seedload wrote:MSimon wrote:Ladajo and I agree on this (nuclear) one. Funny that.
Nuclear fuel cycle cartel is uber powerful, yet unable to build new plants.
Nuclear fuel cycle cartel will squash new competition, yet Hyperion exists.
Nuclear fuel cycle cartel will squash new ideas, yet HPM was researched at Los Alamos, won federal awards, and was successfully licensed.
Got it.
Look, obviously getting a new nuclear fission technology to market would be an exceedingly hard task requiring lots of money and lots of risk in the regulatory process, but I still don't buy the claim that it can't be done because it disrupts the currrent fuel cycle too much and that there would be a significant conspiracy against it based on this fact.
Truth is that it doesn't matter much anyway. We will be buying LFTRs from China in 15 years or so.
regards
It would not disrupt the current fuel cycle as much as it just doesn't fit into it. That is the real issue. The system is comfortbale and happy doing what it is doing. It has no real interest to do anything else. There is no incentive for the existing establishment to bring LFTR into the fold. Until there is a motivation to do so, it will struggle or have to force entry. Either way will require large external capital and time. Normally, this does not add up to a viable business endeavor.
I fully agree with you that LFTR is a viable and useful pursuit. I also agree with you that it is more likely that someone (more than likely foreign) outside of the existing uranium model will run with it.
The uranium fuel cycle infrastructure is just to ingrained and well tied to not just power, but weapons, research, medical, waste and all sorts of things that are not apparent on the surface.
The only way I see LFTR taking off here is with DOD independant buy in for facilities and remote site power. Once they do that, then DOE and industry will buy in. Then you may eventually see LFTR's popping up as community power sources. Again, having an idea how our system works, it is more likely our commercial types will by them from somewhere else and push for licensing and regulatory support to install them.
None of this will be fast nor cheap as yo may think it could be. And for that you can thank the Tree Hugging Consortium who have instilled a massive fear and ignorance of anything using the words atom, radioactive or nuclear into the general populace. It has been a well played IO War by them.