Comment on Microsoft inks deal to restart Three Mile Island nuclear reactor to fuel its voracious AI ambitions
rainynight65@feddit.org 1 month agoThree Mile Island is the epitome of
conventional dirty energy
Comment on Microsoft inks deal to restart Three Mile Island nuclear reactor to fuel its voracious AI ambitions
rainynight65@feddit.org 1 month agoThree Mile Island is the epitome of
conventional dirty energy
Cethin@lemmy.zip 1 month ago
How so? It’s easy to say things so bold, but I’d like to hear your reasoning.
rainynight65@feddit.org 1 month ago
Nuclear falls under ‘conventional’ - the PWR design of TMI is one of the oldest and most common types of nuclear reactor. It’s just another way of creating steam to drive a turbine which then generates electricity.
Nuclear is also anything but clean. People love to call nuclear ‘clean’ because its low in emissions, but that’s ignoring the requirement for either safe storage of radioactive material or reprocessing thereof, as well as the emission of radioactivity in the water cycled through the reactor.
Cethin@lemmy.zip 1 month ago
Even if you call it conventional (I don’t think anyone would, but sure) it isn’t dirty. Dirty energy is stuff that releases pollution that isn’t contained. Nuclear releases water vapor and that’s all.
It is very clean. The radioactive material it produces that must be contained is very easy to contain safely. It really isn’t an issue. Check these videos out if you want to learn more about it. (The second video is another plant owned and operated by the same company that is being contracted here.)
youtu.be/4aUODXeAM-k?si=VhZ6LZJcA0HJsz2z
youtu.be/lhHHbgIy9jU?si=6Wn_1t-vNwSFYCMP
rainynight65@feddit.org 1 month ago
I love how the ‘Death rates per unit of electricity production’ graphic includes deaths from a 1975 dam break in China, when the dam in question up to that point hadn’t produced a single megawatt of electricity (and by the looks of it, still hasn’t to this day). At the same time it appears to conveniently ignore the increased mortality among uranium miners.