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[personal profile] baratron
I'm a woolly left-wing liberal, who is carfree by choice and recycles everything. But news that Greenpeace have been protesting against proposed new nuclear power plants just seems wrong to me. What, exactly, are they proposing as the alternative? Lovely though it would be for us all to reduce our use of petrol and electricity and for people to start walking and cycling everywhere, I can't see it happening.

In an ideal world, wind turbines would be shiny and wonderful and provide vast amounts of power. But in practice, they are noisy, and a large number of them are needed to produce a small amount of electricity. Many of the most suitable sites for them in the UK are areas of outstanding natural beauty, such as hill and mountain tops, and/or interfere with wildlife, such as offshore locations. Also, they are subject to the weather. Yes, it is often windy, but not always.

I don't know what the answer is. Ideally we'd use a large range of different non-polluting renewable sources. But replacing the entire country's fossil fuel stations with wind turbines isn't going to work. Nuclear power could be a short to medium-term solution to ease the transition between fossil fuels and renewable power.

What do you think?

[Poll #623017]

I'm not very impressed with Greenpeace for saying that nuclear power stations are a terrorist target. I can't really explain why this bothers me, except that I think that Fear of terrorism is the way the terrorists win. Let's take people's current Fear of Terrorism and combine it with their existing Fear of Radiation and use those emotions to win the argument, rather than science, logic and rational debate. *sigh*

Date: 2005-11-30 09:16 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] a-musing-amazon.livejournal.com
I don't think that nuclear power is the best answer - apart from the low probability/high risk stuff (both terrorism, and just fuck-up Chernobyl/3 Mile Island scenarios) its just too expensive to be my first (or even 2nd or 3rd choice) choice. When the government has actually put all the money that might sensible be spent on better/cheaper/quicker alternatives (such as wind power - where, btw, I disagree with your assessment, tidal, geothermal, cogeneration and most of all conservation) then I'd be prepared to resort to nuclear if we are still not getting there.

George Monbiot, who thinking i do respect, did write an article yesterday [http://www.guardian.co.uk/Columnists/Column/0,,1653215,00.html] arguing that we needed everything, including nuclear, if we were to make a reasonable impact on our carbon emissions - I'm afraid I'm not really up to checking his calculations - but unfortunately the govt. seems more concerned about dealing with 'real politics', such as the threat that electors might have to turn down their central heating thius winter than the real issue of global warming.

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