So far I have respected your input, and supported it - I believe Nuclear is a necessary stop gap (albeit hugely expensive). But using a media and film studies source in a nuclear science debate is a stretch. The article is quite clearly more about Jane Fonda and her activism than Nuclear issues. Please stick to the science, not opinion from an Irish Film studies media course.
What? Jane Fonda was literally at the forefront of the anti-nuclear movement (so was Sierra Club). That was literally the point of that reply. You had an anti-nuclear film and then Three Mile Island happens and everyone, much to the pleasure of Big Oil and Big Coal, jumped on the anti-nuclear bandwagon which effectively began the nuclear power moratorium in the United States years before Chernobyl. Chernobyl was just another "SEE!?!" moment which was the final straw that broke the camel's back: people didn't have to protest anymore; the executives simply pulled the plug on all nuclear ambitions. Illustrating the point (keep in mind that there's a roughly 5 year lag between starting construction and commissioning the reactor):
Explosive growth 1963-1976, slump in 1977 and 1978 due to 1973-1975 recession, big growth in 1979 (the year of TMI/China Syndrome), then falling until it hit a roughly flat line in 1986. Interest grew again in the 2000s because of "global warming" but interest plummeted again when access to natural gas became cheap and reliable. None of the reactors "under construction" in this picture were actually started as far as I know. Vogtle's two units are the only ones that will most likely be finished.
The science then and now was in support of nuclear power. The difference is that public opinion has swayed with the focus on greenhouse gas emissions. And on that note, all of the budgets for research for both fission, fusion, and waste reprocessing vanished at roughly the same time for the same reasons. Countries like Japan and France, joined by China later, didn't abandon nuclear and, look where we are today: A coal state (Wyoming) is bringing in Japanese engineers and money to build a 4th gen nuclear reactor because USA literally has a 40 year gap in nuclear knowledge because of TMI/China Syndrome.
It's a sad state of affairs, but at least the corner appears to have been turned...for now. If the plant going up in Wyoming turns out to be the only one, then the corner really hasn't been turned. Time will tell.
what some people such as yourself can't wrap their head around is
nuclear fission was developed as a weapon, not as an alternative energy source. fusion on the other hand, is being developed as an alternative energy source and poses 1,000 times less risk. since you
like iea:
Factually inaccurate. Fission was developed as a weapon (Trinity,
1945), then military energy (USS Nautilus,
1954, and Project 627, 1957), then civilian energy (Shippingport Atomic Power Station, 1958, and Obninsk Nuclear Power Plant,
1954).
Fusion was developed as a weapon (Ivy Mike,
1952) and because of the technical problems, it's never become a viable energy source to date because of engineering challenges related to containment.
Note the years: we detonated a fusion bomb (1952) two years before the first nuclear powered submarine launched/nuclear power plant was commissioned (1954). Making things explode is much easier than containing said explosion. Case in point: we were blasting rock long before we managed to create an internal combustion engine to harness the rapid increase in pressure of burning fuels to power drills to accomplish the same goal...less explosively. Trapping a very heavy metal (uranium) is much easier than a gas (deuterium) heated into a plasma state.
Also on that note: BWR are practically giant versions of what was found in Nautilus. It is not the best design for producing grid electricity we could come up. It was just the easiest to get done quick and cheap because the US government already knew what it was. Unlike submarines, grid power plants don't have the luxury of being surrounded by cold sea water; hence, accidents like Three Mile Island happened. Vogtle is the only 3rd gen nuclear power plant being built right now in the USA...and it literally has a passive heatsink to cool the reactor should a worst-case scenario unfold. This is something a submarine design would never comprehend, yet it's kind of a "duh" for grid installations.