Tuesday, December 21, 2021

Nuke Power

 In the past year, a lot of chatter has come up within the EU over the idea of saying natural gas/nuke power.....are sustainable, and should be supported.  

Chief reason for this chatter?  If you glean through all of the news outlets....this goes to two consequences....higher cost for electricity and potential blackouts.

If you live in Germany....you are accustomed now to the idea that there might be two or three extremely short blackouts each year.....usually 30 to 60 minutes in length and tied to a weather issue.  I had a conversation in the mid-1980s with a German who talked to the issue in the mid-1960s....that folks generally expected a couple of four to eight hour blackouts each year.  

The average German, if confronted today with a 8-hour blackout....would ask a lot of stupid questions.  Personally, I think the politicians and electrical companies would prefer to avoid stupid questions, and most likely have arrangements to buy power off the French or Polish electrical grid.....at higher prices.

If the EU were to ease (force) the German government into accepting nuke plants?  It'd be a shocker to some folks.  But here's the chief problem....there's so much money and effort tied into shutting down the German nuke plants....that if the EU says nuke power is 'clean' and agreeable.....it would cost a ton of money to revamp the plan and bring nuke power back onto the grid.  That extra cost?  It'd go right onto your electrical bill.  

So it's something you ought to view from a distance, and wonder how the EU will handle this for 2022. 

2 comments:

Bigus Macus said...

Nuclear power in France, Nuclear power is the largest source of electricity in France, with a generation of 379.5 TWh, or 70.6% of the country's total electricity production of 537.7 TWh,[1] the highest percentage in the world.[2]

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nuclear_power_in_France

Schnitzel_Republic said...

France has had a totally different view on nuke power for several decades. After Fukushima, the Germans went to the far extreme...that all nuke power was unsafe. They kept selling themselves that windpower could make up for all nuke power....then along came the other German concept....dumping coal power. They could have done one or the other, but having gone and trimmed/cut both (in terms of plans)....it's left a gap sitting there.

Zero doubt that buying 'dirty' energy from neighbors will be the future path for the Germans. They just don't realize it.