Nuclear power
Summary
Considering the different types of nuclear power, it seems that thorium power is the one with the least problems. Here's a comparison:
Type of nuclear power | Problems if scaled up | ||
---|---|---|---|
Fuel scarcity | Weapons proliferation | Nuclear waste | |
Conventional nuclear power (status quo) | Problem | Low risk | Problem |
Conventional small nuclear reactors | Problem | High risk | Problem |
Uranium-238 breeder reactors Additional benefit: Uranium-238 reactors would make use of existing nuclear waste, which has been left over from decades of conventional nuclear power. | Abundant | High risk | Almost none |
Thorium-232 breeder reactors | Abundant | Low risk | Almost none |
Fusion (not viable yet) | Abundant | Low risk | Almost none |
^ For more details, follow these links in the leftmost column. |
Fuel scarcity
uranium.reserves
8.070 million tonnes uranium_natural
Global uranium mineral reserves, measured in energy units
The calculator understands "tonnes uranium_natural" as an energy unit. It's based on the fact that natural uranium is just 0.7% uranium-235 (the isotope we extract energy from). The rest is uranium-238, which isn't useful for energy unless we use breeder reactors.
Citation:
Uranium 2020: Resources, Production and Demand ('Red Book')
"The total recoverable identified resources to $260/kg U is 8.070 million tonnes U."
Citation:
Uranium 2020: Resources, Production and Demand ('Red Book')
"The total recoverable identified resources to $260/kg U is 8.070 million tonnes U."
nuclear_power_plant.efficiency
33%
Electrical output divided by the heat energy of the nuclear reactor
Nuclear power plants convert heat (from uranium-235, currently) into electricity. The process is approximately 33% efficient.
Citation: Key World Energy Statistics 2020 (IEA report) - Page 73 - Glossary - Nuclear
Citation: Key World Energy Statistics 2020 (IEA report) - Page 73 - Glossary - Nuclear
energy.tfc
9937.70 Mtoe/year
Global energy usage - total final consumption (TFC)
Includes: fuel (80.7%) + electricity (19.3%) AFTER it is generated.
Does not include the fuel used in generating electricity. See [energy.tes] for that.
Citation: "Key World Energy Statistics 2020" IEA
- Page 47 - Simplified energy balance table - World energy balance, 2018
Does not include the fuel used in generating electricity. See [energy.tes] for that.
Citation: "Key World Energy Statistics 2020" IEA
- Page 47 - Simplified energy balance table - World energy balance, 2018
- Conventional nuclear power uses only the uranium-235 part of the fuel. The uranium-238 becomes nuclear waste.
- If all the world's energy were to be produced this way, we'd run out of uranium-235 in just 4 years.
(see maths)
(calculation loading)
(more)~ We'd run out even faster if all nations were developed.
~ In either case, conventional nuclear power can't really meet global energy demands. Best case, it might be sufficient for baseload electricity only (which is a smaller part of total energy demand).
discussion Uranium can also be obtained from seawater, but doing that is so energy-intensive that we wouldn't "break even" unless we were to use both the U-235 and U-238 components.
- Breeder reactors can make use of the uranium-238
(by first converting it to plutonium-239)- But that comes with a lot of risks regarding nuclear weapons proliferation.
- Breeder reactors can also make use of thorium-232
(by first converting it to uranium-233)- Overall, a less weaponizable fuel.
- In terms of mining, thorium is about as abundant as uranium. It occurs naturally mixed with discussion Thorium is currently considered a by-product of rare-earth mining. But if thorium power were scaled up enough, maybe the other rare-earth elements would become the by-products? neodymium and other rare earth discussion Note that the term "rare earth" is a category of elements, named a long time ago when they were thought to be scarce. Turns out they are not as scarce as previously thought. There are 17 rare earth elements (REEs): neodymium, dysprosium, scandium, yttrium, lanthanum, cerium, praseodymium, promethium, samarium, europium, gadolinium, terbium, holmium, rebium, thulium, ytterbium, lutetium. metals, which we would need anyway for the magnets in electric vehicle motors.
- Thorium can also be found in ordinary soil in low concentrations. [ELABORATION needed]