- Mar 29, 2004
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The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) acted today to put a hold on at least 19 final reactor licensing decisions – nine construction & operating licenses (COLS), eight license renewals, one operating license, and one early site permit – in response to the landmark Waste Confidence Rule decision of June 8th by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit.
Falling demand, cheaper alternatives and runaway nuclear costs had doomed their near term prospects well before the recent Court decision. Important though the Court decision is in modifying the NRC's historic push-the-power-plants-but-postpone-the-problems approach to generic safety and environmental issues, it cannot be blamed for ongoing descent into fiasco of the bubble once known as 'the nuclear renaissance'.'
http://www.sacbee.com/2012/08/07/4702489/nrc-freezes-all-nuclear-reactor.html
Nuke power is no longer economically viable.
Good riddance to these economic/environmental timebombs.
No talk of what they are going to do with the 76,000 tons of long term waste sitting around in unsafe unreinforced holding pools though.
For what? The power was never cheap. Nor were any of the promises ever fulfilled no matter how much taxpayer subsidies were thrown at the industry.
Might as well stick a fork in the 19th century concept of centralized big government/industry power distribution. It's done.
Falling demand, cheaper alternatives and runaway nuclear costs had doomed their near term prospects well before the recent Court decision. Important though the Court decision is in modifying the NRC's historic push-the-power-plants-but-postpone-the-problems approach to generic safety and environmental issues, it cannot be blamed for ongoing descent into fiasco of the bubble once known as 'the nuclear renaissance'.'
http://www.sacbee.com/2012/08/07/4702489/nrc-freezes-all-nuclear-reactor.html
Nuke power is no longer economically viable.
Good riddance to these economic/environmental timebombs.
No talk of what they are going to do with the 76,000 tons of long term waste sitting around in unsafe unreinforced holding pools though.
For what? The power was never cheap. Nor were any of the promises ever fulfilled no matter how much taxpayer subsidies were thrown at the industry.
Might as well stick a fork in the 19th century concept of centralized big government/industry power distribution. It's done.
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