@kravietz Nuclear power has advantages, drawbacks and tremendous implications on the political system.
It is too fragile and dangerous to be open, decentralized and transparent.
I means concentration, it implies an industrial-military-political complex, it implies further hinterland colonization by cities for production as well as long term storage. Also, mining in problematic conditions.
100% of what you wrote applies in 100% to renewable energy and any other energy source.
@kravietz I don't anderstand how a combination of thermic/voltaic solar panels on a family house -however relevant they be- need military grade protection, state secrets and violation of whole communities living space in order to store the long term waste under their feet, far away from the consuming cities.
On the other hand : yes, photovoltaic they need tragic mines, and so does the neodyme needed by windmills.
That's precisely the point. Any modern technology requires globally supplied resources - just have a look at this crazy diagram. And global resources require spying, diplomacy, military to protect etc.
@kravietz Not very resilient indeed.
Is everybody going to get their share?
Anyway, a corrupt official is always dangerous, but a corrupt official with hands on nuclear security and plutonium is β¦
I believe our choices should take corruption and cataclysms in account.
Image: SMBC :)
Nuclear weapons proliferation is a completely separate topic from nuclear power.
There are countries that have nuclear weapons (e.g. Israel) but no nuclear power, and dozens of countries with nuclear power but no nuclear weapons (e.g. Czech).
Everyone developed nuclear reactors back in 50's to have nuclear weapons. The main reason to use uranium rather than thorium was driven by the weapons program.
But none of the modern reactors used in France or Germany, not to mention new ones built in Bangladesh, can be used to make nuclear weapons.
What France did however was the 70's civilian nuclear power which allowed it to decarbonize its energy sector at unprecedented scale.