: 100% solar/wind are not an option.
> radioactive contamination
The photo shows nuclear waste storage in Switzerland. There's a man walking around in the middle. And there are ~200 nuclear reactors running in the world for the last half century without any contamination.
> killing mankind by CO2
If we don't limit CO2 emissions within a few decades yes, this will be true disaster.
The contamination from Asse is minimal and at depths like -900 m that are never reaching any surface waters. Asse stores low- and medium-activity waste. For example, the largest leak found was 240 kBq/l which is roughly natural (!) radioactivity of a group of 60 people (from K-40 isotope).
One of the main causes for Asse problems was anti-nuclear lobbying, which hindered any attempts to properly develop and secure the storage and eventually led to its closure.
@kravietz In contrast: This is "Schachtanlage Asse" in Germay. Lots of contamination already leaking in the underground water.
(I'm no 100% sure this picture is actually showing Asse, but it is matching was has been reported about Asse since many years.)