• optional@sh.itjust.works
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    20 days ago

    If it’s such a non issue, how come we still don’t have a single long term storage facility for spent nuclear fuel in the world? After more than 70 years of nuclear energy production.

        • AceOnTrack@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          19 days ago

          In general, one should not look at what happens in the USA and use it as a basis of reality for the rest of the world.

          Weird ass country full of whackjobs who dedicate their entire lives into finding the worst possible solutions to problems nobody else but them have created for themselves.

          • optional@sh.itjust.works
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            2 days ago

            I totally agree with you, especially in the second part where you’re talking about the US being a weird ass country full of wackjobs.

            But that doesn’t mean that we in the other countries aren’t a bunch of wackjobs either. We might not be as totally wack as you are right now, but that’s just a matter of past or future. Just so you know: We already found the worst possible solution, so you don’t have to find it for yourself, you can learn from us and choose another path.

      • optional@sh.itjust.works
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        19 days ago

        Which is still not operational, just like the dozens of other potential storages, we started building just to find out last minute that they are not suitable. Or even better, those we started using just to find out they were not suitable to begin with later. I’m curious to read how many billions it will cost to retreive the waste from Onkalo in 30 years when we’ve learnt that it’s also not safe for the next million years.

        • zalgotext@sh.itjust.works
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          19 days ago

          “not operational” as in “construction is not complete”, sure, but they were able to start testing at that facility in 2024, and it will be complete and ready for full operational use in 2026. Just because other storage facilities didn’t work out in the past doesn’t mean new ones are doomed as well. This project has been in development for a few decades now, and they’re learning from all those previous mistakes.

          Edit: where in the Yucca Mountain article does it say it’s “not a suitable site”, as you imply? I’m reading the exact opposite in multiple places, and it seems like the halt of operations/construction there was due to political pressure and local sentiment, not because of any safety risks.