Developing
Nuclear Power as Alternative
Energy
Many researchers believe that harnessing the
power of the atom in fission reactions is the most
significant alternative energy resource that we have, for
the fact of the immense power that it can
generate.
Nuclear power plants are very “clean-burning”
and their efficiency is rather staggering. Nuclear power
is generated at 80% efficiency, meaning that the energy
produced by the fission reactions is almost equal to the
energy put into producing the fission reactions in the
first place. There is not a lot of waste material
generated by nuclear fission—although, due to the fact
that there is no such thing as creating energy without
also creating some measure of waste, there is some. The
concerns of people such as environmentalists with regards
to using nuclear power as an alternative energy source
center around this waste, which is radioactive gases
which have to be contained.
The radiation from these gases lasts for an
extraordinarily long time, so it can never be released
once contained and stored. However, the volume of this
waste gas produced by the nuclear power plants is small
in comparison to how much NOx (nitrous oxide—that is, air
pollution) is caused by one day's worth of rush-hour
traffic in Los Angeles. While the radiation is certainly
the more deadly by far of the two waste materials, the
radiation is also by far the easier of the two to contain
and store. In spite of the concerns of the
environmentalists, nuclear power is actually
environmentally friendly alternative energy, and the risk
of the contained radiation getting out is actually quite
low. With a relatively low volume of waste material
produced, it should not be a difficult thing at all for
storage and disposal solutions for the long term to be
developed as technology advances.
The splitting of an atom releases energy in the
forms of both heat and light. Atomic power plants control
the fission reactions so that they don't result in the
devastating explosions that are brought forth in atomic
and hydrogen bombs. There is no chance of an atomic power
plant exploding like a nuclear bomb, as the specialized
conditions and the pure Plutonium used to unleash an
atomic bomb's vicious force simply don't exist inside a
nuclear power plant. The risk of a “meltdown” is very low.
Although this latter event has happened a couple of times,
when one considers that there are over 430 nuclear
reactors spread out across 33 nations, and that nuclear
reactors have been in use since the early 1950s, these are
rare occurrences, and the events of that nature which have
taken place were the fault of outdated materials which
should have been properly kept up. Indeed, if nuclear
energy could become a more widely accepted form of
alternative energy, there would be little question of
their upkeep being maintained. Currently, six states in
America generate more than half of all their electrical
energy needs through nuclear power, and the media are not
filled with gruesome horror stories of the power plants
constantly having problems.
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