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- <text>
- <title>
- (Jan. 02, 1989) Nuclear Power Plots a Comeback
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1988 Highlights
- </history>
- <link 00011>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- January 2, 1989
- PLANET OF THE YEAR, Page 41
- Nuclear Power Plots a Comeback
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>But safety comes first in new reactor designs
- </p>
- <p>By Philip Elmer-Dewitt
- </p>
- <p> The primary purpose of the $3.6 billion nuclear plant that the
- U.S. Department of Energy wants to build in Idaho Falls, Idaho, is
- to help replenish America's dwindling supply of tritium, a vital
- component in atom bombs. But if approved by Congress, the Idaho
- facility could play an even more important role in the civilian use
- of nuclear power. For it is based on what proponents claim is a
- fail-safe technology, one that virtually eliminates the danger of
- a meltdown.
- </p>
- <p> Nuclear plants have the potential of providing abundant
- supplies of electricity without spewing pollutants into the
- atmosphere. But the nuclear-power industry has failed to deliver
- on that promise, at least in the U.S. Even before the accident at
- Three Mile Island in 1979, the costs of making atomic power safe
- were spiraling out of control. Since that episode, the industry has
- been at a standstill.
- </p>
- <p> What makes the failure all the more disturbing is that it was
- unnecessary. Engineers have the know-how to build reactors that
- are demonstrably safer than those now in operation. Moreover, that
- basic technology has been available for more than 20 years. It was
- largely ignored in favor of a technology--the water-cooled
- reactor--that had already been proved in nuclear submarines. But
- water-cooled reactors are particularly susceptible to the rapid
- loss of coolant, which led to the accidents at both Chernobyl and
- Three Mile Island.
- </p>
- <p> All nuclear reactors work by splitting large atoms into smaller
- pieces, thus releasing heat. The challenge is to keep the core of
- nuclear fuel from overheating and melting into an uncontrollable
- mass that can breach containment walls and release radioactivity.
- One way to prevent a meltdown is to make sure the fuel is always
- surrounded with circulating coolant--ordinary water in most
- commercial reactors. To guard against mechanical failures that
- could interrupt the transfer of heat, most reactors employ multiple
- backup systems, a strategy known as "defense in depth."
- </p>
- <p> The problem with defense in depth is that no matter how many
- layers of safety are built into a conventional reactor, it can
- never be 100% safe against a meltdown. At its Idaho plant, the
- Energy Department wants to try a different strategy. Rather than
- construct a giant atomic pile that requires the cooling of large
- quantities of concentrated fuel, designers propose to build a
- series of four small-scale, modular reactors that use fuel in such
- small quantities that their cores could not achieve meltdown
- temperatures under any circumstances. The fuel would be packed
- inside tiny heat-resistant ceramic spheres and cooled by inert
- helium gas. Then the whole apparatus would be buried belowground.
- Lawrence Lidsky, an M.I.T. professor of nuclear engineering, calls
- this an "inherently safe" approach: it relies on the laws of
- nature, rather than human intervention, to prevent a major
- accident.
- </p>
- <p> The main problem is that the modest electrical output of
- smaller units makes them less economical, at least initially. But
- proponents argue that inherently safe plants should prove more
- cost-effective in the long run. Not only would expensive safety
- systems no longer be needed, but the units could be built on an
- assembly line and put into operation one module at a time, enabling
- utility companies to match operating capacity with demand for
- power.
- </p>
- <p> Critics are quick to point out that no nuclear reactor, either
- water-cooled or gas-cooled, is totally safe as long as it produces
- radioactive waste. The U.S. alone has generated thousands of metric
- tons of "hot" debris, including enough spent fuel to cover a
- football field to a height of three feet. Said Sir Crispin Tickell,
- British Permanent Representative to the United Nations: "The fact
- that every year there is waste being produced that will take the
- next three ice ages and beyond to become harmless is something that
- has deeply impressed the imagination."
- </p>
- <p> There are ways to cope with the waste problem. The French have
- pioneered a process called vitrification that involves mixing
- radioactive wastes with molten glass. Over time, the hot mass
- should cool into a stable, if highly radioactive, solid that can
- be buried deep underground. The U.S. is also pursuing a strategy
- of deep burial, but the process has become ensnared in regional
- politics. Some sites that might have been suitable for an
- underground storage facility--the granite mountains of New
- Hampshire, for example--were quickly ruled out because of
- opposition from nearby residents. The one site now being
- considered, a remote mountain in southern Nevada, still faces
- formidable political hurdles.
- </p>
- <p> It is a problem that can, and must, be solved. Third World
- countries do not have the technical or managerial expertise to deal
- with the complexities of nuclear power. They will be forced, at
- least for the foreseeable future, to rely primarily on
- environmentally harmful fossil fuels. That is going to put pressure
- on the developed world to produce increasing amounts of cheaper,
- safer nuclear power.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-