Nuclear power seems like exactly what we want: a reliable, low-carbon source of huge amounts of energy. So why does it produce less of our electricity per capita now than it did decades ago?
A major reason: nuclear power suffers from very bad PR. In this episode of The Studies Show, Tom and Stuart discuss the ever-present safety fears surrounding nuclear power, the problems of nuclear waste, and the reasons that nuclear power is so drastically expensive. How many people died in the Chernobyl and Fukushima disasters, anyway? Could new reactor designs fix some of nuclear power’s problems? And is nuclear power so irredeemably unpopular that we should just give it up and move on to renewables?
The Studies Show is sponsored by the i, the UK’s smartest daily newspaper. You can get a half-price deal on digital subscriptions to the whole paper, including full access to Stuart’s columns and his subscriber-only science newsletter, by following this special podcast link.
The Studies Show is also sponsored by Works in Progress, an online magazine about science, technology, and human progress. The newest issue of Works in Progress is out now, with essays on topics like the discovery of the malaria vaccine and the surprising economics of copper.
Show Notes
* Fumio Kishida eats a Fukushima flounder; John Selwyn Gummer eats a British beef burger (with his daughter)
* Graph showing the plateau in nuclear power generation
* Hannah Ritchie on the safest sources of energy; review comparing health effects of different sources of electricity generation
* Jack Devanney on plutonium in Works in Progress; and on why the “Linear No-Threshold” model is “nonsense”
* Jason Crawford summary & review of Devanney’s book Why Nuclear Power Has Been a Flop
* Article on the wildly-varying cancer and death numbers suggested for Chernobyl
* UNSCEAR report; IAEA estimate of deaths; Alternative TORCH estimate; IARC estimate of cancers up to 2065
* IAEA analysis of Fukushima water and comparison to normal levels of radiation
* Report on deaths from the evacuation after the Tōhoku earthquake/tsunami
* Tom’s article in the i on Fukushima and nuclear power’s PR problem
* Article on spent fuels and waste from nuclear reactors
* Summary of “breeder” and “burner” reactors
* Hannah Ritchie on mining for low-carbon energy vs. mining for fossil fuels
* Article on the pollution produced from lignite mines
* Sceptical view of new nuclear plant technologies
* Graph of solar panel prices dropping over time
Credits
The Studies Show is produced by Julian Mayers at Yada Yada Productions.
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