Ban Hazardous Coal Power Now!
US nuclear generation creates about 2,000 tons of high-level waste per year.
This worries people, and it is thus treated with lots of care, and its storage is the subject of much debate.
Coal generation, creates about 100 million tons. And it's exempt from being treated as hazardous waste!
Coal waste has approximately 20-30 parts per million of Uranium.
Lets do the maths then:
100 million tons x 25 parts per million = 2,500 tons of uranium from the coal industry per year.
So, the coal industry is generating more nuclear waste per year as the nuclear one, but they are just chucking it in landfills and the atmosphere.
And that's just counting Uranium, not other radionuclides - never mind greenhouse gases, Mercury and other toxins that last forever, unlike radioactive waste that has a half-life.
According to the DoE, there are 2-3 billion tons of coal finings already lying around near coal mines - enough that its worth them researching a way to turn them back into coal.
Getting us weaned from coal generation onto nuclear and other alternatives should be the focus of energy policy.
Friday, 19 April 2002
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
6 comments:
Glyn Moody: @kevinmarks @rasmusvuori @BernardKeane another thing we haven't started thinking about much yet is environmental cost of all that lithium...
via twitter.com
Rasmus Vuori: @kevinmarks @glynmoody @BernardKeane I agree. And about emissions I think we should also worry about NO2 and SO2, not only CO2
via twitter.com
Mark Yelland: @kevinmarks IMO anyone concerned abt nuke waste wld be silly to discount the potential of projects 1/2 @rasmusvuori @glynmoody @BernardKeane
via twitter.com
d 'O'yle: “@kevinmarks: @rasmusvuori @glynmoody
Compare to oil/gas/coal they are tiny. Coal waste is more radioactive epeus.blogspot.com/2002/04/ban-ha…” #Auspol
via twitter.com
d 'O'yle: liked this.
via twitter.com
Achal: mentioned this in Capture from the link from my previous tweet. (Quantity v/s Concentration) pubs.usgs.gov/fs/1997/fs163-….
via twitter.com
Post a Comment