I have been reading James
Mahaffey’s Atomic Accidents, an
account of failures of nuclear technology. This is merging in my mind with
responses to climate change, which are now desperately needed.
For
a long time, my position on nuclear power has been that it would be an
excellent technology if we could find saints and angels to run the system.
Lacking a supply of those, we had probably best solve our energy problems in
another way. This book, if anything, confirms me in that position. But time is
running out to avert planetary disaster from climate change and nuclear power does not contribute to global climate change. Perhaps it is time to rethink nuclear power.
1. On the safety of nuclear power technology
Mahaffey
is a long-time researcher and engineer. He advocates the use of nuclear power
and regards the book as a defense of the technology, pointing out that all
large-scale power generation systems are subject to deadly failures. This is
true, and yet nuclear technology is different.
For
people who do not know the issues here, I will review some of the facts, both
good and bad.
First,
it is fairly hard to create a nuclear bomb; reactors designed to generate power
cannot spontaneously turn into nuclear bombs.
However,
reactor failures have produced some of the most spectacular furnace and boiler
explosions in history. At Chernobyl, poor design and operational decisions led
to the vaporization of much of an entire reactor core. This speaks to my
concern about personnel. It is easy to feel superior to the Soviet engineers
and operators, who made many poor decisions. Mahaffey rightly points out that
Soviet authoritarianism made matters much, much worse in Chernobyl, and I
wonder about deaths in North Korea’s nuclear programs. But the relentless
cost-cutting of Western designers and operators in capitalist economies carry
their own risks.
The
dangers of radioactivity are to some extent overrated. Responses to exposure are
variable, and sometimes simple steps can prevent major injury. Yet almost
no-one knows those steps, so people exposed are apt to make deadly mistakes.
Even trained, knowledgeable people sometimes get it wrong.
Anyone
who works with electricity knows that, with the best will in the world, with
training, with careful safety codes and component engineering, people will
sometimes forget or, worse, say “hold my beer” and injure or kill themselves.
These problems are even worse with nuclear power, where the dangers lurk in
places we do not imagine. When it comes to nuclear power, our intuitions are
wildly wrong. I am reminded of Algis Budrys’s 1950s science fiction novel Rogue Moon, where a complex alien
installation of unknown purpose on the far side of the moon consistently kills
people who make wrong moves. There are many deaths as the installation is
studied and mapped.
Nuclear
fuel kills in that way. The shape of nuclear fuel influences its reactivity, in
contrast with anything of our familiar experience. Simply pouring
fuel-containing liquid from the standard long, thin storage tube into a fatter
conventional tank can lead to a spontaneous nuclear reaction (“criticality
event”) and deaths. (And don’t even think about organizing those long, thin
tubes in a neat close-packed array. That is a nuclear reactor.) On top of which
most elemental nuclear fuels are pyrophoric; they catch fire on contact with
air, combining the dangers of nuclear accident with those of chemical accident.
Human
error enters into nuclear disasters in another way: a number of major disasters
could have been prevented if operators allowed automated shutdown mechanisms to
operate. We are not as smart as we think we are.
Common
power reactor designs are based on light water technology. These are scaled up
from relatively safe naval designs. Unfortunately, in scaling them up they
become both more dangerous and harder to manage. Safer designs have been
proposed but, for reasons of cost, have not been pursued. Experimentation is in
any event difficult, and here we come to a social problem of the West which
Mahaffey only touches on: success in this area consistently requires both good
management, and a willingness to spend what is necessary. Capitalist design and
operation of nuclear power generators is risky; safe use of nuclear power
requires a social commitment of resources, something nearly impossible in any
extant economy.
Finally,
I will briefly point out that Mahaffey does not even address the potential
ecological risks of nuclear contamination. Credible research on the impact of
the Chernobyl reactor explosion indicates long-term ecological harm. If we
continue to use nuclear energy in a careless way, there will be more harm.
The
bottom line seems to be that we may be able to use nuclear power safely if we
become competent socialists.
2. On the use of nuclear power in a warming world
We
are on the edge of planetary disaster. Opposition to the use of nuclear power
and yet rising demands for energy has led the world to embrace fossil fuel
electrical generation. This cannot be sustained; it is already changing the
earth’s climate. Yet we can hardly say to the world’s people that they must
accept widespread poverty.
Our
environmental problems can in time be solved but time is what we do not have.
We have dawdled, and we have perhaps 15 years to act.
I
have been an alternative energy researcher, and alternative energy has something
to offer these problems, but I do not see how we are to deploy any alternative
energy technology quickly enough to save us. What safe nuclear power, deployed
widely, might be able to do for us is buy time, time to reduce our population
to a reasonable level, time to raise the world out of poverty so that our birth
rate falls, time to mitigate the damage of climate change. Despite the risks,
it is time to consider nuclear power again.
This
will require discipline which is not characteristic of our civilizations. The
so-called “green revolution,” hyper-intensive technological farming, was
intended as a stopgap measure. Instead it has become permanent, and aggravated
the problems of environmental degradation, enabling our population to grow even
further. Deployment of nuclear power to mitigate climate change could easily
follow a similar path. If humans on earth are to have a future, we must not
simply swap one potential disaster for another.
I
have no conclusions. Nuclear power could save the world from global warming. It
might also poison the world, or simply enable continued environmental
destruction. I do not know which. What do you think?
Nuclear energy is clean and safe - until it isn't. I like your idea of saints and angels but they are in scarce supply. As Allan Savory says, the earth will survive but Homo sapiens will not. Maybe it is someone else's turn? I dunno.
ReplyDeleteWe are in desperate straits, which is why I am even considering the subject. One thing I hope we do not do is build more large boiling water reactors; they are hard to operate. (And of course the graphite-moderated RMBK design of Chernobyl should never be repeated, ought not have been built in the first place.)
ReplyDeleteArrays of small boiling water reactors like those used in submarines are a plausible design; they have an excellent safety record. If we started today, I would start with those.
There are a number of technical paths in nuclear energy that have not been tried as well and these deserve further exploration. I know of two: the liquid thorium reactor and the traveling wave reactor. The traveling wave design is hopeful, but has not even been prototyped; the liquid thorium design has been prototyped, but is chemically nasty (florine!)
None of these are completely safe but, heavens, what is? I would infinitely rather live next door to any of these reactors than a coal-fired plant. Even solar and wind have their risks.
To the person who linked a self-published crank anti-nuclear book, possibly in the hope of increasing sales (I've taken the link down, muttering imprecations about Blogger's limited moderation capabilities), we are near to literal billions of deaths from climate change. The risks of nuclear power may perhaps be a lesser terror.
ReplyDelete