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Utahns back nuclear power
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Utah is 90% barren wasteland. If we can find a way to use the desert areas of our state to make money through Nuclear power and waste dumping, I don't see why not.
Unfortunately alarmists have prevented new nuclear waste projects from opening up in this state. Hopefully Utah will stop listening to these propagandists and allow more waste disposal in areas that will never have any use to us other than that.
Your lead paragraph says, "Utahns WHO KNOW ABOUT THE ISSUE favor nuclear power.
Then you give us all sorts of poll numbers without explaining how you arrived at who you polled. Apparently you only polled those WHO KNOW ABOUT THE ISSUE.
How did you determine WHO KNOWS ABOUT THE ISSUE?
I'm awaiting your answer with keen interest?
1)Those familiar with the current reactor designs.
2)Those that did not get their knowledge of nuclear power from Jane Fonda.
P.S. I lived near Three Mile Island, when nothing happened (except fear mongering) in the 70's.
The HUGE challenges: making it safe AND finding adequate storage.
We owe it to our kids not to screw it up this time.
Strongly favoring 33%
Stongly opposed 22%
Undecided 34% (somewhat in favor and somewhat opposed are the same thing)
With a +- 5% margin of error, this makes all three categories a statistical dead-heat at 28-27-29, with the greatest proportion of undecided.
Statistics can tell you anything you want them to. The real issues are mining and related waste and health issues, cost of building including subsidies and loan guarantees, time to build and whether it addresses climate change issues, water use and contamination, disposal of radioactive waste and spent fuel, and health risks to those living near the plant, including tritium and strontium-90 discharges and increased risk of leukemia. What the survey reveals is a great need for public education.
The headline may or may not be true, but this poll does nothing to either support or contradict it.
This is like asking the question, "Do you like chocolate?" and then drawing conclusions about compulsive behavior and obesity. There is no unavoidable connection.
Perhaps the DesNews needs to hire a statistical analyst for the staff.
Those thinking of volunteering for those wages should plan to start their education before ground is broken.
We are being forced to stay in Iraq and the Middle East because we fear a cut-off on the oil supply. We are filling the air with pollution because burning coal without treatment is "cheap energy." Cough-cough.
If we had been able to pursue nuclear power as did France in 60s to 80s, it would today be our best friend and strong defense.
Power supply is not a Utah thing, it's for our country and the world. The cost of energy is going to go up; lets make it good, clean, green, safe energy.
Sid Gilligan
Murray
Having lived in Utah all my life I challenge this poll. Hire the BYU student exit pollers, they do much better job.
Every form of mass energy production has its costs and risks. People die from coal and oil productions and usage. My cancer may or may not have resulted from living east of the Nevada test site, back before the real risks of nuclear fallout were well understood. We'll never know.
But let's remember that --- except for Chernobyl (the result of a regime careless about human life) --- more people have died in the back seat of Ted Kennedy's car, than in all the nuclear power plant accidents on the planet.
There is abundant information available that fairly and accurately presents the clear reality that the world nuclear power prospects for the next 20 to 30 years are not only promising, but essential. If only compared to carbon based power generation (and attendant greenhouse issues), there is no contest.
To suggest that wind power, solar power, or geothermal power are viable alternatives for the near future is laughable! Too many years yet to develop. Those opposing nuclear power want it both ways: No nuclear - AND no greenhouse gases! Hey, make an intelligent selection and "Save the Planet!"
The movies (and "knowledgable" stars), the press, and, of course, uninformed environmentalists, have frightened the public into thinking that every nuclear power plant in the world functions at the same primitive level as the Chernobyl facility.
Why can't opponents of nuclear energy stay as close to the cutting edge of reality as the nuclear power industry does to the cutting edge of science AND safety ? The REAL world awaits us!
then do the opposite.
"MLG" demonstrates part of the hurdle nuclear power faces. In his former position, he should have known that all peer-reviewed science on Yucca Mountain shows it to be "environmentally benign." That he didn't know that is frustrating because it means he has not discriminated between credible and non-credible sources of information.
Can nuclear plants operate without accidents or accidental release of radiation? Yes. Do we really know how to safely dispose of nuclear waste, even to it's half-life? No. We have hypothesized that Yucca Mountain will give us what we need. But we really don't know. If you are depending on the federal government to inform and protect you from radiation, you need to take another look at how well they informed and protected the citizens of Southern Utah in the fifty's and sixty's.
Are we measuring how "green" nuclear power is, only by lack of particulate when compared to coal? Just how "green" will utahn's sportsmen think nuclear is when downstream fisheries have been altered from the thermal "contamination" put into the water. Except for perhaps the Great Salt Lake, Utah does not have a body of water that is both large enough and not a major tourist destination, that can absorb the thermal rejection of a nuclear plant.
Bob G. is right. Utahn's are too trusting. They need to ask more questions, and be more skeptical of the answers.
It's all about business pal.
It's all about business.
Nuclear power pays for its waste disposal. If fossil fuel plants were charged a similar tax on CO2 emissions, nuclear power would be cheaper. There is no guarantee that the thermal "pollution" generated by the plant would increase water temps enough to damage fisheries.
As far as waste, over 90% by mass of spent fuel is uranium that can be used again if reprocessed. GE/Hitachi has a great plan for reprocessing. Currently, most plants hold their spent fuel on site in casks that are nearly indestructible.
Why not spend more money on green solutions, or improving green solutions rather than spending it on digging more land fills to hold the ridiculous amounts of waste this state produces...just a thought
It's safe... unless you are Russian and live near Chernobyl.
Answer: Illegal aliens. Send illegal aliens home and there should be plenty of water.
Those thinking of volunteering for those wages should plan to start their education before ground is broken." -- Economist
Why do you think Utah is currently educating illegal aliens at reduced tuition rates. It is asserted that illegals are willing to take the jobs that Americans don't want. Voila! Problem solved.
They were in the front seat. They had not yet migrated to the back seat.
""I think it confirms what we expected all along, that Utahns believe nuclear power has to be part of the mix for the future," said Rep. Aaron Tilton, R-Springville. Tilton is a principal in Transition Power Development . . . "
A special interest groups being quoted as generalizing the Utah public opinion. I have to admit would be surprised if he didn't support nuclear power. Where would his job security be?
People should make their own opinions and not trust anything that is sent down through government. They should look for the true head of the coin as the Founding Fathers intended.
If you're waiting for the federal government to act, you'll be waiting for a long, long time.
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