France: Vive Les Nukes
Steve Kroft On How France Is Becoming The Model For Nuclear Energy Generation
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Play CBS Video Video Kroft's Reporter's Notebook Only On The Web: Steve Kroft discusses his "60 Minutes" segment on the renewed interest in nuclear power as a "green" energy source, and the safety issues involved.
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Video A Meltdown-Proof Reactor? Web Extra: MIT Professor Andrew Kadak explains to Steve Kroft how a Pebble Bed reactor works and why the technology is meltdown-proof.
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Video Vive Les Nukes! In Full: As the process to make energy continues to cause global warming, America may need to reconsider nuclear energy, like the French, who depend almost entirely on it. Steve Kroft reports.
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(CBS/AP)
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Interactive Eye On Energy Explore the production and consumption of energy in the U.S. Find out more about energy costs, and the use of fossil fuels, nuclear power and renewable energy sources.
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Interactive Alternative Energy Learn about the types of renewable energy that are used in the U.S. and the regions of the country considered to be most suitable for each kind.
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Fast Facts France Learn about the people, economy and history.
While the United States decided to store its nuclear waste, the French embraced the idea of reprocessing it. Instead of burying the spent fuel rods underground or underwater, they decided to build a massive plant on the coast of Normandy and recycle the used fuel and reuse it.
The high security facility stretches for two miles along the coast. All of France's spent nuclear fuel eventually ends up at the plant in pools of water.
After the fuel rods have cooled five years, the French recycle them to make new fuel. The process drastically reduces the amount of nuclear waste, but one of the by-products of this is high-grade plutonium that can be used for nuclear weapons.
"In our judgment, we have to recycle waste eventually. And recycling makes a lotta sense," Sell says.
"The big argument against reprocessing has been the fact that some high-grade plutonium that could be used in making a bomb could be stolen from the plant," Kroft remarks.
"And we're quite concerned about that as well. And that's why the president has pursued a policy that says we shall develop advanced recycling technologies that do not result in separated plutonium," Sell replies.
The United States is leading an international effort to develop the process, but large-scale, plutonium-free reprocessing is still decades off, and just one of a number of research projects the industry hopes will improve a still young technology.
"Five years ago, nuclear was dead. Now people are really buzzing about it," says MIT Professor Andrew Kadak, who is working on a new generation of nuclear technology, called the Pebble Bed reactor. Instead of conventional fuel rods, the uranium is contained in hundreds of thousands of graphite balls, which would make it safer than than conventional reactors.
"This type of reactor is very unique in the sense that there's no way to melt this down," Kadak explains. "The power inside each little pebble is so low that the temperatures here don't get high enough to reach the melting temperature of uranium, these reactors are exactly what people really wanna see, and that is no meltdowns."
For now the French are pushing an interim generation of nuclear reactors that are safer, simpler and more efficient than the ones that were built in the United States in the 1960's and 70's and they have partnered up with the American nuclear plant operator Constellation.
"It's difficult to fight against climate change. And at the same time to be against nuclear power because you have not a lot of ways to produce energy without CO2 emissions," says AREVA chief Anne Lauvergeon. "You have hydro, you have nuclear, you have wind and you have solar. But wind and solar are you know, temporary sources of energy. It works when you have wind, it works when you have sun. No sun, no wind, no energy. You don't want watch TV only when you have wind."
Produced By L. Franklin Devine
© MMVII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.


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See all 78 Comments"What percentage of that is derived from uranium that is mined within the national boundaries of France?"
Sorry i missed your question!
But I don't know mate i would say around 0% lol. From what i have read over the Areva website, Areva is the world leader in natural uranium production with around 15% of market share (a position which ensure the so-called 'independance' that we were talking about), they stopped mining in France lately and operate mostly in Canada, Australia, Niger and Kazakhstan.
http://www.iter.org/
But more importantly, in France it is a government program run by scientists. As that woman in charge there was saying, we are very very careful. No compromises.
Here it's in the hands of greedy and corrupt energy corporations whose only motive is profit. And why they are so enthusiastic about nuclear power? The report does not mention it, I guess Steve Kroft would not want to embarrass the government industry lobbyist he was interviewing, but new power plants would be built to a major extent on taxpayers dollars! Billions and billions of them. In France, given their situation, the country decided to invest in nuclear energy, for its people. Here it would be a government investment in corporate profits.
"This aggression will not stand, man"
Say we do build several nuke power plants, which will take about 10 years to bring on line. These are profit motivated corporations, but they are also utilities which can petition for rate increases on future power. So if the country is successful over the next 10 yeas in reducing it dependence on fossil fuels through conservation and innovation the nukes will come on line just about the time they are least needed. So the price of the energy from these plants will the most expensive power offered for the next 30 years.
As for the claim that the US is developing a recycling program for spent fuel that does not create weapons grade plutonium, the correct term for that statement is Vapor Ware.
Solve the waste problem first, and then consider building a new power plant. Have we learned nothing from our current nuke waste problem?
I would question the motives of anyone who would make a statement like the one above. That it came from the C.E.O. of an atomic energy plant operator makes me even more suspect.
Last Summer, there was a major power outage in Europe that was only briefly mentioned in the US media. What happens when the water runs low or out and the nukes cannot be cooled without killing off the fish in the rivers?
Nuclear is the way to go ... at least for now. We need nuclear as a short term fix %u2026 40-50 years. However, long term, solar, wind and maybe even ocean turbines need to be developed. Solar and wind technology are simply too expensive for an individual. To make solar and wind affordable it will be necessary to change our lifestyle, but only a little. Communities of the future (everything from small sub-divisions to cities) will need to first be conscious of their source of energy (solar/wind) and then planned and developed around that energy source.
Right now there is a town in Alberta, Canada with a population of about 17,500 that is entirely powered by solar energy. So, as you can see, it is not necessary to live in the sun-belt to utilize solar energy.
Nuclear is the way to go ... at least for now. We need nuclear as a short term fix %u2026 40-50 years. However, long term, solar, wind and maybe even ocean turbines need to be developed. Solar and wind technology are simply too expensive for an individual. To make solar and wind affordable it will be necessary to change our lifestyle, but only a little. Communities of the future (everything from small sub-divisions to cities) will need to first be conscious of their source of energy (solar/wind) and then planned and developed around that energy source.
Right now there is a town in Alberta, Canada with a population of about 17,500 that is entirely powered by solar energy. So, as you can see, it is not necessary to live in the sun-belt to utilize solar energy.
Cute but ... true ...
We%u2019ll be watching it all on a Reality TV show.
To the chap who mentioned John W. Gofman; why not look up Dr. Bill Wattenberg, a scientist, inventor, KGO radio host, & Lawrence Livermore Lab researcher, who also worked on the Apollo Mission & worked with Dr. Edward Teller. I'm sure he would punt-kick John W. Gofman any day of the week. (Newscasters, you should interview him sometime for some lively & informative discussions.)
Nuclear can be quite cheap, especially if we limited the endless, unending silly lawsuits by the lefties who hate mankind. And yes, open up Yucca Mountain, & look to reprocess the spent fuel rods. Wall Street loves nuclear, listen to Bob Brinker sometime on Moneytalk (radio).
Also, per the waste issue, "Dr. Bill", as he is known, says all the waste we have produced for the past 40 years could fit into ONE high school gymnasium!
It is true that the French have a positive attitude but they also have something else, as you alluded to: they have a desire for their energy policy to be effective rather than a tool for big corporations to make a profit. The French place their country as the priority -- not the profits of their friends at companies like Westinghouse, Bechtel, or GE to line their pockets by designing competing plant types. They standardized for safety and made sure that plants were uniformly regulated and corrected as necessary. The US needs to focus on the needs of their people, not the profits of the corporations. No wonder the French enjoy life! Vive le France! We should use them as our model.
I liked towards the end with the gentleman that had the small ball idea instead of the rods. Sounds like we may be on the right track for once instead of like in the 60's putting the cart before the horse as we tend to do with just about everything. No one looks ahead anymore, just at the now and the almighty dollar.
I liked towards the end with the gentleman that had the small ball idea instead of the rods. Sounds like we may be on the right track for once instead of like in the 60's putting the cart before the horse as we tend to do with just about everything. No one looks ahead anymore, just at the now and the almighty dollar.
His credentials are impeccable.
Ran the Lawrence Livermore Radiation Laboratory
from 1963 to 1970 on a $3.5 million grant per year for the Atomic Energy Commission under director Glen Seaborg. Was pro nuclear at the start.
Discovered 8 transuranium elements as graduate student while working on the Manhattan Project.
Holds the patent on two processes to separate Plutonium from spent fuel.
Discovered on uranium element.
Won the Stofurs award for being one of the top 25 cardiologists of the past quarter century.
When Bush's nuclear apologist was on 60 minutes last night and said no one has ever died from a nuclear power plant in the U.S., then read what Gofman has to say about what the real truth is.
Nuclear energy generating costs are not cheap.
The cost at the "door" for nuclear generated electricity is 11.1-14.5 cents/kwh. This includes all forms of cost structures while coal is 4.8-5.5 cents/kwh. Wind is 4.0-5.0 cents/kwh and now accounts for 1.4% of global electric demand.
By end of 2006, the world had accumulated 14,904 MWe of wind power generating capacity. This is expected to increase to 160,000 MWe generating capacity or over 14.9% of the world's electric demand by end of 2010.
Ms. Lauvergeon was not aware that solar-hydrogen power plants operate 24/7 due to the night-time gas-turbine combustion of stored hydrogen to generate electricity. In 2007, a 200 MWe solar-hydrogen power plant is being planned.
Dr. Warren Reynolds
Instead, they have made it convenient for the utilities to dictate to us large centralized power producing facilities like nuclear. We have been fortunate to only have had 3 Mile Island. All reactors of similar design were shut down in 1979 while the cause of the accident was being investigated.
Now the government wants to build 30-50 new reactors and become even more dependent on nuclear.The current fleet of 103 commercial reactors were designed for 30 years of operation, most of which have exceed that life span.
We are moving into uncharted territory with designs that wern't meant to operate past 30 years. One accident or terroist act at one of these aged reactors will bring the industry to screaching halt.
Instead, we should be funding wind, solar and conservation with every dollar we can throw at it. Ocean Power Wave Technology estimates that we can provide all of our electical needs by harvesting just 2% of the stored energy in the ocean.
Within one year, LED lighting will be available for home use that uses 1/15 of the energy that an incandescent light uses. Austarlia just banned the incandescent light. Replacing one incandescent light bulb in every Ameican home with a compact flourescent bulb would save 16 Billion in electric bills.
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