Why the US needs Russian uranium

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  • čas přidán 4. 06. 2024
  • The Russia-Ukraine war is exposing a problem that doesn’t get that much coverage: the nuclear fuel supply chain. Back in March 2022, President Biden announced sanctions on Russia’s energy exports, oil and gas. But uranium was left off the list.
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    00:00 Introduction
    00:36 Russia-Ukraine War
    01:19 Why uranium?
    01:41 How uranium becomes nuclear fuel
    04:12 The future of nuclear power
    06:34 The debate behind nuclear power
    Russia is a huge player on the global stage when it comes to nuclear energy and particularly when it comes to the uranium supply chain.
    The US can pretty easily turn its back on Russian oil and gas and has and has not been able to pull the trigger on uranium because we rely on Russia for a significant chunk of our uranium.
    It supplies about 16% of the US’s uranium supply and upwards of that when it comes to the global uranium supply.
    Nuclear power is a highly contested energy source, but it still makes up about half of our carbon pollution free electricity in the U.S. Right now, the Biden administration is investing a lot of money and resources into its expansion, from extending the life span of old plants to building new ones.
    #Uranium #RussiaUkraineWar #NuclearEnergy #NuclearFuel #NuclearPower #Seeker #TheVerge
    Read more:
    The US Can’t Seem to Quit Russian Uranium
    www.theverge.com/2022/3/31/23...
    The US’s exclusion of uranium from energy sanctions “was very frustrating because we understand that this is part of the Russian war machine,” says Kostiantyn Krynytskyi, head of the energy department at Ukrainian environmental organization Ekodia.
    That uranium ore found at a Grand Canyon museum isn’t as scary as it sounds
    www.theverge.com/2019/2/19/18...
    We know that prolonged exposure to one of the decay products of uranium or radon gas in high concentrations increases your chance of getting cancer. But three buckets of ore sitting in a basement or in a closet is a lot different than somebody going down into a mine and working for 30 years mining uranium ore. It’s not just the dose rate, but it’s the total dosage you get is what determines your risk.
  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 1,4K

  • @Seeker
    @Seeker  Před rokem +68

    What material should we look into next?

    • @vorpalthefox
      @vorpalthefox Před rokem +46

      thorium

    • @justinpyle3415
      @justinpyle3415 Před rokem +3

      Kazak uranium, the largest exporter on earth, and why we actively pay our military competition when there are alternative sources

    • @Gabriel-of-YouTube
      @Gabriel-of-YouTube Před rokem +11

      antimatter

    • @alphaapple1375
      @alphaapple1375 Před rokem

      How about nuclear fusion? It creates energy by fusing hydrogen into helium under high pressure and temperature, which naturally occurs in the Sun. Scientists around the world have tried to find a way to power civilization that neither emits greenhouse gasses nor radioactive waste.

    • @djp1234
      @djp1234 Před rokem +4

      Titanium

  • @tomkelly8827
    @tomkelly8827 Před rokem +404

    As a Canadian, I can tell you that our reactors do need the enrichment process. No need to develop the types of fuels that can also power bombs. We have heavy water reactors and they burn natural, domestic uranium. We are the second biggest provider of Uranium in the world next to Khazakstan. Build your processing facility if you want light water reactor fuel. We have plenty of supply for the world. Build recycling into your process like France does and you will have less high level waste and so much more fuel on hand too!

    • @jeromedavis7816
      @jeromedavis7816 Před rokem +47

      This is a very misleading statement. While yes, canada doesn't use enriched uranium for it's reactors, it still uses depleted uranium "DU" not natural uranium ore. These reactors cannot operate on naturally occurring concentrations of each isotope and since DU is a byproduct of the enrichment process, enrichment is still a crucial part of the operation of these reactors and without enrichment these reactors would not work

    • @vancouvercomedyuncensoredv8240
      @vancouvercomedyuncensoredv8240 Před rokem +9

      CANDU!

    • @ronblack7870
      @ronblack7870 Před rokem

      @@jeromedavis7816 no you are making false statements. Candu reactors use natural uranium with .7% u 235 . they only use depleted uranium to help control startup but run on natural uranium. canada does no enrichment of uranium. one company imports DU from usa and processes into fuel bundles for use on startup of candu reactors,. the reactors absolutely can operate on natural uranium. or any number of fuels. such as spent fuel from light water reactors that are typically .9% u235 , or mixtures with plutonium or thorium.

    • @analyticalmindset
      @analyticalmindset Před rokem

      @@johnbaker867 you nailed it . America favors profit margins over everything. They war with countries over trade and financial interests .

    • @NIK-to3xs
      @NIK-to3xs Před rokem

      😅

  • @fukukforever
    @fukukforever Před rokem +207

    USA be like:- don't buy gas and oil from Russia or i will sanction you!!
    Also USA:- purchasing fertilizer and Uranium 😛 from Russia

    • @elitewavez4768
      @elitewavez4768 Před rokem

      That's not how it is but ok

    • @elitewavez4768
      @elitewavez4768 Před rokem

      Russia will be broke without the 🇺🇸

    • @eddedwards9879
      @eddedwards9879 Před rokem +2

      It’s more complicated. Do you really want Russia trying to find a Alternate fire for enriched uranium? I’m sure North Korea would be more than happy

    • @SportZFan4L1fe
      @SportZFan4L1fe Před rokem

      @@elitewavez4768 it is. US lifted Sanctions on Russian fertilizer because they found out they need it. They also lifted Sanctions on Russian Grain and Wheat. But they're calling it Ukrainean grain in mainstream media to keep the Pro-Ukraine narrative going. The dumb people in the West fall for it.

    • @amanjha5916
      @amanjha5916 Před rokem +21

      @@elitewavez4768 okay then, explain?

  • @NGabunchanumbers
    @NGabunchanumbers Před rokem +109

    Russia has a fuel called "remix" which is made basically entirely out of "nuclear waste" by burning nuclear waste in a fast-neutron breeder reactor. This breeder reactor takes stable uranium and converts it into plutonium, which can be 'burned' both in a breeder reactor or in a conventional reactor. Breeder reactors not only produce more plutonium than they use, they also produce power. It's honestly a bit overpowered.
    According to the RosAtom, the Russian nuclear energy company, if the entire world switched to nuclear overnight without changing energy demand, AND we stopped mining uranium all together, we would still have enough fuel to run the entire world for ~325 years.

    • @dan1_1
      @dan1_1 Před rokem +12

      rosatom based

    • @davideddy2672
      @davideddy2672 Před rokem +10

      @@dan1_1 What do you want, a promise from Boris or Biden?

    • @gehcontent5618
      @gehcontent5618 Před rokem

      325 years.....is there a source for the statement?

    • @sotch2271
      @sotch2271 Před rokem +7

      @@gehcontent5618 rosatom

    • @dan1_1
      @dan1_1 Před rokem +4

      @@gehcontent5618 rosatom based again

  • @eatingsfun
    @eatingsfun Před rokem +201

    Lol sitting here in Australia with 31% of the worlds known uranium reserves makes me feel uneasy.

    • @spicychad55
      @spicychad55 Před rokem +132

      Prepare yourself for some democracy!

    • @ParameterGrenze
      @ParameterGrenze Před rokem +25

      China knows.

    • @luke4916
      @luke4916 Před rokem +61

      Haha time to be liberated guys!! *US national anthem intensifies*

    • @spicychad55
      @spicychad55 Před rokem +15

      @@luke4916 *DOOM MUSIC INTENSFIYING*

    • @985476246845
      @985476246845 Před rokem +28

      and yet Australia has one of the most CO2 intensive energy in the developed world

  • @DGG.85
    @DGG.85 Před rokem +103

    Well I’m definitely not using delta, the amount of times that commercial is on this video is ridiculous

    • @dustieboots546
      @dustieboots546 Před rokem +12

      Lol just use vanced...

    • @CanadianBakin42O
      @CanadianBakin42O Před rokem +2

      @@dustieboots546 that's just going to stop working in a year and a half at best, so you can quit telling people to use something that's not going to work in a very shortcoming time.

    • @CanadianBakin42O
      @CanadianBakin42O Před rokem +1

      @@dustieboots546 the developer, Xfin, got a cease and desist letter.

    • @hansolowe19
      @hansolowe19 Před rokem +7

      @@CanadianBakin42O there are already replacements. For the moment I am still using vanced, works just fine.

    • @MrPwnageMachine
      @MrPwnageMachine Před rokem +2

      I’m premium. Said I never would but they shoved too many ads at me 😓

  • @ParkingSandwichify
    @ParkingSandwichify Před rokem +18

    I want some of dat Canadian uranium

  • @wycliffe_ndiba
    @wycliffe_ndiba Před rokem +34

    "You guessed it, Russia" will be in my mind for a bit
    Any Kenyan in here who hasn't voted yet, stations are still open...

    • @noimnotarobotcanubeleiveit7024
      @noimnotarobotcanubeleiveit7024 Před rokem +3

      its not who votes that counts, its who counts the votes

    • @kojakgichigi6733
      @kojakgichigi6733 Před rokem

      US is war criminal not Russia.. from Nakuru

    • @Peter-ob6ue
      @Peter-ob6ue Před rokem

      The Olympic Dam mine in the Australian state of South Australia has the world's largest proven reserves of Uranium

  • @TheRabid0ne
    @TheRabid0ne Před rokem +26

    Why not Canadian uranium? We’ve got just as much if not more.
    ;)

    • @j1r2000
      @j1r2000 Před rokem +3

      please people buy our rocks we even have a city named after it PLEASE

    • @shawnfoogle920
      @shawnfoogle920 Před rokem +2

      no. Im Canadian we need to keep it for whenever we start to build nuclear power plants

    • @7stiano123
      @7stiano123 Před rokem

      They are weird people

    • @zaczane
      @zaczane Před rokem

      @@shawnfoogle920 but you don’t have the population the USA does

    • @justinpyle3415
      @justinpyle3415 Před rokem

      Because military contractors are russian assets who lobby the legislature to do their bidding by buying overpriced uranium from a military competitor.

  • @XenXenOfficial
    @XenXenOfficial Před rokem +71

    6:25 sigh. I'm sorry but you're contributing to the issue. Meltdown threats are WAAAAAAAAAAAAYYYYYYYYY lower than what it was like when we first started out with places like Chernobyl. We're not in the 70s-80s anymore lol Even nuclear waste management has pretty much been solved with virtually indestructible containers and 2000ft+ of earth put on top of it (Yucca Mountain nuclear waste repository).

    • @spoobfish1273
      @spoobfish1273 Před rokem

      Umm your data is incorrect. I can name twelve from the past decade...

    • @XenXenOfficial
      @XenXenOfficial Před rokem +7

      @@spoobfish1273 It's better for the enviroment, and for us. We can output more power and power even more homes if we just migrate to nuclear, but peoples unnecessary fears stop us from progressing as a civilization.

    • @graham1034
      @graham1034 Před rokem +4

      @@spoobfish1273 12 meltdowns from the past decade?

    • @asdf3568
      @asdf3568 Před rokem

      Fukushima. And Ukraine is now shelling a nuclear power plant and the west doesn't care.

    • @garyjenson8262
      @garyjenson8262 Před rokem +2

      @@graham1034 yeah I wonder what they do for a living? Coal miner?😆

  • @delta-romeo0263
    @delta-romeo0263 Před rokem +17

    Fun fact: the job with the highest fatality rate in world is being an Iranian Nuclear Scientist

    • @elgaatooo
      @elgaatooo Před rokem +9

      And ironically radiation has got nothing to do with those fatalities lol.

    • @AdamAdamHDL
      @AdamAdamHDL Před rokem

      The Americans and Israelis keep blowing them up.

    • @dan1_1
      @dan1_1 Před rokem +7

      @@elgaatooo its really funny to see nuclear powers stopping other countries nuclear programs hahaha

    • @germanher7528
      @germanher7528 Před rokem

      That's why they get paid on big breasted women

  • @megagene
    @megagene Před rokem +3

    Nice to see Matt again. I remember when he was a regular host on this channel back in the day.

  • @LinkeHarryB
    @LinkeHarryB Před rokem +32

    I guess the US should perhaps invest in reprocessing, breeder reactors, and developing a viable thorium fuel cycle. That would really help with energy independence

    • @digger105337
      @digger105337 Před rokem +5

      These climate nut bags will have us huddled around a candle soon. Never mind breader reactors and thorium. Solar panels and windmills, were gonna look like 18th century Holland.

    • @LinkeHarryB
      @LinkeHarryB Před rokem +3

      @@digger105337 Nothing wrong with those. 18th century solar panels were beautiful to look at! Nice and green.

    • @niallcnoc9646
      @niallcnoc9646 Před rokem +5

      Or they could stop starting wars

    • @paulbedichek5177
      @paulbedichek5177 Před rokem

      The US is by far the most advanced nuclear nation, we are proceeding with almost every type, and all nuclear power is based on US inventions.
      We still don't do reprocessing, spent fuel is easy to store,we are proceeding with fast reactors but Natrium uses five times less U ore and leaves five times less waste, you could leave no waste with reprocessing but we want to sell these to the world and reprocessing could lead to proliferation.
      Eu already reprocesses and they are in the worst energy crisis, people who are against nuclear just use spent fuel as an excuse, they are coal and Russian interests.
      Also,as it stands now,reprocessing is expensive and raw U is extremely cheap and abundant, we have enough to last for 20 trillion years.

  • @jerolvilladolid
    @jerolvilladolid Před rokem +10

    Did you know that nuclear power plants are just giant steam pumps? The “smoke” you see is just smoke from water boiling. Since all nuclear wizardry is dedicated to doing one thing, boil water. And have the steam from the water turn the turbines for electricity.

    • @thoisin
      @thoisin Před rokem

      U need heavy water to cool d systemat too

    • @KGDHMF
      @KGDHMF Před rokem

      Just a giant kettle that your trying to boil water and try to turn a generator with some chemistry.

    • @g..s..s..
      @g..s..s.. Před rokem

      I'll give you a hint Einstein, it ain't smoke you are seeing.
      At 212 degrees ferrenheit water changes states from a liquid to a gas; this is called latent heat. Steam is invisible. The "smoke" you are seeing is water vapor changing states back from a gas to a liquid as it cools from the ambient temperature of the atmosphere.

  • @tonys.1946
    @tonys.1946 Před rokem +19

    Nuclear is very safe, when everything is done properly and facilities are maintained.

    • @SchwarzerHirsch
      @SchwarzerHirsch Před rokem +2

      Yes maybe, but please look at the situation in Ukraine now - npp's can easily become a war (or terrorism) target and no Westen country is safe. This socio-cultural factor should be part of the equation if we want to calculate safety of nuclear

    • @Knight_Kin
      @Knight_Kin Před rokem

      @@SchwarzerHirsch Oh please, this is no different than any other source of energy in that regard. Even the solar panels need to be strip mined for materials and take an incredible amount of energy to produce them to the point they are never truly net positive on the energy scale or are really environmentally friendly. So we stop using them? No, we need these sources of energy. Everybody thinks everything is Chernobyl. The war in Ukraine isn't going to result in a nuclear disaster because it would have already happened. It's just not that 'sensitive' even with shelling and bombs going off. Deliberate sabotage might cause problems but the bigger concern is the Dam along the Dniper and not the nuclear plant. If THAT breaks.......

    • @christianzilla
      @christianzilla Před rokem

      ...for 100,000 years.

    • @lukasvrabec5783
      @lukasvrabec5783 Před rokem +3

      Actually Czernobil happneed just because total, really total lack of uderstanding whats going on inside reactor together with breaking and overpowering several safety features and protocols. AKA - there will be no meltdown if thery will not break several rules, even if they will masivelly ignore maintanance.

    • @christianzilla
      @christianzilla Před rokem

      @@lukasvrabec5783 Fukushima Daiichi. Earthquake. Tsunami. Meltdowns.

  • @ohdearearthlings1879
    @ohdearearthlings1879 Před rokem +14

    Australia possesses around 30% of the world's known recoverable uranium reserves. This island nation is the 20th-largest economy in the world and has stable legal and political systems
    The third-largest player in the global uranium market is Russia, with about 9% of the world's uranium (it's actually tied with No. 4, Canada).

    • @paulbedichek5177
      @paulbedichek5177 Před rokem

      Austria is incredibly backwards, imagine a law that says no nuclear power, the only other country as ignorant is Austria.

    • @hajnalattila795
      @hajnalattila795 Před rokem

      Give back to the island to the original owners!!so sfup!!!

    • @hajnalattila795
      @hajnalattila795 Před rokem

      Yo earthlings??what happened to your brain??you and your English murderes make a biggest genocide in the world!!!

    • @hajnalattila795
      @hajnalattila795 Před rokem

      Any questions??4 what do you think??

    • @ohdearearthlings1879
      @ohdearearthlings1879 Před rokem

      @@hajnalattila795 The original owners own most of the uranium.

  • @derbigpr500
    @derbigpr500 Před rokem +4

    Not just uranium...but titanium (which is crucial for any military related stuff), lithium, nickel, lot's of other raw materials.

  • @diybotic
    @diybotic Před rokem +57

    Your completed fuel bundle in your flow chart is from a CANDU reactor which doesn’t require any enrichment. Also, Canadian reactors are fuelled by 100% domestic uranium. Uranium in Canada is mined by Cameco which is the largest uranium company in the world. The usa just needs to transition to North American supply, no issue, will just take a few years. Yellowcake is a very small part of the process too by the way.

    • @rickintexas1584
      @rickintexas1584 Před rokem +3

      I’d be a lot happier buying from Canada than from a lot of other countries.

    • @ryanjones7681
      @ryanjones7681 Před rokem +2

      I'm pretty sure ALL uranium needs enrichment to be used.
      Otherwise the radioactivity wouldn't be high enough to cause the reactions needed

    • @mrcmoes
      @mrcmoes Před rokem +3

      @@ryanjones7681 the Candu reactors can use natural, non enriched uranium. Using deuterium as the moderator allowing them to use it, and other fuels such as spent enriched fuel.

    • @Peter-ob6ue
      @Peter-ob6ue Před rokem +1

      The world's largest proven reserves of Uranium are at Olympic Dam in the Australian state of South Australia they are also the purest.

    • @VictorLarsen-fy9ls
      @VictorLarsen-fy9ls Před rokem

      Cameco campaign deals with extraction and conversion, but not enrichment. It's just a commodity campaign.

  • @fishsmiddy1048
    @fishsmiddy1048 Před rokem +6

    Australia has tonnes of Uranium. Why not use that?

    • @firdaus99031
      @firdaus99031 Před rokem

      Even most of australian electricity themselves come from coal, why do you think they can use uranium, let alone export it to the US

    • @jahlahbrine843
      @jahlahbrine843 Před rokem

      They just prefer using Canada and russia for enough power in the future and weapons. If Australia then probably it won't be enough power if there is war break out or the power is not strong enough in the future.

  • @AScY83
    @AScY83 Před rokem +2

    I really liked the inclusion of bloopers at the end!

  • @lazylasagna5181
    @lazylasagna5181 Před rokem +10

    As an Australian I know we produce a massive amount of uranium ore

    • @REVOLUTIONS51
      @REVOLUTIONS51 Před rokem +3

      Yeah, Russia is only the 4th producer after Canada Australia and Kazakhstan. And even if we consider Kazakh uranium under Russia's control it would still only control less than ⅓ of the uranium reserves and about 40% of the active production, so... This even with the usage of reprocessed or mox fuel.

    • @greyfells2829
      @greyfells2829 Před rokem

      This video is titled and presented very misleadingly, not surprised the comments are either people pointing this out, or falling for the video's rhetoric and automatically assuming we need to find an alternative to Uranium.

    • @Peter-ob6ue
      @Peter-ob6ue Před rokem

      Yeah Olympic Dam mine I believe

    • @VictorLarsen-fy9ls
      @VictorLarsen-fy9ls Před rokem

      It's just raw material.

    • @user-ou6jj8bx9f
      @user-ou6jj8bx9f Před rokem

      @@REVOLUTIONS51 I will probably upset you a lot, but Uranus deposits in Canada are 60% owned by RosAtom.)))

  • @loonyt22
    @loonyt22 Před rokem +52

    Thorium reactors would the smart option for the West. Australia, India, US and Norway have the largest reserves, and represent over 75% of global reserves. Thorium reactors are significant less likely to meltdown. The only issue for some nations is that Thorium cannot be used to make nuclear weapons.

    • @Silent_Steel
      @Silent_Steel Před rokem +7

      Thorium would be the future fuel... assuming science can unlock the last steps to making an efficient reactor

    • @Bouncing1c
      @Bouncing1c Před rokem +2

      That I not true. You can stop the reaction mid process to get weapons out of it. Thorium is also not as studied making it far less effective.

    • @richardschaeffer3204
      @richardschaeffer3204 Před rokem +1

      What do you think voyager 1 and 2 use for fuel? Nuclear is as green as you can get.

    • @svanimation8969
      @svanimation8969 Před rokem +2

      @@richardschaeffer3204 it contains plutonium?

    • @mrcmoes
      @mrcmoes Před rokem

      @@Bouncing1c what weapons can you get out of it?

  • @Waldemarvonanhalt
    @Waldemarvonanhalt Před rokem +6

    It's worth pointing out that the insane energy density of U-235 still makes it absolutely worth refining as far as return-on-energy-invested is concerned. You'd need a log scale to depict it relative to coal or oil's energy density.

    • @paulbedichek5177
      @paulbedichek5177 Před rokem +1

      About 20 million times more energy dense, and oil is much more energy dense than solar panels or windmills,soalr panel waste is an environmental disaster while nuclear waste is safely stored or recycled.

    • @paulbedichek5177
      @paulbedichek5177 Před rokem +2

      20,000,000 times as energy dense as diesel.

  • @ShowsOn
    @ShowsOn Před rokem +12

    "U235 is easily split during fission - releasing tonnes of energy." Einstein saw what you did there.

  • @donrumata2274
    @donrumata2274 Před rokem +4

    McCain once said, "Russia is agas station masquerading as acountry" The gas station put the whole of Europe on all fours.

    • @selbalamir
      @selbalamir Před rokem +1

      And ultimately massively sped up the departure from dependency….

  • @DougOfTheAntarctic
    @DougOfTheAntarctic Před rokem +5

    You're telling me that Iran can concentrate uranium isotopes but the U.S. has forgotten how?

    • @radicaIarchitect
      @radicaIarchitect Před rokem

      Its about quantity. The US consumes massive amounts of energy and they need people that can run that

  • @shannonblack3513
    @shannonblack3513 Před rokem +19

    I don't understand the reliance on Russian uranium when the largest deposits of uranium ore are in Australia? Would it not make more sense to base your nuclear supply chain with an ally?

    • @exiled_aussie
      @exiled_aussie Před rokem +2

      It is kazakhstan that's currently the largest producer of yellow cake and they are the cheapest to.

    • @noimnotarobotcanubeleiveit7024
      @noimnotarobotcanubeleiveit7024 Před rokem

      ozzys cant stand seppos.

    • @hankjones3527
      @hankjones3527 Před rokem +1

      That's my two cents. We (Australia) should stop digging up coal and start exporting uranium to allies.

    • @garyjenson8262
      @garyjenson8262 Před rokem

      Because Russia doesn't care about worker safety or the environment. Think blood diamons but uranium.

    • @firdaus99031
      @firdaus99031 Před rokem +1

      Time to bring some democarcy to australia

  • @A.Filthy.Casual
    @A.Filthy.Casual Před rokem +2

    Thorium is better to begin with, but this is just one more reason to convert-- until fusion gets worked out anyhow.

  • @danielpetrucco6513
    @danielpetrucco6513 Před rokem +1

    5:10 she talks about smaller reactors for more efficient fuel.. for equal power output.. but smaller cooling tower is shown in the video:))

  • @Bloated_Tony_Danza
    @Bloated_Tony_Danza Před rokem +53

    This is a genuinely stupid problem to have, think about it. It's like waiting for your rude neighbor to give you a ride to work while your car is sitting in your driveway, all because you forgot how to drive...Who knew letting other people do everything for you would leave you unskilled and unhelpful!

    • @snowsnow4231
      @snowsnow4231 Před rokem +23

      yeah but before that you place an anti tank mine under your neighbor door. Just to ensure your own safety. And place some barbed wire. Even though he asked you not to do so for 20 years. And then you also convince other neighbor to syphon his water, electricity and gas, just because why not.
      You are not telling the whole story buddy

    • @derbigpr500
      @derbigpr500 Před rokem +7

      Except you're the rude neighbor getting rides from your nice neighbor who you're only nice to when you need a ride, otherwise you stab them in the back, talk crap about them behind their back, and do everything in your power to make their life miserable.

    • @Star-xx5zr
      @Star-xx5zr Před rokem

      @@derbigpr500 amen

    • @bojrio7585
      @bojrio7585 Před rokem

      @@derbigpr500 Really , big imaginations 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

    • @lolHERALDlol
      @lolHERALDlol Před rokem

      @@derbigpr500 fax 🤣🤣

  • @charlespk2008
    @charlespk2008 Před rokem +71

    We do need so much more nuclear.
    The idea we can’t tap into this country’s massive reserves of it is absurd.

    • @EarthsGeomancer
      @EarthsGeomancer Před rokem +4

      The Navajos should take one for the team.

    • @o-wolf
      @o-wolf Před rokem +1

      @@EarthsGeomancer they already did u genocidal lackeys

    • @charlespk2008
      @charlespk2008 Před rokem +14

      @@EarthsGeomancer ther are safe methods to Minnie the ore, and to imagine that we could not do that is just insulting.

    • @specialopsdave
      @specialopsdave Před rokem +3

      Or just import it from Austrailia, they have a boatload

    • @ThePorkchop1787
      @ThePorkchop1787 Před rokem +1

      @@specialopsdave Or Canada just to the north. They have some of the highest grade deposits

  • @olegc6209
    @olegc6209 Před rokem

    useful video thank you

  • @CultureoftheWorld
    @CultureoftheWorld Před rokem

    Informative

  • @eds6889
    @eds6889 Před rokem +4

    Nope, plenty of uranium in Canada.

  • @kristensorensen2219
    @kristensorensen2219 Před rokem +66

    #241👍The US needs to reprocesse reactor fuel like France does. As it is today we have tons of spent fuel in pools next to existing reactors. That spent fuel is going to waste and keeping it around is stupid!! Mining new Uranium is a looser! Why is reprocessing spent fuel off the table? Who decided it was not for the US? More in-depth people!!

    • @zaczane
      @zaczane Před rokem +6

      especially since leaving spent fuel rods in salt water, along with a few other chemicals become 50% reusable after 60-90 days.
      I messing that up slightly, but that’s the general gist of how it works.

    • @jmpattillo
      @jmpattillo Před rokem +4

      It was shut down in the wake if the TMI incident.

    • @Cynthia_Cantrell
      @Cynthia_Cantrell Před rokem +7

      The reason spent nuclear fuel isn't reprocessed here in the US is that it is so much cheaper to use fresh fuel. A google search will lead you to papers explaining that.

    • @tigoes
      @tigoes Před rokem

      Depleted uranium is not going to waste, its going into munition and is being thrown on countries around the world.

    • @dustin1481
      @dustin1481 Před rokem

      Reason why fuel reprocessing is not really done is bc its expensive

  • @Jonathan-uq3zu
    @Jonathan-uq3zu Před rokem

    Where did you find the uranium ore?

  • @Acid31337
    @Acid31337 Před rokem +1

    When money isn't scarce, everything else is scarce.

  • @Sixeye_
    @Sixeye_ Před rokem +3

    Get it from Australia. "Australia has the world's largest Economic Demonstrated Resources of uranium and is the world's third largest uranium producer.".

    • @chasindigo
      @chasindigo Před rokem +5

      Australia has the rock, not the enrichment process.

    • @0374studio
      @0374studio Před rokem

      ​@@chasindigo true

    • @0374studio
      @0374studio Před rokem

      Ok, go, try to asking Australian people (government) to be so kind.
      Digging ore, developing uranium, buying it, shipping it...

    • @exiled_aussie
      @exiled_aussie Před rokem

      @@chasindigo we have SLX own GLE who are working on the 3ed advanced enrichment process that uses lasers not centrifuges. Worth checking out.

  • @simialogue
    @simialogue Před rokem +5

    Hmm. Russia produces around 8% of the world's uranium. The U.S.'s largest friendliest neighbour to the north produces 27%.

    • @marshalljulie3676
      @marshalljulie3676 Před rokem

      Maybe because Russia has produced more nuclear weapons than any other countries and they produce more uranium safer faster since know how is everything.

    • @jahlahbrine843
      @jahlahbrine843 Před rokem

      They choose Russian one because I think it was more effective than Canada.

    • @TheKinoGo
      @TheKinoGo Před rokem

      Nuclear power plants require a certain fuel

  • @Cosmonaut_Devin
    @Cosmonaut_Devin Před rokem +1

    What happens if you touch uranium ore without gloves? Because I have before… oops

  • @amorrar1
    @amorrar1 Před rokem +1

    interesting doc. Thank you. Nuclear seems like the way to go

  • @mrkokolore6187
    @mrkokolore6187 Před rokem +14

    The oceans of the world could be a nearly unlimited source of uranium.

    • @TheAquaticMandolin
      @TheAquaticMandolin Před rokem +1

      I'm curious. I'm all for modern nuclear but please elaborate.

    • @ritvikg
      @ritvikg Před rokem +4

      @@TheAquaticMandolin uranium is found in sea water in traces, but it's extraction isn't viable.

    • @7stiano123
      @7stiano123 Před rokem

      Keys

    • @mrkokolore6187
      @mrkokolore6187 Před rokem

      @@TheAquaticMandolin There are billions of tons of uranium dissolved in sea water. Scientists have already extracted small amounts of it before so its not just theory.

    • @joshuaerkman1444
      @joshuaerkman1444 Před rokem +2

      And more importantly an actually unlimited source of fresh water.

  • @ritvikg
    @ritvikg Před rokem +4

    You people need to spend some on marketting! Being a 5M channel, you get very few views despite of quality content!

  • @parkerpatterson1
    @parkerpatterson1 Před rokem

    This should be very interesting!

  • @missano3856
    @missano3856 Před rokem

    This is quite possibly the most supplemented video I've ever watched about nuclear power.

  • @climatehero
    @climatehero Před rokem +3

    At the behest of the US, the "Uranium capital" of the world at Canada's Elliot Lake was shut down.

  • @entropyachieved750
    @entropyachieved750 Před rokem +3

    There is plenty of Uranium in Australia. Have at it, we dont use it here...

  • @Abloutions
    @Abloutions Před rokem +1

    Canada has the world's largest deposits of high-grade uranium with grades of up to 20% uranium, which is 100 times greater than the world average. In 2018, Canada produced 6,996 tonnes of uranium, all from mines in northern Saskatchewan. Nearly 85% of Canada's uranium production is exported.

    • @jeanmanson444
      @jeanmanson444 Před rokem

      YEAH I FORGOT ABOUT CANADA…BUT THEN CANADA IS NOT “IN” THE USA.

  • @OshinAttari
    @OshinAttari Před rokem +1

    In Iran, there are several large uranium mines in Yazd, Hormozgan and Kerman provinces, but the government never talks about their size, it's only said that Russia and China share in those mines, and Russia also buys enriched uranium from Iran.

    • @nomadundercover3018
      @nomadundercover3018 Před rokem

      And Russia buys almost all its uranium from Kazakhstan, thens ells it abroad. Canada produces 10% of global uranium supply at 4693 tons while Russia produces 2635 tons, meaning Russia produces 5-6% of the global uranium supply. Not very impressive.

  • @benburton3496
    @benburton3496 Před rokem +5

    Get it from Australia, we make 47% worlds supply but can't build a nuclear power station

  • @blcstriker9052
    @blcstriker9052 Před rokem +64

    Would we be able to avoid the need to use Russian uranium if future reactors utilized thorium instead? Who would be the primary supplier for that? I know some of the more talked about designs for the current gen reactors mention thorium as a possible or preferred fuel.

    • @justinpyle3415
      @justinpyle3415 Před rokem +12

      Instead you should research why we buy from russia and not kazakhstan or netherlands, who export FAR FAR morr uranium, enriched and otherwise at a cheaper price.

    • @hackneo64
      @hackneo64 Před rokem +17

      Thorium requires breeder reactors which will convert it to usable fuel with is another costly step in fuel production plus those reactors aren’t fully developed yet.

    • @mr.b1590
      @mr.b1590 Před rokem +15

      Thorium reactors have been known since the 1940s. It was the need for Uranium in the Manhattan project that shelved it.

    • @B-H76
      @B-H76 Před rokem +8

      @@Hrotiberhtaz Do you see how difficult it to build uranium reactors and we already have the technology. It would be 20 years rollout at least to have enough thorium reactors to affect climate change. Uranium is already here to save the day if people would quit fearmongering it!

    • @gregorymalchuk272
      @gregorymalchuk272 Před rokem

      The USA has tens of thousands of tons of uranium reserves in the western states. This isn't a problem.

  • @Waldemarvonanhalt
    @Waldemarvonanhalt Před rokem +1

    Just recently in local South African news I saw that in neighbouring Namibia they were working to get the world's largest uranium mine (which is mothballed) up and operational again, after it became "economically viable" to operate again. IMO, I think Canada and Namibia will be able to pick up the slack from Kazakhstan.

    • @charlie-ot5ug
      @charlie-ot5ug Před rokem

      I think supply of uranium is not the isssue here as lots of countries can dig up this stuff. It's the highly enriched uranium that is needed for the next generation power station and that is only available via Russia at the moment.

  • @christophbenkoe512
    @christophbenkoe512 Před rokem +1

    What about Titanium? Not for energy of course. But for sure a mayor resource for another industry?

  • @fromlandoffire.
    @fromlandoffire. Před rokem +6

    It's so sad that people looking for ways to destroy themselves but not live in peace

  • @axecapital1
    @axecapital1 Před rokem +5

    Joke of the day: This is radioactive that’s why we use gloves. Looool . You made my evening better .

  • @thebeautifulones5436
    @thebeautifulones5436 Před rokem

    Company silex has a laser based method for enriching uranium that costs 10% of the gas centrifuge method. It makes processing tailings and depleted uranium economically viable

  • @lordisback1947
    @lordisback1947 Před rokem +2

    This is not all US is dependent on Russia for fertilizers, platinum and palladium for catalytic converter in automobiles and military vehicles and aircrafts, inorganic chemicals, diamonds, rare earth minerals, etc. The twist is US is going to run out of Oil and natural gas on it's land so it has to either come to Russia or turn towards Russian allies like Venezuela, Iran, middle East, Algeria, Western and Central Africa, etc. Main reason is that US misused it's resources to great extent and now it will suffer in future along with Europe which has rarely anything to call as resource.

    • @Thesamurai1999
      @Thesamurai1999 Před rokem

      Greenland has more resources than russia or its’ allies. Also, Australia has sh*t ton of uranium far more than russia and its’ allies combined.

  • @stunimbus1543
    @stunimbus1543 Před rokem +6

    No re-processing spent fuel and using MOX was always a mistake.
    And the US could approach the UK for a supply of MOX fuel.

  • @JasonPurkiss
    @JasonPurkiss Před rokem +9

    I believe we either continue with the research in Fusion but whilst we wait we should also research Thorium instead of Uranium as well as the research to drill deep bore holes as Iceland has the cleanest power stations that uses natural Geysers to boil water and if we could bore deep enough we could do the same cheaply and easier around the world and hopefully without cooling Earths core :(

    • @antoniolsls7774
      @antoniolsls7774 Před rokem +2

      Fusion will take decades to be operational

    • @elgaatooo
      @elgaatooo Před rokem +1

      Drilling deep bores is not efficient at all. Drilling even a meter in rock costs a hefty amount of money, so much so that it will be impossible to ever make any profits for any company, unless the electricity is charged at a mad expensive price. The only regions where geothermal will work is where there is geothermal activity in the crust, in volcanically and tectonically active regions. In other regions, such as continental shields, its impossible.

    • @JasonPurkiss
      @JasonPurkiss Před rokem

      @@elgaatooo Hence the research needed :) like using plasma to cut through the rock for instance

  • @Peter-ob6ue
    @Peter-ob6ue Před rokem

    Actually the purest uranium in the world is found at Olympic Dam in South Australia, the uranium deposit over there is also the largest proven reserve in the world, the Australian state of South Australia also has numerous other deposits of uranium.

  • @cyizarwanda5488
    @cyizarwanda5488 Před rokem

    So the strategic uranium reserve allows you to have your cake and eat it at the same time? Am I getting this correct?

  • @vikingskuld
    @vikingskuld Před rokem +13

    Yeah I'm no expert here but Uranium is not only found in Russia. We have it here in the US as well as other countries around the world. It's known you have to enrich any Uranium dug up. Besides that how many years does a fuel rod last before it goes bad? What one to 2 years or more with months of storage time? I I think we have time to find another supplier of fuel rod's.

    • @marildogjolena1012
      @marildogjolena1012 Před rokem

      I'm no expert either but reactor operators swap out the rods that are no longer very useful, which is about a third every 1-2 year(s), so a complete refuel of the reactor happens every 3-6 years. With the most recently build ones we can expect that to be on the higher end, like 5 years.
      As of my knowledge (i may be wrong), storage of used rods happen in stages, which means that the rods, and the used gear, are moved to other storages to accommodate them (since they are less dangerous) depending of how many half lifes have passed

    • @machevellian79
      @machevellian79 Před rokem

      Canada has more.

    • @Shaker626
      @Shaker626 Před rokem +2

      @@machevellian79 Canada does indeed have great reserves of high-grade ore. But Canada possesses no capability whatsoever to enrich that uranium. America is asking for uranium of higher enrichment than what they usually use (just like someone asking for diesel fuel instead of heavy crude oil). Canada's domestic power reactors (CANDU) all use unenriched fuel in its natural 0.7% U-235 state.

  • @scottkidder9046
    @scottkidder9046 Před rokem +76

    I advocate for nuclear because there’s no other option. If we fail to adopt it, we will miss our climate change goals, it’s that plain and simple. I would worry about the perils of mining uranium, the process of enriching it ever closer to weapons-grade uranium, and security issues. Those issues seem much more manageable than climate change without reliable sources of energy. And as for safety of the plants themselves, they are orders of magnitude more safe than coal, gas, or oil power plants in terms of lives lost even if you account for scale. The next generation reactors will be even safer. So as for safety, the safest reactors on the planet are nuclear reactors. Storage again seems like much more manageable problem than the alternative. The thing is, nuclear isn’t perfect especially because most of the infrastructure is from the 60’s, but it can and will be improved. Fully matured nuclear tech will be far safer, more reliable, and more dependable than before because there just is so much room for improvement. That includes mining, manufacturing, and storage. Time will also fix the supply chain issue. Just because we were terrible miners 100 years ago, doesn’t mean we’ll be just as bad today. This tech can fill in the gaps of renewables, is proven, and is carbon free. Until fusion is ready, if it ever is, fission is by far away our best option given the timeframe we have to work with.

    • @singular9
      @singular9 Před rokem

      The guys making climate decisions aren't Pro Climate, they are pro population control, and so they will deliberately miss by creating fake narratives of clean green energy through "solar" and other non stable sources of energy while continuing to exploit millions mining lithium and cobalt.
      The trick isn't that we need nuclear, its that those that run the world don't need nuclear in their grand scheme of things.

    • @Imaxxd22
      @Imaxxd22 Před rokem +2

      Russia has developed new generation reactor on fast neutrons, which solves all problems you have mentioned and which has no nuclear waste.

    • @algorithm-artisan
      @algorithm-artisan Před rokem

      The world will run out of uranium eventually

    • @jesseadams828
      @jesseadams828 Před rokem +2

      I'd argue that solar power capacity is developing at a momentous rate and could easily surpass the nuclear industry in meeting all of the green goals of this U.S. Administration. Although, this reality I'm defending is only possible if the American electorate remains in favor of these kinds of pro-Green policies for at least another 2 or 3 election cycles...

    • @jessefisher1809
      @jessefisher1809 Před rokem +3

      @@jesseadams828 As I'm sure you know, solar is non-dispatchable so basically, you need to supplement it with something that is dispatchable. Thats pretty much either fossil fuels, or nuclear. Believe it or not, safety in terms of deaths per kwh is actually very comparable between solar and nuclear. We really need both.

  • @_IT528
    @_IT528 Před 10 měsíci

    Bro, how did you make so many channels

  • @hasher2265
    @hasher2265 Před rokem +2

    Hold on if they want more U235 why not just use MOX fuel instead? It is more economically viable and the nuclear waste management can start using all that energy stored in the basement.

  • @assassinul95
    @assassinul95 Před rokem +14

    This seems like something easly fixable. Also this is the result of outsourcing for cheap stuff. Less jobs less independence more money spent fixing it

    • @Knight_Kin
      @Knight_Kin Před rokem

      The majority of US domestic uranium mining was sold to the Russians around 2010. Hillary Clinton facilitated the sale when she was Secretary of State.

    • @minniemi9170
      @minniemi9170 Před rokem +1

      Doesn't sound like an easy fix. They outsource because of costs but also because Russia has the resource and is willing to do the job to extract the uranium. Who cares if this provides more jobs in the US if no one wants to fill them?

  • @neilstuarr2278
    @neilstuarr2278 Před rokem +3

    australia has heaps of uranium . maybe thats a stable supply given its a stable country

  • @connecticutaggie
    @connecticutaggie Před rokem +2

    Why aren't we focusing on newer fission reactors that need less/no Uranium ( Thorium reactors and also breeder reactors)?

    • @UNVIRUSLETALE
      @UNVIRUSLETALE Před rokem +2

      Because you can't make weapons with that and America likes big weapons

  • @SandyRiverBlue
    @SandyRiverBlue Před rokem

    We still don't have a place to store spent fule rods. They are essentially just sitting in open cooling pools. Utah was supposed to provide underground salt vault storage but they chickened out, even though every expert who has ever looked at the subject thinks it should be safe. We should not be expanding nuclear until we can resolve the spent rod issue.

  • @LordAlacorn
    @LordAlacorn Před rokem +25

    This is what happens when you outsource industries for decades for higher profits. No matter what US does - industries are not coming back. West has transitioned to service money shuffling economies that can no longer support manufacturing on any viable or competitive scale.

  • @joshuaerkman1444
    @joshuaerkman1444 Před rokem +9

    I'm from Grand Junction Colorado and we had uranium mining please please please please come back.
    I'm also a previous nuclear power plant operator and your video is mostly accurate but largely under informed.

    • @stevechance150
      @stevechance150 Před rokem +2

      How do you feel about Thorium?

    • @Adrian-jn9ov
      @Adrian-jn9ov Před rokem +2

      Really doesn't matter. Thorium still needs prototype reactors and won't be ready for a few decades. Even if you would start building those today. If you want to be carbon-neutral by 2035 the only way to achieve that is to build renewables. Even if you build new reactors today, those aren't going to be finished in time. Also, renewables are just cheaper even with storage

    • @zaczane
      @zaczane Před rokem

      @@stevechance150 I second this.

    • @zaczane
      @zaczane Před rokem +1

      @@Adrian-jn9ov renewables are definitely not cheaper. Perhaps in construction, but not in overall spending over time.

    • @axelotl86
      @axelotl86 Před rokem +1

      @@zaczane they are cheaper and still getting cheaper even with storage in mind.

  • @feenok3314
    @feenok3314 Před rokem

    My aunt runs a antique shop.
    Pretty much all the glassware and clocks etc are uranium

  • @jmpattillo
    @jmpattillo Před rokem +2

    If we would reprocess spent fuel rods we wouldn’t be in this situation

  • @axezazel
    @axezazel Před rokem +3

    Nuclear is the only way to go

  • @luke4916
    @luke4916 Před rokem +4

    This documentary misses the point completely.
    There are alternative methods for mining uranium to not cuck the environment.
    Small modular reactors will play a massive part in the energy grid.
    The US must build more reactors to meet its climate goals.
    There is better ways to fabricate fuel now than ever before using silex technology.
    Uranium and nuclear waste is actually genius because it is measurable unlike the dangerous emissions from fossil fuels.
    The fuel can also be reused near infinitely in breeder reactors, and we could use the plutonium waste as fuel too, perhaps in space instead.
    Do a better job next time

    • @Knight_Kin
      @Knight_Kin Před rokem

      If we could use Thorium in molten salt bed reactors then we wouldn't need to have special mines to find Thorium, it's already mined when digging for materials like titanium, tin, and aluminum. The thorium is 'thrown away' back into the ground because it's illegal to take it, but the thorium is as concentrated in the ores as the metals they dig for. Now that's just stupid and wasteful, it's no different than how gasoline used to be dumped back when early oil drilling was occurring. Hmm...actually it's worse because back then they thought gasoline was just waste, whereas we know the thorium is valuable.

    • @luke4916
      @luke4916 Před rokem

      @@Knight_Kin I definitely need to research more on Thorium, but from my understanding it cannot produce a chain reaction and it cannot produce as much power as U-235. But I definitely agree, molten salt reactors EPIC.
      Hopefully industry will find a way to utilize it!

  • @gislebertusreck9204
    @gislebertusreck9204 Před rokem +1

    What 4 countries have the largest uranium reserves?
    Uranium Reserves: Top 5 Countries (Updated 2022)
    Australia. Uranium resources: 1,692,700 tonnes (28 percent of world uranium resources) ...
    Kazakhstan. Uranium resources: 906,800 tonnes (15 percent of world uranium resources) ...
    Canada. Uranium resources: 564,900 tonnes (9 percent of world uranium resources) ...
    Russia. ...
    Namibia.

    • @overloader7900
      @overloader7900 Před rokem

      Here's the TL;DR of the video for you: its not the ore, its the enrichment which is the problem

  • @reinpinebook825
    @reinpinebook825 Před rokem

    Spasiba, RBMK and Anya Sakharov. This is where Dima Mendeleyev gets his hype together with Misha Lomonosov.

  • @drouillotvalentin6476
    @drouillotvalentin6476 Před rokem +5

    What I don't understand is Why the US needs Russian uranium when Canada got some very important uranium deposits.
    There's tons of other countries that produce uranium, like Kazakhstan, or Australia etc. Russia isn't even well known for major uranium deposits.

    • @sweetman5249
      @sweetman5249 Před rokem +1

      Because Russian Uranium is too cheap 😆

    • @vutruong7761
      @vutruong7761 Před rokem

      Because Russia have the facilities to enrich it. Kazakhstan 's situation pretty similar to African countries, rich in resources but could only export raw materials at low price since they don't know how to process the raw materials. Russia is a perfect choice for Kazakhstan consider how convenient it is . Both sides co-operate for the best revenue.

  • @spoobfish1273
    @spoobfish1273 Před rokem +2

    I live in Kentucky and we have tons of those deposits. How about we bring work back to America, you know for Americans to do. Lest we give the economy to another nation... Wait, what?! We're already too late?! 😲

  • @jimysk8er
    @jimysk8er Před rokem +2

    Haaaaaaave you met Canada? Lots mining, lots of nuclear tech.

  • @GordonMcDowellPublic
    @GordonMcDowellPublic Před rokem +1

    CANDU run on natural uranium. No enrichment needed. India builds similar heavy-water reactors too.

  • @robg2347
    @robg2347 Před rokem +4

    We have plenty of Uranium here in the United States and Canada. UEC is a Canadian based company that mines uranium here and the only company that is mining it in the United States from what I know. We don’t need Russia for this.

    • @canadajim
      @canadajim Před rokem

      Yes but companies get another 0.2% profit, which to them is worth destabilizing the entire economy.

    • @robg2347
      @robg2347 Před rokem

      @@canadajim that’s really sad

  • @timallen3496
    @timallen3496 Před rokem +7

    Australia has mega quantities of uranium and active mines could easily supply the US also a ally so not sure it would be so big a problem if USA didn't buy Russian uranium

    • @hanarmy3225
      @hanarmy3225 Před rokem +6

      so why not ban Russian uranium ?

    • @woodsstocks9178
      @woodsstocks9178 Před rokem +7

      Did you guys watched the whole video?

    • @radicaIarchitect
      @radicaIarchitect Před rokem +2

      @@woodsstocks9178 more like misunderstood the whole thing

    • @vutruong7761
      @vutruong7761 Před rokem

      @@hanarmy3225 Yeah I'm wondering about the same thing. And it is kinda weird that Russia despite all of Western sanctions keep providing enriched Uranium for the US.

  • @magnvss
    @magnvss Před rokem +2

    A quick Google search says that Kazakhstan is the country with the most reserves of the world (or at least, the useful one) so I wonder what are the geopolitics (or the lack of investment) on that country to not be the alternative to Russia.

    • @ignasanchezl
      @ignasanchezl Před rokem

      Not reserves, but instead they are the largest producer of uranium in the world. With about 35% share in 2011 and growing still.
      China is their main buyer is what I read.

  • @josephsmith3908
    @josephsmith3908 Před rokem

    Some of the new plant are built already encased for storing waste

  • @loveridgeben
    @loveridgeben Před rokem +4

    This whole story is sensationalist fear mongering. Im an Australian, who has worked in the australian mining industry and russian yellowcake is a tiny drop in the ocean compared to the vast quantities we here in australian possess and as australia is pretty tight with US i dont see any shortages anytime soon .

    • @haeveen8255
      @haeveen8255 Před rokem

      The reason US buy from Russia is comes to the price.

  • @benmcreynolds8581
    @benmcreynolds8581 Před rokem +7

    We have advanced nuclear energy options in so many other ways that honestly uranium doesn't have to be our only option... There is a lot new methods and Reactors.

    • @swampy1234
      @swampy1234 Před rokem +1

      Like?

    • @geryz7549
      @geryz7549 Před rokem

      ​@@swampy1234 like molten salt reactors (MSR's), which have been in testing since the 60's and can operate on Thorium

  • @pilotman9819
    @pilotman9819 Před rokem +1

    The beauty of RosAtom is that almost all of their Uranium are used. They've reycled them and could do it over and over again basically giving themselves infinite energy for the next 300 or so years.
    Kinda insane what Nuclear power can do, and the benefits it can give to large countries like Russia.

    • @greyfells2829
      @greyfells2829 Před rokem

      Kind of insane the kind of trouble it can cause corrupt and broken countries like Russia, or anyone unfortunate enough to be occupied by them.

    • @firasajoury7813
      @firasajoury7813 Před rokem +2

      @@greyfells2829 said the American

  • @adamsyve
    @adamsyve Před rokem

    U.S. to Russian Uranium:
    "Why can't I quit you?!!!"

  • @arthurzettel6618
    @arthurzettel6618 Před rokem +5

    America has the ability to reprocess all Nuclear Waste into power production. America just needs the will to do it.

    • @Cynthia_Cantrell
      @Cynthia_Cantrell Před rokem

      Nuclear power is already one of the most expensive electrical sources there is here in the US. Nuclear waste isn't reprocessed here because new fuel is so much cheaper.

  • @StrangerHappened
    @StrangerHappened Před rokem +6

    *THE "WEST" ALSO NEEDS* Russian titanium, sapphires, neon gas, fertilizers, grain and other foods, let alone natural gas, oil, coal and uuranium from the video. Also in space as ISS can only operate with Russia. And this is not a complete list, of course.

    • @phpn99
      @phpn99 Před rokem +1

      B.S.

    • @StrangerHappened
      @StrangerHappened Před rokem

      @@phpn99 How?

    • @Shaker626
      @Shaker626 Před rokem

      Tell me you're on the Kremlin payroll without telling me you're on the Kremlin payroll. 🤣🤣

    • @StrangerHappened
      @StrangerHappened Před rokem +1

      @@Shaker626 Tell me you'on the NSA payroll without telling me you're on the NSA payroll. 🤣🤣Jokes aside, the NSA's instruction for its troll says that whenever it is impossible to come up with an argument, the troll has to invoke Kremlin.

    • @blacklynx1318
      @blacklynx1318 Před rokem

      @@StrangerHappened western hypocrites 😂😂😂

  • @joemama397
    @joemama397 Před rokem +2

    Bruh you got Australian and Canadian uranium to supply your needs. Or you can go with Kazakhstan or China assuming they won’t be hostile to the USA.

  • @aryanchauhan510
    @aryanchauhan510 Před rokem

    There should also be some research on thorium

  • @galileo_rs
    @galileo_rs Před rokem +5

    Here's a revolutionary thought: Don't start a proxy war with Russia?

  • @ScottJPowers
    @ScottJPowers Před rokem +4

    I know a chemical engineer who works at westinghouse here in Pittsburgh, PA and they make nuclear fuel rods.
    Also, is nuclear energy really clean with all of its nuclear waste? it's very dangerous but all we can do is store it in a sealed and shielded underground storage facility and wait forever for it to decay into non or minimally radioactive elements.

    • @OutOfNameIdeas2
      @OutOfNameIdeas2 Před rokem +5

      Yes it's cleaner than water and solar due to less wasted resources and insanely higher output. Nuclear waste is actually not really a problem. people seem to think it's still stored like in video games, the glowing barrels lol. It's not only stored underground anymore. It's sealed in "boxes" that require no maintenance either.
      (Water destroys eco systems and solar is a huge waste of resources with current panel technology)

    • @ScottJPowers
      @ScottJPowers Před rokem +2

      @@OutOfNameIdeas2 that may work for now but it could become a problem later. We'll eventually run out of places to bury more nuclear waste and then something, like an earthquake or fracking or something could rupture those nuclear waste storage boxes. People originally had the same attitude about power plants that burned coal or wood or fossil fuels. They though it could never become a problem or that we could never run out of fossil fuels. They thought that the smog would just endlessly dilute in the atmosphere and never become a problem.

    • @instanoodles
      @instanoodles Před rokem

      ​@@ScottJPowers Run out of space? How much waste do you think is created? All the waste created from nuclear reactors since their inception would fit inside a football stadium. The waste from mining for materials used in solar and wind produce more nuclear waste then nuclear power does.

    • @TheSSEssesse
      @TheSSEssesse Před rokem

      @@ScottJPowers what data are you using to support that we’ll run out of places to bury waste?

    • @ScottJPowers
      @ScottJPowers Před rokem

      @@TheSSEssesse there's only so much earth and therefore only so many places to bury stuff. Therefore, if you keep burying stuff, you'll eventually run out of places to bury more stuff.

  • @kaito2005
    @kaito2005 Před rokem

    ngl, when the Verge dude started talking about safety precautions while wearing plastic gloves from the 1$ store, I got 'how to build a custom PC for gaming' flashbacks.

  • @aaronsalyers4819
    @aaronsalyers4819 Před 7 měsíci

    We use to mine it and everything now it takes up to 4 yrs to be dependent again

  • @sollymadeit
    @sollymadeit Před rokem +3

    All I'm hearing is winter is coming and the cold comes along with it.
    Doubt Russia will be kind enough to help western nations

    • @0374studio
      @0374studio Před rokem +1

      You see, if the leaders of our governments are going to really serving to their people - then we (people) can expecting much more profits and possiblityies to live better life
      But, they're do not want to serve, they want only exploits human/earth resources and developing the different kind of a conflicts...
      Locally or globally.
      🤣

    • @salty_cucumber
      @salty_cucumber Před rokem

      Every conflict has its end

  • @Professional--Gamer
    @Professional--Gamer Před rokem +1

    imagine if USA and Russia were allies.
    world would be living 80 years in future today.
    we just need to get rid of corporate greed and weapon manufacturers

  • @Repz98
    @Repz98 Před rokem +1

    I bet on kindergarden fusion, it’s when you convert crying children noise into energy.