View Poll Results: Should Australia build a Nuclear power station?

Voters
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  • Yes

    122 64.89%
  • No

    55 29.26%
  • Unsure

    11 5.85%
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Thread: Nuclear Power - debate / poll

  1. #161
    JDNSW's Avatar
    JDNSW is offline RoverLord Silver Subscriber
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    Quote Originally Posted by Zambian View Post
    I may be wrong but isn't there an old nuke power station already in Aussie, somewhere outside Sydney.
    Not Power - its a research reactor used mainly for producing medical isotopes and for a variety of research and industrial projects. It does not produce any power. It was shut down recently, and is being replaced by a new research reactor.

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  2. #162
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    Quote Originally Posted by JDNSW View Post
    Not Power - its a research reactor used mainly for producing medical isotopes and for a variety of research and industrial projects.
    John

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  3. #163
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    Quote Originally Posted by vnx205 View Post
    Your first comment is obviously spot on, but I disagree with your second point.
    There is also controversy about whether the extra cost of nuclear is acceptable, how much CO2 is produced in all the processes involved, how safe some of the new designs and some of the old designs are, the cost of decommissioning a reactor, whether weapons proliferation is a problem and possible a couple of other issues.
    Fair point, i should have worded it differenlty, the most controversial part (as i see it) is the waste.
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  4. #164
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    Quote Originally Posted by Ace View Post
    Its a controversial topic, however the only controversial part of it is the disposal of the waste, being a chemistry teacher i understand the problems and the life of such waste.


    As a chemistry teacher you'd probably be the person to ask, what is the life expectency of depleted Uranium rods?

  5. #165
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    Its never too late

    Quote Originally Posted by RobHay View Post
    The time to take action was probably 30 years ago and we still have done nothing.
    your right Rob if we had listened to "the great unwashed, the ratbag scientists, the radicals etc. 30 years ago we might not be in the predicament we are in now!

    These were the days when wearing these badges on anti nuclear protests would get you photographed by ASIO and if that was done often enough investigated by special branch!
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  6. #166
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    Quote Originally Posted by Dave110 View Post
    your right Rob if we had listened to "the great unwashed, the ratbag scientists, the radicals etc. 30 years ago we might not be in the predicament we are in now!

    These were the days when wearing these badges on anti nuclear protests would get you photographed by ASIO and if that was done often enough investigated by special branch!

    Perhaps if the great unwashed, smelt a bit better then the general public would have listened to them instead of running a mile.

  7. #167
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    It is beginning to look as if this debate has run its course. I don't think it is up to me to make that decision, but I wonder whether as the person who initiated this poll, grumpybastard also thinks it is time to follow this poll with a related one.

    I would be curious to see the results of a poll that asked:

    Did the AULRO debate change your mind about nuclear power?
    Yes
    No
    Maybe


    ...or something like that.
    What do you think?

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  8. #168
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    vnx205: No, I'm still sitting on the fence.

    I heard Dr Karl explain how to store nuclear waste and it sounded fair and resonable.

    If electricity from nuclear will cost 5 to 10 times more than current, why bother.

    I'm a firm believer in using our permanent nuclear source, the sun, it's just a matter of how to capture its output. I've seen a 'solar' plant in the Californian desert (full of mirrors) which apparently produced vast amounts of watts... and was not ugly, nor a blemish on the earth, or whatever, unlike the nuke plant on the coast south of Los Angeles.....

    we should all have (where there is endless sun, like where i live) solar capturing devices.... no real need, then, for other 'electricity generating devices'

    GQ

  9. #169
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    Quote Originally Posted by vnx205 View Post
    It is beginning to look as if this debate has run its course. I don't think it is up to me to make that decision, but I wonder whether as the person who initiated this poll, grumpybastard also thinks it is time to follow this poll with a related one.

    I would be curious to see the results of a poll that asked:

    Did the AULRO debate change your mind about nuclear power?
    Yes
    No
    Maybe


    ...or something like that.
    What do you think?
    Or it mighty be more informative (when the time comes) to ask:

    Did the AULRO debate change your mind about nuclear power?
    Yes - I now support
    Yes - I now oppose
    No change

    Having made these suggestions, I notice people are still voting so I may be jumping the gun a bit.

    Maybe a bit later.

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  10. #170
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    Quote Originally Posted by Quiggers View Post
    vnx205: No, I'm still sitting on the fence.

    I heard Dr Karl explain how to store nuclear waste and it sounded fair and resonable.

    If electricity from nuclear will cost 5 to 10 times more than current, why bother.

    I'm a firm believer in using our permanent nuclear source, the sun, it's just a matter of how to capture its output. I've seen a 'solar' plant in the Californian desert (full of mirrors) which apparently produced vast amounts of watts... and was not ugly, nor a blemish on the earth, or whatever, unlike the nuke plant on the coast south of Los Angeles.....

    we should all have (where there is endless sun, like where i live) solar capturing devices.... no real need, then, for other 'electricity generating devices'

    GQ

    There are solar farms in Australia, I know of at least one around Singleton, then there is the wind farms stattered around the country as well. The problem is the ongoing costs associated with such farms. Things like replacing panels every few years could get a tad pricy

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