The NY Times editorial page has, for years and years, been pro-nuclear power. With all the usual blinders on. Whatever. But columnist Bob Herbert had a pretty hard-hitting take last week: “We’re Not Ready.” He likens the blithe indifference on safety at offshore oil rigs to that on nuclear power.
There is no way to overstate how cautiously we need to proceed along this treacherous road. Building nuclear power plants is mind-bogglingly expensive, which is why you need taxpayer money to kick-start the process. But the overriding issues we need to be concerned about, especially in light of our horrendous experience with the oil gushing in the gulf for so long, are safety and security.
The Times printed my letter in response, alongside one from the Nuclear Energy Institute and one from a guy pushing a new, “safe” technology. Here’s mine:
This analysis of nuclear power is on the money. Safety is a concern that needs to be uppermost in the minds of those in the headlong rush to institute a “nuclear renaissance.” It’s not.
The cost of nuclear power and the radioactive waste it produces are two other critical issues. And there are more, like the threat of terrorism and the likelihood of nuclear weapons proliferation when there are more reactors in countries with unstable political environments.
We would be much better off if we took the huge federal loan guarantees for nuclear power and used them for renewable-energy and energy-efficiency programs. There would be a significantly greater and faster return.
We should be looking toward a true “decarbonization” of our energy economy. This would create more jobs, more quickly and at less cost, and provide significant reductions in greenhouse gas emissions much sooner.

4 Comments So Far»
Your article has the same generic and vague anti-nuclear arguments commonly heard from amateur armchair environmentalists everywhere. The safety of electricity generation from nuclear power is a technical issue, and there is a tremendous amount of engineering and technology specifically dedicated to nuclear safety. Nontechnical arguments are fine if you object to nuclear power on religious, moral or ethical grounds. Unsubstantiated claims regarding the relative safety of nuclear power versus your (or any) proposed alternatives is empty talk. As an environmentalist, I do not want to see nuclear power ruled out without fair consideration of the merits as compared to the alternatives. Speaking of comparisons, you suggest using the nuclear loan guarantees for “renewable-energy and energy-efficiency programs.” Loan guarantees are to encourage private investment. Your suggested programs are unlikely to attract much investment, even with loan guarantees. I am not against your suggested programs, but they need cash (that we don’t have), not just loan guarantees. This is a significant difference that you didn’t recognize.
I’ve written extensively here about nuclear power. I’ve followed the issue for 40 years. I make technical, economic and common-sense arguments against nuclear power. In a rapidly warming world - see today’s post on the State of the Climate report - new nuclear power is slowing down our response. For detailed analyses, see the work of Amory Lovins cited here often.
Herbert’s florid language is a hatchet job on nuclear energy. He never spoke to anyone in the industry before writing the piece.
http://djysrv.blogspot.com/2010/07/bob-herberts-hatchet-job-at-new-york.html
Folks in the industry are not going to give you an objective view, are they? The letter from the Nuclear Energy Institute that appeared with mine gave you - surprise, surprise - an “everything is rosy” view. But even John Rowe advises caution on new nuclear - because of the waste issue.
Herbert did talk to the Union of Concerned Scientists which, if you have ever read their material, is not anti-nuke - as I am. UCS has, however, spent decades looking very carefully and deeply at the issues and is well suited to comment on safety issues, as is Redlener from Columbia.
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