Why Nuclear Power is Making a Comeback

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  • čas přidán 11. 10. 2022
  • America is building nuclear power again, but it's been a long time coming.
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    Special thanks to Mark Nelson. Additional footage and imagery courtesy of Georgia Power, ABC News, Brian Stansberry/CC BY 3.0, CBS News, EDF, France 3 Normandie, Google Earth, HS2, IAEA, Jmnbqb/CC BY-SA 4.0, Nuclear Regulatory Commission, Tennessee Valley Authority, 20th Television, US Department of Energy, WJBF, Z22/CC BY-SA 3.0 and OpenStreetMap Contributers (www.openstreetmap.org/copyright).
    This production includes footage from several Georgia Power videos licensed under Creative Commons (creativecommons.org/licenses/...)
    Narrator - Fred Mills
    Producer - Adam Savage
    Video Editing and Graphics - Thomas Canton
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Komentáře • 2,8K

  • @TheB1M
    @TheB1M  Před rokem +142

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    • @themanwnoname3454
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      2022(G) “Respect and dignity.” Furthermore:

    • @octavia.n
      @octavia.n Před rokem +2

      What does you channel name mean?

    • @ropro9817
      @ropro9817 Před rokem

      I find it hard to take a guy with a 70's pornstache and black turtleneck seriously... 😆

    • @ivy_47
      @ivy_47 Před rokem +2

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      @kovy689 Před rokem +2

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  • @Joshua-xf9ev
    @Joshua-xf9ev Před rokem +5518

    I don't know why the advocate for nuclear energy dresses like a super villain

    • @justjohn7529
      @justjohn7529 Před rokem +307

      Henry Cavel in Mission Impossible?

    • @renlysotherlover294
      @renlysotherlover294 Před rokem +438

      I had the same thought and that mustache to complete the look

    • @shitzuation
      @shitzuation Před rokem +423

      Someone get this man a white Persian cat & a tall black leather chair asap!

    • @jacksak
      @jacksak Před rokem +19

      Same thought here !

    • @rushtest4echo737
      @rushtest4echo737 Před rokem +136

      Guy's clearly auditioning to be the next Bond villain

  • @ulrichspencer
    @ulrichspencer Před rokem +2578

    I'm detecting a consistent theme with certain kinds of large, publicly-funded infrastructure projects: when we stop building them, we lose the supply chains and institutional knowledge on how to build them and have to redevelop them from scratch. The US is also like this with high-speed rail. Turns out if you keep on churning out new rail or new nuclear or new whatever, you build up a lot of supply chains and institutional knowledge for how to build them on-time and on-budget. The solution to these issues is to just keep building them so we don't keep on having to learn from scratch how to build these things.

    • @mickvastesaegher2140
      @mickvastesaegher2140 Před rokem +86

      The problem of cost & time overruns isn't limited to projects that don't happen frequently. Skyscrapers are being built daily around the world, yet these overrun too. Even something like a train station, highway construction, subway development, ... The supply chain is one part of the problem and definitely applies to those one of items like the reacter itself, certain components needed for X or Y, but the majority in delays and cost overruns lies in the complexity. When a project is planned, you look at it on paper and thus can only see part of the issues that will arise in the future. Even with modern BIM modelling not every problem can be foreseen. A LOT of information also just gets lost in these complex construction projects because humans are unreliable, forget, mislay, take too long, ...

    • @imhotepjasonduncanson6068
      @imhotepjasonduncanson6068 Před rokem +5

      Thank you and I agree.

    • @JBDazen
      @JBDazen Před rokem +10

      Too bad reality isn't that simple :)

    • @AnotherEpicName
      @AnotherEpicName Před rokem +73

      @B Babbich its way easier to innovate when you have the base knowledge already.

    • @procatprocat9647
      @procatprocat9647 Před rokem +107

      @@JBDazen Reality really is that simple. I work in the Nuclear Industry and I have witnessed countless examples of significant problems resulting from a lack of continuous development of the industry. People retire, skills are lost, the supply chain gives up on the industry and moves elsewhere.
      Starting again from scratch is incredibly wasteful in all metrics.

  • @dimetime35c
    @dimetime35c Před rokem +45

    Three mile island is a very good example of how safe nuclear power is. Almost everything was done wrong and operators basically tried to blow it up. They bypassed and disabled numerous safety systems and it still didn't fail catastrophically.

    • @deletdis6173
      @deletdis6173 Před 7 měsíci +5

      Exactly thank you

    • @HSstudio.Ytchnnl
      @HSstudio.Ytchnnl Před 6 měsíci

      yeah if nuclear fails, it's very much a human failure

    • @somefuckstolemynick
      @somefuckstolemynick Před 6 měsíci +1

      Not to mention it was quite a while ago, and modern power plants are even safer.

  • @Game_Hero
    @Game_Hero Před rokem +38

    Jim Carrey's Robotnik is now a nuclear engineer.

  • @WangChung81
    @WangChung81 Před rokem +1514

    We've actually built plenty of nuclear reactors in the U.S. - every submarine and aircraft carrier we've sent out for the last 30 years. If we approached our national grid the same way we approach our national defense then we'd have plenty of capacity with the best safety record in the world.

    • @Tuppoo94
      @Tuppoo94 Před rokem

      That's right, but of course, the defense industry and the armed forces are very keen on maintaining secrecy. Military reactors are completely different from civilian reactors. Very little is known about the reactors used on nuclear powered aircraft carriers or submarines, because the technology is obviously highly classified. A quick Google search doesn't even return any pictures of them. The men and women who built these machines and service them will probably take their knowledge with them to their graves.

    • @MrAwesomeSaucem
      @MrAwesomeSaucem Před rokem +248

      You might even say building our national grid is literally a national defense / security issue.

    • @stephenbrickwood1602
      @stephenbrickwood1602 Před rokem

      when all the Dictators have nuclear industries the extra nuclear deterrence submarines can be built more quickly so that they can be close to the new threats. And act rapidly.
      150,000 SMRs, Small modular reactors like BWRX300 from GE Hitachi and Rolls Royce.
      No more CO2 in the world.
      $TRILLIONS in national grids to disperse the concentrated central electric power to the dispersed ends of the grid and the dispersed EVs.

    • @seankilburn7200
      @seankilburn7200 Před rokem +117

      You could say the same about all aspects of American infrastructure and sectors dependent on government spending . If the US invested as much as they do in defence spending across all other areas they wouldn’t be facing half the challenges they are.

    • @stephenbrickwood1602
      @stephenbrickwood1602 Před rokem

      When the USA built nuclear weapons the Dictators stole the info.
      If the USA builds a nuclear powered national grid the Dictators will, and use the cash flow and nuclear industry to build their ultimate weapons.
      More military defence will be needed, budgets will explode.

  • @PB-Trinity
    @PB-Trinity Před rokem +978

    All these megaprojects are amazing. But we all know that Fred's biceps are the most impressive megaproject of them all...

  • @shellderp
    @shellderp Před rokem +15

    Here in Ontario, the grid is over 50% nuclear. Very stable and cheap electricity

    • @orishaeshu1084
      @orishaeshu1084 Před rokem +3

      Hopefully they continue to invest in it. Reactors are extremely powerful.

    • @SuSmallville
      @SuSmallville Před 3 měsíci

      I didn't find anything in Toronto Cheap. 12% tax on goods and services hurts a bit

  • @Droidman1231
    @Droidman1231 Před rokem +195

    Great video as always. As a Georgia resident and a big nuclear advocate I've been split on this project as I've had to pay a lot for the overruns (in terms of extra fees added to my power bill) but also happy that we are leading nation in a new age of nuclear

    • @alexdye6625
      @alexdye6625 Před rokem +4

      @Zaydan Naufal Georgia, USA

    • @paxundpeace9970
      @paxundpeace9970 Před rokem +5

      Nuclear is really expensive 3 to 4 times as much as solar and wind per produced kwh of electricity.
      It is also 5 times more expensive to build.

    • @adamwest3266
      @adamwest3266 Před rokem

      @@paxundpeace9970 Solar and Wind are are not sustainable. Fact. Solar and Wind at our present day tech could never meet the demands of our Country. Fact.

    • @hurri7720
      @hurri7720 Před rokem +8

      @@paxundpeace9970 , that mathematics tend to change when a power plant is expected to run for +60 years with "small" running costs.
      But it's a difficult mathematics, how do you measure the cost of air pollution burning fossil fuels for instance. Right now quite a few countries in Europe (Europe has more nuclear plants together than the USA) wish they had built more or at least not started to cut down.
      Right this afternoon France got at best 75% of its energy production from nuclear, best in the EU in that respect.

    • @iworkout6912
      @iworkout6912 Před rokem

      Many states have no plans on building any new nuclear plants but are going all in for the Green way, which means no fossil fuels after a rather short time line. (like 8-12 years) I believe at some point, we will have to wake up and realize that wind turbines and solar panels are not going to be 100 percent. Politics has much to do with it, and the media will have to get real, which they aren't at the moment. People I talk with about nuclear are 100 percent against it, mostly because all they see is the the media tells them.

  • @vordark304007
    @vordark304007 Před rokem +286

    Freddie Mercury as Nuclear Engineer very impressive

  • @hughmungusbungusfungus4618
    @hughmungusbungusfungus4618 Před rokem +1452

    Calling Three Mile Island one of the worst nuclear accidents in history is like a quadriplegic coming in third in a foot race: it happened because there were only three contestants

    • @MitzvosGolem1
      @MitzvosGolem1 Před rokem +394

      Very little radiation released .
      Not significant to ban all construction for decades because of such.
      Big oil coal gas pushed no nuke propaganda to crush competition.
      I worked in that field.

    • @TrebleSketch
      @TrebleSketch Před rokem +105

      Plus the issue is upper management, overworked workers, stress, and work ethic in ALL THREE nuclear incidents (TMI, Fukushima, and Chernobyl).
      Saying that we as a species should quit all because the lack of improving is rather frustrating to hear >~

    • @Ruhrpottpatriot
      @Ruhrpottpatriot Před rokem +21

      @@MitzvosGolem1 If it was so inconsequential, then why did the IAEA rate it as 5 on the INES scale?

    • @foo-foocuddlypoops5694
      @foo-foocuddlypoops5694 Před rokem +66

      "Hiroshima was one of the worst nuclear attacks in history"

    • @e1123581321345589144
      @e1123581321345589144 Před rokem +42

      @@TrebleSketch for TMI it was also incorrect institutional legacy brought over from the navy, the people running the reactor were operating with the mindset of running a nuclear reactor on a submarine at sea, which is a bit difficult and has a set of unique circumstances when compared to running a land based nuclear power plant.
      for Fukushima it was basically corporate greed. They were repeatedly notified that a tsunami of that scale could happen, and what the results of that could be, but they dismissed it because something of that magnitude is unlikely and the risk was deemed too low to mitigate. They knew adapting flood defensed was necessary but they kept kicking the ball down the road.
      as for Chernobyl, that was gross incompetence.

  • @duncanmcauley7932
    @duncanmcauley7932 Před rokem +11

    Hey thanks for the shout out to Watts Bar! I only worked there for a few months in 2015-16 for construction of the haul path and spent fuel pad, but I remember Unit 2 was finally getting finished at that time. It had started construction way back in the ‘70s but stopped for a long time and was essentially being used for spare parts for the in-service Unit 1. If there’s anything I learned at the nuclear plant is that it is an extremely regulated and safety-oriented industry with virtually no tolerance for the slightest error. Heck, I remember seeing a plant-wide email about a safety incident where someone had been injured, but it was literally a cut to a finger.
    Another thing I learned is just how serious they take security of these power plants. Just to be able to enter the protected area required a background check with multiple references, a safety course, a palm vein scan, and a 500+ question psychology test, among other things. If anyone was ever dumb enough to try to jump the fences into the protected area (not even able to get to a reactor, as that is even further guarded inside), instead of entering through a (heavily guarded) portal, lethal force would be authorized. And hearing the frequent gunshots coming from the nearby on-site shooting range was a constant reminder that the guards in the lookout towers were well-trained and ready for anything. I wouldn’t lose a wink of sleep over cyber security of a US nuclear plant having seen all this in just 4 months time.

    • @makatron
      @makatron Před rokem +1

      Lethal force its the norm in nuclear plants when it comes to dealing with unauthorized access, and it's pretty clear with large signs clearly stating that if you cross the line there will be no warning shots.

  • @briangarrow448
    @briangarrow448 Před rokem +4

    So amazing that in the intro shots of the new nuclear power plant being built had a shot of the containment vessel having a ring hoisted into place and the pick of one of the reactor vessels. I’ve worked on both of those jobs as a young man. I’m retired now and my last job before retirement was building a coal cleaning facility at a coal powered thermal power plant.

  • @KhaosEntertainment
    @KhaosEntertainment Před rokem +279

    Love these docuseries on construction with the B1M. Narration with Fred is the best 👌

    • @satyris410
      @satyris410 Před rokem +2

      Wonderful name as well. Fred, or maybe Freddy, Mills. Sounds somewhat rakish and cheeky

    • @MyBelch
      @MyBelch Před rokem

      Toady lickspittle sycophant.

    • @satyris410
      @satyris410 Před rokem

      @@MyBelch you OK kiddo?

  • @Ruhrpottpatriot
    @Ruhrpottpatriot Před rokem +330

    I find it a bit sad that this channel can't even correct the common misconception about the Texas Blackout: It wasn't because of renewables are unreliable, or NPPs can deliver. Even with more NPPs the same would've happened, because the problem wasn't energy production, it was the grid.
    Back in 2011, Texas experienced something similar and the North American Electric Reliability Corporation made suggestions to better prepare the infrastructure to be better suited for cold weather, these recommendations were ignored by ERCOT (as they were in 1989 when this also happened).
    Furthermore: The Texas grid doesn't have a safety margin beyond expected draw and the grid isn't even able to meet peak summer demand when needed.
    The Texas government then cancelled a contract with the Texas Reliability Entity and disbanded the Oversight and Enforcement Division, reducing oversight further and dropping cases that aimed to improve reliability.
    Another thing, that's very peculiar to Texas apparently: Normally you'd expect, that an underperforming company should lose money, right? Well if you're a natural gas supplier, you make money from underperforming.
    So basically the grid operator didn't bother to spend the money to keep their equipment from freezing, the politics let them do as they pleased.

    • @ChristinaKendrick
      @ChristinaKendrick Před rokem +33

      Where did the video say the Texas blackout was caused by renewables? Around 2:10 the expert talks about the cold causing gas supply issues, which it absolutely did and caused CCGT plants to go offline.
      You are correct about ERCOT and the rest though, Texas refuses to cold harden their infrastructure and won't connect to either of North America's grid interconnections.

    • @bwake
      @bwake Před rokem +7

      @@ChristinaKendrick
      Solar and wind are heavily subsidized. This reduces the profit margins for competitors, with entirely predictable results. It’s either cut costs or go out of business.

    • @Ruhrpottpatriot
      @Ruhrpottpatriot Před rokem +32

      @@ChristinaKendrick I didn't say the video, i said "common misconceptions", which are only thinly veiled spoken about by the "expert", who should be called "lobbyist", as Radiant Energy Fund is a lobby organization aiming to influence politics fore more NPPs. In fact here in Germany the "expert" linked to a petition about reversing our nuclear phase-out -- completely, which would mean, old and insecure reactors would come back online and not help energy prices or the grid stability in any way.
      Basically what the "expert" is trying to say, and B1M never corrected is: More NPPs would have saved Texas from a blackout and kept NG prices low. Because more power from NPPs would have meant less gas to gas power stations and thus more gas for consumers or less consumption overall.
      However, this still wouldn't have prevented the grid from simply freezing to death.
      His Twitter is also... very questionable, where he tries to uses memes to bash any energy source that's not nuclear.
      B1M simply adopting the "advising governments" speak from a lobby organization, without further questioning is really bad journalism on their part.

    • @Hyakman5408
      @Hyakman5408 Před rokem +6

      Why not direct your dissatisfaction with this channel's video on the matter into producing your own video to correct all of the errors you seem to have found in Fred's.

    • @yakub3962
      @yakub3962 Před rokem

      No wind=no power.
      No sun=no power.
      No water in the reservoir=no power.
      No waves= no power.
      Geothermal is great but doesn't work everywhere.
      Nuclear works everywhere and it's scalable to suit every need.

  • @wirekat
    @wirekat Před rokem +17

    Having worked at Hanford #2 in the 80's, there are few more issues with building nukes. I'm all for it, but nobody has addressed the endless paperwork required. Of course this was before smart phones and such but I had to complete a one foot stack of paperwork (yes, 12" high) before grouting back a (non-critical) pipe penetration. That times the thousands of non-critical tasks and it's a mountain of forms. How can we build a 777 or a SpaceX rocket and yet a nuke is beyond our capabilities?

  • @Heworldwide
    @Heworldwide Před rokem +6

    It’s surreal to here you mention the reactor being built in wanyesboro. I moved up there for senior year of high school and to see the impact and growth it has on that community is quite amazing. I’m not saying it doesn’t have negative impacts on other variables but just so crazy I stumbled upon this video and happened to hear it being mentioned

    • @clarkkent9080
      @clarkkent9080 Před rokem

      But there is more.
      Please don’t assume that YT videos are factual. If you live in the U.S. here is the reality for the last 4 state of the art Westinghouse AP1000 ADVANCED passive safety features new nuclear power projects and spent fuel reprocessing and in the U.S. over the last 20 years. You decide if this YT video was presenting the truth.
      The Southeastern U.S. is super pro-nuclear MAGA, has zero anti-nukes, and 100% media and political support.
      The MOX facility (South Carolina) was a U.S. government nuclear reprocessing facility that was supposed to mix pure weapon grade Pu239 with U238 to make reactor fuel assemblies. It was canceled (2017) in the U.S. After spending $10 billion for a plant that was originally estimated to cost $1 billion and an independent report that estimated it would cost $100 billion to complete the plant and process all the Pu239, Trump canceled the project in 2017.
      VC Summer (South Carolina) new nuclear units 2&3 were canceled in 2017 after spending $17 billion on the project (original estimate of $14 billion and 2016 completion date) with no clear end in sight for costs or schedule.
      Vogtle (Georgia) new nuclear units 3 &4 currently 110% over budget and schedule (currently over $30 billion) and still not operating. Mid way into the build, the utility stated that had they known about the many costly delays they would never have chosen nuclear. They are now delayed another year because according to the project management, thousands of build documents are missing.
      Please google any of this to confirm.
      If you can’t build new nuclear in the MAGA super pro-nuclear southeast U.S. then where can you build it?

  • @f1_amr
    @f1_amr Před rokem +14

    Hoping the public begins to accept nuclear more

  • @StarFleet_Tech1701
    @StarFleet_Tech1701 Před rokem +14

    I live in Georgia and am looking forward to Vogtle's completion. I feel like a shareholder because Southern Company/Georgia Power have hiked up my power bill to help pay for the new additions. Bring on the POWER!!!

    • @westside213
      @westside213 Před rokem +4

      Newsom had to scrap taking Diablo Canyon offline because (just like Germany) California is coming to a breaking point with its "green" solar and wind fantasies.

    • @scpatl4now
      @scpatl4now Před rokem

      It should have been on in 2016...yet we have been paying for it close to 10 years

  • @RadioChief52
    @RadioChief52 Před rokem +78

    My thoughts are that we should be building nuclear plants that are scaled back in output so that reasonably sized construction equipment can be used. At the same time, settle in on a design that can be repeated throughout the country in order that the operators that are trained at one plant can easily slip into the same position at another plant.

    • @killcat1971
      @killcat1971 Před rokem +10

      The older designs require a certain size for economy of scale to kick in, basically the red tape for a 1GW reactor is no more than for a 250MW reactor.

    • @jimgraham6722
      @jimgraham6722 Před rokem +4

      Basically thats what France did with EPR and Canada with CANDU have done.

    • @cow_tools_
      @cow_tools_ Před rokem

      It's coming. I heard Rolls Royce has started on this.

    • @AnimeHumanCoherence
      @AnimeHumanCoherence Před rokem +6

      I believe they're called SMRs, or small modular reactors. I think one design is in the approval process!

    • @johannesgutsmiedl366
      @johannesgutsmiedl366 Před rokem

      @@AnimeHumanCoherence There are a whole bunch of companies and countries working on these, the first one actually under construction is probably the ACP100 in China.

  • @KrimsonStorm
    @KrimsonStorm Před rokem +8

    Loved the video. I live in Georgia and I cannot be happier that my state is the first to make substantial clean energy progress. I hope many follow GA in this. Glow blue to go green, I say!

    • @clarkkent9080
      @clarkkent9080 Před rokem +2

      My electric rate increased 29% due to Vogtle according to my Ga power bill and will double if and when Vogtle ever goes on line. Nuclear is green going out of my wallet

    • @42luke93
      @42luke93 Před rokem +2

      @@clarkkent9080 That sucks to hear. At least you have that rather then spend the same or similar amount on wind or solar which isn't an efficient source like nuclear.

    • @clarkkent9080
      @clarkkent9080 Před rokem +2

      @@42luke93 After Vogtle and the VC Summer failures no U.S. utility is even considering new nuclear but I see solar farms being built all over.
      I was mistaken, my bill increased 19% during the Vogtle construction but will double one=ce they go on line.

  • @aronc24
    @aronc24 Před rokem +95

    As an American who’s not a fan of carbon emissions, I’m very pro nuclear and I hope we see more!

    • @anthonybanchero3072
      @anthonybanchero3072 Před rokem +2

      Hope Energy Northwest gets the SMRs they are proposing built. Columbia Generation Station at Hanford came in handy during the 2021 heat wave, but we almost didn’t have it. It is refueled in odd years, but usually scheduled for late spring when Hydro is at it’s peak.

    • @scpatl4now
      @scpatl4now Před rokem +2

      See how pro nuclear you are when they tack on a $15 surcharge to your bill every month before the construction even starts to pay for for it.

    • @scottslotterbeck3796
      @scottslotterbeck3796 Před rokem

      ​@@scpatl4now OMG. California closed down all of its plants and now burns natural gas, which kills people through air pollution.

    • @SebastianPeitsch
      @SebastianPeitsch Před rokem +1

      nuclear energy isn't carbon neutral. mining the uranium and building the reactors results in anywhere between 12 and 114 grams of CO2 per kWh. That's significant.

    • @SuWoopSparrow
      @SuWoopSparrow Před rokem +4

      @@SebastianPeitsch nuclear doesnt need to be carbon neutral, it needs to be sustainable (which it is)

  • @DanskeCrimeRiderTV
    @DanskeCrimeRiderTV Před rokem +196

    Delay and overbudget doesn't really matter. I'm a nuclear expert, and they tend to pay back after 3-5 years. The Olkiluoto plant in Finland was very behind schedule and overbudget, however, it has been a great success and will be paid back in just 3 years, and then there will be tremendous profits.

    • @1968Christiaan
      @1968Christiaan Před rokem

      That is not true at all. Massive overruns, wasting both time and money. Finances and waste-disposal problems will kill off nuclear.

    • @eannamcnamara9338
      @eannamcnamara9338 Před rokem +47

      I think I doesn't really matter if it's delayed or overbudget, it's our only easily way of reaching a fossil fuel free future, so we need to build it anyway. Put the earth before profits

    • @mmeade9402
      @mmeade9402 Před rokem +18

      But as was alluded to in the video, much of the delay and cost blowout was simply due to the fact that none had been built domestically in 40+ years. Its like when they started ramping up construction of the Virginia class submarines, it started off terribly, but once they got a few out of drydock they worked out the construction kinks and now they roll out ahead of schedule and under budget on a regular basis.
      If they get to work on the next soon, that knowledge of how to do it, and what problems to look for will transfer, speed will pick up, and price will fall more in line with whats expected.

    • @stephenbrickwood1602
      @stephenbrickwood1602 Před rokem +4

      @@mmeade9402 and when all the Dictators have nuclear industries the extra nuclear deterrence submarines can be built more quickly so that they can be close to the new threats. And act rapidly.
      150,000 SMRs, Small modular reactors like BWRX300 from GE Hitachi and Rolls Royce.
      No more CO2 in the world.
      $TRILLIONS in national grids to disperse the concentrated central electric power to the dispersed ends of the grid and the dispersed EVs.

    • @ten_tego_teges
      @ten_tego_teges Před rokem +10

      @@eannamcnamara9338 As much as I care for our planet, I have to disagree with a "overbudget doesn't matter" sentiment.
      Money is useful, it abstracts sth as complex as building a nuclear plant to single number that can be compared to some other complex thing e.g. medical expenses. We have finite resources, we have finite productive capacity and finite work hours at our disposal. Building a sustainable future means we have to be extra vigilant in how we manage those.
      The different between a vanity project and an investment is that the former ignores any cost effectiveness. Let's not make that mistake and be critical of ourselves even when we are doing the right thing :)

  • @merkakis212
    @merkakis212 Před rokem +96

    Glad to see nuclear power making a comeback as it is far more important to our future than people understand.

    • @makatron
      @makatron Před rokem

      Hippies ruined the nuclear, imagine if the US had enough nuclear to be fossil fuel free in the national grid.

    • @Mattihacker
      @Mattihacker Před rokem +2

      Yes, because of all the useless waste. There is literally no use for it, its just expensive.

    • @ManOfSteel1
      @ManOfSteel1 Před rokem +3

      the aftermath is unimaginable but who cares what you leave behind for coming generations because american dream is about you not the world.

    • @merkakis212
      @merkakis212 Před rokem +13

      @@Mattihacker nuclear waste can be recycled and what can’t be recycled can be stored deep beneath the ground on the site it’s produced,
      Solar and wind produce a lot more waste that ends up in dump polluting the environment
      Given that population will grow and human energy consumption keeps increasing we need reliable source of energy

    • @merkakis212
      @merkakis212 Před rokem +6

      @@ManOfSteel1 yeah have an actual research and see how much rubbish ends up in dumps from solar panels and wind turbines, plus nuclear energy is what will be needed to power cities of tomorrow as populations grow and our consumption of energy grows as well, it far more sustainable and cleaner than you think.
      Nuclear waste can be literally stored on the site deep underground and
      Most now will be possible to recycle anyways
      And the reactors of today already are built with a lot more precautions than the ones building 10years ago.

  • @TheMrFishnDucks
    @TheMrFishnDucks Před rokem +2

    Looking forward to how this turns out. Nice video. Keep up the good work.

    • @textmeontelegrammsapreviou1269
      @textmeontelegrammsapreviou1269 Před rokem

      Thanks for watching and commenting. You have been selected in my draw✨Winners should text on telegram to claim prize. (Only Winners).🏝🏝

  • @computercrack
    @computercrack Před rokem +48

    5:40: That's untrue. Flamanville NPP block 3 was expected to cost 3.4billion euros and should have been completed 2012. Ten years later it's still not online and costs are expected to be around 12.7billion euros. The 300million you are talking about are only the latest price increase for the delay from end of 22 to Q2/23!!!

    • @XMysticHerox
      @XMysticHerox Před rokem +16

      Fun fact. If that amount had been invested into solar and wind you'd have about 4 times the power generation it's supposed to have and it would likely have been ready much faster.

    • @dickmelsonlupot7697
      @dickmelsonlupot7697 Před rokem +11

      @@XMysticHerox
      yes but the power generation won't be as reliable as nuclear and it can't be "on demand".

    • @TorteInYourFace
      @TorteInYourFace Před rokem +7

      @@dickmelsonlupot7697
      Then only put 40% of that money in solar/wind and the other 60% into batteries or some other storage facility. Would work as well and you would not end up with waste that literally kills you for the next million years.

    • @bleachorange
      @bleachorange Před rokem

      @@TorteInYourFace says the toxic heavy metals present in the batteries that just goes to landfills and leaches into groundwater. There are also new designs that are orders of magnitude safer, as in zero percent chance of meltdown, that will also be cheaper once the first couple are done. Why arent they being built already? Institutional inertia. Its like the big aerospace companies and rockets - The regulatory environment is not friendly to new designs, and it takes time to train up a workforce to use new processes and techniques.

    • @pavulon5000
      @pavulon5000 Před rokem

      @@TorteInYourFace How does nuclear waste kill people? Wtf. If solar and batteries are that good, maybe you shouldn't resort to fear mongering.

  • @pavulon5000
    @pavulon5000 Před rokem +41

    Nuclear must be pretty damn safe if the Three Mile Island is considered "one of the worst nuclear disasters ever"

    • @scottslotterbeck3796
      @scottslotterbeck3796 Před rokem

      Not a single person died. Something even hydroelectric cannot claim.
      And does not kill birds like windmills.

    • @what.the..6990
      @what.the..6990 Před rokem +2

      Right up there with that time I left the oven on.

    • @LordZontar
      @LordZontar Před 10 měsíci +1

      Even factoring the three worst nuclear disasters in history -- Windscale, Chernobyl and Fukushima Daichi -- into the mix, the total number of people who have died from nuclear accidents in 70+ years of reactor operation wouldn't fill a college basketball arena. From 50,000 to 80,000 die annually from fossil fuel power generation pollution, the 1975 Banqiao dam collapse in China killed 100,000, the 1979 Machchu dam collapse in India killed 25,000, and the 1986 Bhopal chemical disaster in India killed 50,000. A bit over 9300 a year die within Louisiana's Cancer Alley, the 85 mile stretch of the Mississippi River between Baton Rouge and New Orleans where the state's petrochemical industry -- 200 chemical plants and oil refineries -- is located. Three Mile Island didn't even reach the level of a full meltdown and there was no breach of the reactor vessel. So in comparison, yeah, nuclear is "pretty damn safe".

    • @jackman5840
      @jackman5840 Před 2 měsíci

      @@LordZontar People talk about the irradiated area that should have never happened in the first place in chernobyl, but what about the oil spills straight into the ocean? like tf?

    • @LordZontar
      @LordZontar Před 2 měsíci

      @@jackman5840 Or the BP Deep Horizon oil platform spill in the Gulf of Mexico back in 2010.

  • @hhydar883
    @hhydar883 Před rokem +22

    With delays spanning decades, it seems like in the US, one can spend his/her whole career on a single project without any worries lolz 😄

  • @lazyslistener
    @lazyslistener Před rokem +105

    I remember learning about this project way back in like 2013 and I was like oh my God. finally, we're getting some new nuclear but then of course delayed delayed delay. I'm so happy this is finally getting completed. we need more of this stuff, power our country into the future and beyond

    • @clarkkent9080
      @clarkkent9080 Před rokem +1

      Dude, at $15 billion each, these plants produce power at 3 times the cost of a natural gas plant

    • @jsusbdndk1362
      @jsusbdndk1362 Před rokem

      @@clarkkent9080 yes, but at some point we’re gonna run out of natural gas. And nuclear power plants produce at maximum capacity over 90 percent of the time, marking it a more reliable source than natural gas and coal. Plus, as time goes on and the more we build, it will become cheaper like everything else.

    • @ducksonplays4190
      @ducksonplays4190 Před rokem +2

      @@clarkkent9080 With over 6 times the power output.

    • @iankmak
      @iankmak Před rokem +4

      90% of these delays and cost overruns is because people in america forgot how to build. There isn't even a workforce capable of doing it anymore. People had to be trained on the job leading to delays. Things get done and have to be redone because people didn't do it right.
      If nuclear reactors are built more, these inefficiencies will get ironed out because economies of scale.

    • @clarkkent9080
      @clarkkent9080 Před rokem

      @@iankmak I don't think it is quite as simplistic as that but you are not too far off the truth. But how many utilities are willing to build grossly cost inefficient plants hoping that things will get better in the future?

  • @asdfjklol
    @asdfjklol Před rokem +17

    3:32 People need to STOP saying 3 mile island was one of the worst nuclear accidents in history. It does not even compare to Chernobyl, Kysthtym, and Fukushima. No one was killed or even seriously injured. The amount of radiation released was miniscule. Key safety systems worked as intended.
    The harm from abandoning nuclear power in the US is out of all proportion to the TMI accident.

    • @highdefinist9697
      @highdefinist9697 Před 3 měsíci

      I don't think Fukushima is anywhere near comparable to Chernobyl, but it is true that it was "suprisingly bad", given that it happened in an OECD-country (and people would stereotypically assume that the Japanese are very thorough on such stuff).

  • @sjnieha
    @sjnieha Před rokem +5

    I really enjoy your videos and always look forward to a new one. GREAT Job!

  • @hasanchoudhury5401
    @hasanchoudhury5401 Před rokem +1

    Great timing finally ! Optimistic.

  • @HAA0603
    @HAA0603 Před rokem +11

    I recommend doing a video on Ottawa’s light rail system expansion like you did about Seattle’s, which isn’t talked about enough and is one of the biggest transit expansions if not the biggest in North America

    • @capitalinventor4823
      @capitalinventor4823 Před rokem

      Yes, shine a light to investigate how terrible the whole project is and what the city repeat mistakes when the second phase opens. Or perhaps they'll just make a set of new ones. No matter what I'm sure that the riders will be blamed for all of the problems of Watson's Folly.

  •  Před rokem +74

    This guys stache can probably produce more energy than american wind turbines combined

  • @Zack-pl9np
    @Zack-pl9np Před rokem +192

    I really hope that nuclear makes a bigger comeback in the US

    • @mh3535
      @mh3535 Před rokem +2

      I'd echo your sentiment with the caveate that they come out with a clear and understandable plan to deal with the waste that doesn't involve burying it in poor rural people's back yard combined with actively ignoring said poor people's elevated cancer rates.

    • @kovy689
      @kovy689 Před rokem +9

      @@mh3535 If safely contained and sealed in barrels, it shouldn’t be a problem.

    • @eannamcnamara9338
      @eannamcnamara9338 Před rokem +26

      @@mh3535 not to dismiss your point, but there is little to no increase in cancer near storage facilities since they are so deep (900 feet) . Hell the risk of cancer is shown to be higher if you live near a coal plant than near a nuclear plant.

    • @amyalewine
      @amyalewine Před rokem

      @@eannamcnamara9338 Tell Kevin D Blanch that. PHD nuclear Scientist. Go to his youtube page and find the real truth.

    • @scarpfish
      @scarpfish Před rokem +16

      You don't need to bury the vast majority of it anywhere. 95% of fuel rods can be recycled.

  • @DarkpawTheWolf
    @DarkpawTheWolf Před rokem +40

    It's good to see people finally coming back to reality, and getting out of the "no nukes" mentality. I'd like to see you do a video on Canada's nuclear vision (despite being an early leader in CANDU reactor technology), with the country going "all in" on the new SMR (small modular reactor) variants. These cost a small fraction of a larger reactor, are much faster to build, and can be put practically anywhere (including remote towns like in the far north for countries that need them).

  • @asten77
    @asten77 Před rokem +12

    Would love more insight into the various "assembly line" Small Modular Reactor designs that are floating around. One was recently approved by the NRC.

  • @mandakhg6568
    @mandakhg6568 Před rokem +24

    Regularly changing construction code/regulations would be the biggest hurdle when it comes to building nuclear plant proposed budget and time.

    • @grmasdfII
      @grmasdfII Před rokem +3

      Nah, the biggest hurdle is wiping out any chance of gaining institutional knowledge by underpaying and firing the people doing the actual work after every contract and hiring cheap amateurs for the next one.

  • @zunkman1
    @zunkman1 Před rokem +4

    LOVE your videos, HATE the ads in the middle, LOVE my fast-forward buttons on the computer.

  • @ConradSpoke
    @ConradSpoke Před rokem +6

    Perhaps you could have mentioned one bit of trivia about Three-Mile Island, "one of the worst nuclear accidents in history": *nobody died*.

  • @MegaLokopo
    @MegaLokopo Před rokem +47

    I wouldn't worry about accidents like three mile island anymore, printers have gotten a lot faster since then. Also computers have gotten fast enough to be able to fix the problem themselves instead of flashing a red light on a large wall of flashing lights to signal something has broken.

    • @nathanwahl9224
      @nathanwahl9224 Před rokem

      That wasn't the problem. Computers can just do stupid things faster. Everything else around the equipment has been completely changed as well as the equipment itself.

    • @MegaLokopo
      @MegaLokopo Před rokem +1

      @@nathanwahl9224 That wasn't the only problem but it was a major factor in making the disaster worse. If they had up to date accurate information on what was happening, they easily could have stopped the disaster from getting worse or possibly from happening at all.
      The printer that printed errors was several hours behind withen 5 minutes of the disaster sequence starting, how does that not have an effect?

    • @LutraLovegood
      @LutraLovegood Před rokem +1

      @@nathanwahl9224 Computers are significantly less prone to errors than humans.

    • @Justowner
      @Justowner Před rokem

      @@nathanwahl9224 What Luke said. You cannot follow the decision tree of correcting an error if the system that tells you the error is incapable of doing so effectively.

  • @brianholloway6205
    @brianholloway6205 Před rokem +8

    American politics summed up "why deal with the opposition when you can just not build anything."

  • @csharp7926
    @csharp7926 Před rokem +3

    uhhh three mile island was caused by HUMAN error. "oh. we got a problem. ok turn off the water for a WATER cooled reactor. that'll fix it." sheer brilliance there.

    • @Ussr0312
      @Ussr0312 Před rokem

      I read a book about it, it’s called “Meltdown: A Race Against Nuclear Disaster at Three Mile Island” by Willborn Hampton. From what I could understand it was due to a lot of stupid mistakes, and it wasn’t helped by the fact that Met-Ed (the operator of the plant) wasn’t very transparent during the whole thing.

  • @bissycoon
    @bissycoon Před rokem +13

    I can finally mark being involved in a project that the B1M does a video on off my bucket list Plant vogtle ftw!

  • @henrysantos121
    @henrysantos121 Před rokem +14

    Excellent documentary well done✓

  • @dankspain
    @dankspain Před rokem +11

    I work as an engineer in the largest offshore wind farm projects in the world, over 1GW both in execution and planned. I can tell you that we would not be able to build at such at such low costs without a continuous pipeline of projects, with lessons learned, workers chaining projects, etc. So I totally understand why nuclear is expensive and why the problem is not the technology itself.

    • @sandal_thong8631
      @sandal_thong8631 Před rokem

      We need offshore wind in America. But so many people don't want to see it. Maybe they have investments in coal, or they left Holland to get away from windmills?

    • @Mattnesss
      @Mattnesss Před rokem

      Even with a continuous pipeline of projects it wouldn't be the same. Small modules like solar or (somewhat larger) wind turbines simply scale better in terms of learning curve. That's the problem when a single nuclear plant takes 10+ years to build.

    • @margaretarmstrong2445
      @margaretarmstrong2445 Před 11 měsíci

      ​@@MattnesssSMR's don't take 10 years to build. I live in a Renewable Energy Zone and just one wind/solar project here is estimated to be completed in three years. At halfway through the planning they are up to 32 projects of solar and or wind and there are 800 wind turbines included in those figures so far. They want to install 69 turbines in our beautiful valley, each one at 7MW and standing at 280m high and 200m wide (918ft high X 656ft wide). It's bloody devastating. We have 19 endangered species of birds identified in our region alone, as well as endangered bats and Koala habitat. This part of the project will utilise 73 square kilometres (7,300 hectares) and the solar will utilise 17 square kilometres (1,700 hectares). A total of 90 square kilometres for a form of energy that is capable of producing a fraction of the output of coal, gas or nuclear. This is just one project! The cumulative effect of all these projects being built around the same time will be horrendous. The wildlife will be decimated and by the time they complete the projects that are

    • @margaretarmstrong2445
      @margaretarmstrong2445 Před 11 měsíci

      I posted the above response accidentally and the edit function isn't working for some reason. Just to conclude, by the time they complete the planned projects it will be time to start all over again. They are destroying the environment for a form of energy that isn't fit for purpose.

  • @johnnycage8679
    @johnnycage8679 Před rokem

    Thanks!

  • @eccefuga
    @eccefuga Před rokem +8

    Would be great to see a video on the TerraPower nuclear plant project in Wyoming. Idea for a future video.

  • @BBrewster85
    @BBrewster85 Před rokem +110

    Great video, I have been working on a similarly massive nuclear site for some years and the comments about lessons learned/shared between similar projects is familiar. Very long shot but given the popularity of this channel, if any Surveyors/Geospatial professionals working in Nuclear anywhere in the world see this and want to reach out I'd love to chat.

    • @tracyannbanks123_12
      @tracyannbanks123_12 Před rokem

      Nuclear is the true renewable green energy source

    • @LucarioBoricua
      @LucarioBoricua Před rokem

      There's been many other incidents and accidents involving nuclear materials, including power generation, radiological medical waste, nuclear material processing facilities, and nuclear-powered transport (submarines and ships).

    • @SharhbiniRauf
      @SharhbiniRauf Před rokem

      Giant Iron Nitride Permanent Magnet Motor Can Spin Another Giant Electric Generator 100% Clean Energy, Thausands Gw Is Possible Depends On Size.

    • @AshleyEllwood
      @AshleyEllwood Před rokem +3

      You might want to try Reddit to find other professionals to chat with. :)

    • @BBrewster85
      @BBrewster85 Před rokem +2

      @@AshleyEllwood Reddit has passed me by but I’ll give it a shot thanks 🙏

  • @coltongreen1848
    @coltongreen1848 Před rokem +16

    It’s crazy how I’m interested in nuclear energy and live in the US but didn’t know any of this. Thanks! 👏

    • @nathanwahl9224
      @nathanwahl9224 Před rokem

      You're not alone. Followed by Hollyweird the industry is it's own worst enemy when it comes to PR, and our education system is equally to blame.

  • @jimfrazier8611
    @jimfrazier8611 Před rokem +53

    I would hardly call Vogtle 3 & 4 a comeback, since we're nowhere close to replacing the units we've already taken offline, much less the units we literally abandoned in a nearly complete status because the public no longer wanted them. And let's be fair here, if anything Vogtle 3 & 4 are at best a cautionary tale of why nobody wants to invest in new reactor designs. There are tons of new, supposedly walk-away safe concepts on the drawing boards, but they are nowhere close to mature ready-to-build designs, as Southern found out the hard way. I'm not some anti-nuclear zealot, and I actually have somewhere near 10,000 hours of critical operation as a navy reactor operator, I'm just a realist about the hurdles the industry is still facing over 40 years after the term "core meltdown" entered the common vernacular. It's not like the threat of decay heat has gone away or Zirconium has stopped reacting with steam in an uncooled core or anything.

    • @daniellarson3068
      @daniellarson3068 Před rokem

      I guess you wouldn't have the Zirc Water thing with molten salt. Would you have the Xenon decay thing? I've heard that you use a lot less fuel so maybe spent fuel isn't so big an issue. It would be cool if they had the cojones to actually try and build one . Maybe the military could do it

    • @altrag
      @altrag Před rokem +2

      > I would hardly call Vogtle 3 & 4 a comeback,
      Assuming its successful, it becomes a "comeback" in the sense that it could lead the way for other states to follow suit and begin their own similar projects. It may be too soon to call it a comeback _yet,_ but I don't think the word is necessarily incorrect.
      > There are tons of new, supposedly walk-away safe concepts on the drawing boards, but they are nowhere close to mature ready-to-build designs
      Except its not new. Its a design already in use in other countries. The problems are mostly regulatory and supply chain issues, not design issues. And the only way you're going to start fixing those is by actually doing something, discovering the problem areas and correcting them. The only thing you're going to get from a constant fear of trying anything new is left behind.
      > I'm just a realist about the hurdles the industry is still facing
      And the only way to face them is by .. actually facing them. Those hurdles will never be overcome if nobody is ever willing to take the first step.
      > It's not like the threat of decay heat has gone away or Zirconium has stopped reacting with steam in an uncooled core or anything
      It kind of has, to large extent. We've got 50 years of additional scientific and engineering knowledge behind us since the designs of TMI, Chernobyl and Fukushima. Loads of extra redundancies for safety features we've discovered to be most prone to failure, physics-based safety features (that is, losing power automatically shuts off the reactor without any reliance on human intervention or mechanical/electrical devices functioning correctly, etc), much more powerful modern computers capable of monitoring and controlling the plants at millisecond (or less) intervals rather than complete reliance on relatively slow and fallible human intuition.
      There's just not anywhere near as much risk with a modern design as there was before. Because we've learned about the risks and have developed ways to compensate for them. Nothing can ever be 100% guaranteed safe of course, but modern designs are orders of magnitude better at avoiding meltdown conditions than those old 1960's an 70's era plants. Those old plants that had a total of three serious accidents among hundreds (thousands?) constructed around the world over 40-60 years of operation (including many plants that have continued operating well beyond their designed duration).
      The panic over meltdowns is really more of a media frenzy issue than a real issue. That's not to say its not a problem - the media has done a good job of scaring voters and voters influence politicians who ultimately have the power to green light or axe projects like nuclear power plants. But in terms of the actual plants themselves, there really isn't a significant concern (and arguably never really was if you measure the three major nuclear accidents statistically rather than just judging them by looped video of an exploding cooling tower that gets played over and over again whenever someone wants to induce fear of nuclear power).

    • @acmefixer1
      @acmefixer1 Před rokem +3

      @@altrag
      I'm not against new nuclear power plants. It's all about the money. Not far from Vogtle is the VC Summer new NPP debacle, sitting there, abandoned after spending billions in cost overruns and construction delays. Did they tell you about that in the video?
      Reality is that new NPPs can't compete; nuclear power is costing more per MWh than renewables, which are costing less and less.

    • @LtLukoziuz
      @LtLukoziuz Před rokem

      @@acmefixer1 Well, when you count just by MWh, then yeah, you can't really compete with the energy from the nature (like solar or wind). But, to reach the same output that an NPP produces, renewables have to take up way more physical space, not to mention regulations stopping them from happening in anywhere more residential. For USA, that's little of issue with how much free land there is (at least western side, where most such land is federal. Eastern side, where it's mostly state controlled, it gets harder/more annoying), but for example, for Europe, unless there is more push and technological advancement in sea wind parks and other innovative designs, there's just so much space that you can build efficient and, more importantly, sufficient renewables.

    • @bwake
      @bwake Před rokem

      @@acmefixer1 The renewables are still heavily subsidized, while anti-nuclear activists deliberately delay projects expressly in order to run up the costs.

  • @tomjones9510
    @tomjones9510 Před rokem +7

    I think he needs to rephrase that! The AP1000 that were built in China aren’t up to quality standards and regulatory standards in the US. Source former employee on the AP1000

  • @2010MConnolly
    @2010MConnolly Před rokem +27

    Can you do an episode on the Childrens Hospital in Dublin, Ireland? It's an absolute shambles and is the most expensive hospital in the world. Nothing but delays and over budget.

  • @Elucidator-
    @Elucidator- Před rokem +3

    Smooth transition to NordVPN Fred. Very smooth.

  • @zealman79
    @zealman79 Před rokem +5

    "There goes Albany!"
    -Carl, the simpsons...
    LOVE IT

  • @josephwaggener9307
    @josephwaggener9307 Před rokem +11

    I was a Sr. Safety Specialist on the Vogtle Project for over 8 years. It had it's challenges but I am very proud of it's success. Bechtel made it happen.

    • @clarkkent9080
      @clarkkent9080 Před rokem

      I worked in the nuclear industry for 40+ years at 5 different facilities and am very pro-nuclear.
      I believe it was 2016 when then DOE Secretary Moniz was asked about the future of nuclear power in America. He stated that the future of nuclear power was playing out at VC Summer in SC. and Vogtle in Ga. and if they were successful, then nuclear power had a bright future in America. That simple statement says it all. Until the issues with the U.S. construction industry are addressed, nothing will change.
      Vogtle and VC Summer project management and construction crafts have doomed new nuclear in the U.S.
      No one that EVER worked on either of these projects in a exempt role should EVER be allowed on any future nuclear project. The problem was not with anti-nukes, the media, greenies, politicians, or the NRC. The problem was with the people that worked there and yes I am mad as h3ll

    • @ibrahim-sj2cr
      @ibrahim-sj2cr Před rokem

      @@clarkkent9080 so funny that joseph never replied

    • @clarkkent9080
      @clarkkent9080 Před rokem +1

      @@ibrahim-sj2cr These people in management positions at those two nuclear projects have killed new nuclear in the U.S. and need to held accountable

  • @LeoLeo-qo7yw
    @LeoLeo-qo7yw Před rokem +4

    Wow, Dr. Eggman went through a redemption arc, and now is a Nuclear Speciallyst.

  • @zapfanzapfan
    @zapfanzapfan Před rokem +5

    We need a bit of a building boom to replace the current old power plants, hopefully a bit more assembly line construction brings down the cost.

    • @MrMcMind
      @MrMcMind Před rokem

      It might sound nice,but you never reach the point of "mass assembly" with this to bring down the cost.
      Every reactor is different because you have new designs that take advantage of new developments in technology.
      Really the only cost savings you would achieve with an assembly line aka build more reactors the same way is less planning, not in part production. The reality is you might only be building them in the 10s not the tens of thousends...
      and also for this to be practical you would need to start the process of new reactors in a close timeframe of oneanother, ideally all at the same time after the first "test" build.

    • @zapfanzapfan
      @zapfanzapfan Před rokem +1

      @@MrMcMind It'll never be mass manufacture but when every new reactor is a one-off then no wonder it gets expensive. The talent pool goes away to do other things if there is not a constant stream of new builds being started. Maybe Small Modular Reactors can solve that, if someone actually starts building them...

  • @ne0tic
    @ne0tic Před rokem

    Yet another interesting topic!

  • @Nerpson
    @Nerpson Před rokem +5

    Great video! You could do your investigation as well in France, and tell us why the EPR is taking much more time and money than what has been told!

    • @samuelgomola9097
      @samuelgomola9097 Před rokem

      Same story, here in Europe we forgot how to build NPPs, similarly building Olkiluoto 3 and Mochovce 3 and 4 way over budget and delayed. Whats crazy, Mochovce NPP in Slovakia was continuation of frozen project, with almost all structural work already done. Thanks god, Olkiluoto is running and Mochovce 3 just few days ago started chain reaction at minimum power level and next milestone is first grid sync and energetic startup.

  • @peredavi
    @peredavi Před rokem +27

    B1M made a very big omission. TerraPower is building a new type reactor in Kemmerer, Wyoming at a coal fired power plant site. It is scheduled to come online 2028. I’m looking forward to driving or flying down for the opening from Cody, Wyoming. It will be the first of new design nuclear plants. These reactors can make use of “spent” rods stored in existing rector sites.

    • @Anverse-14
      @Anverse-14 Před rokem +4

      Wyoming does not exist, what are you talking about?

    • @textmeontelegrammsapreviou1269
      @textmeontelegrammsapreviou1269 Před rokem

      @@Anverse-14 you won a giveaway text me on telegram to claim your prize

    • @Nill757
      @Nill757 Před rokem +1

      That’s all false. Nobody is currently “building” a power reactor in WY. There is no license to build a TP reactor design in WY or anywhere else in the US, and certainly not online in 6 years.
      All of that is physically possible, but none of it is allowed politically. If you want that changed insist on reform from the people who get your vote.

    • @clarkkent9080
      @clarkkent9080 Před rokem

      Sorry but Russia was going to make their fuel and you know the problem with that. Now the whole project is on hold until the U.S. taxpayer builds a plant to make their fuel here. They will not break ground for at least 10 years

  • @Contortas
    @Contortas Před rokem +24

    Three mile island was not the disaster you made it out to be, it was blown way out of proportion.

    • @dickmelsonlupot7697
      @dickmelsonlupot7697 Před rokem +11

      it wasn't even a disaster and more like a oopsie.
      It only got a bad rap due to dumb media being dumb

    • @zapfanzapfan
      @zapfanzapfan Před rokem

      Didn't kill anyone with radiation but it did kill the nuclear industry... so, quite the disaster in a way...

    • @marsmotion
      @marsmotion Před rokem

      @@dickmelsonlupot7697 really im sure the towns many cancer survivors and victims would take issue there if they could.

    • @brian2440
      @brian2440 Před rokem

      Yet a lot of people still don’t appreciate all the factors that led to the disaster despite it being a great learning opportunity

    • @dickmelsonlupot7697
      @dickmelsonlupot7697 Před rokem

      @@brian2440
      People don't remember the actual reasons and only focus on the supposed "disaster" itself without even knowing the actual truth behind the incident.
      And this mostly because of media who were the main culprits in the misinformation about the incident and nuclear power in general

  • @Scottagram
    @Scottagram Před rokem +4

    I've never understood the description of Three Mile Island as being one of the worst nuclear accidents.
    The contingency plans were carried out. Every emergency procedure worked. No one was hurt.

    • @factnotfiction5915
      @factnotfiction5915 Před rokem

      That is kind of the point. It was one of the worse (nuclear) accidents; much smaller than RE accidents.

    • @nathanwahl9224
      @nathanwahl9224 Před rokem +2

      Shhhh, how are you going to spread fear and hate if everyone finds that out??? Sensationalism sells. Unfortunately.

    • @nedward.7442
      @nedward.7442 Před 10 měsíci

      So that's the point. If lightning strikes and nothing happens, everyone will still crap.

  • @Supernaut2000
    @Supernaut2000 Před rokem +3

    Fascinating, it always comes down to a guy with a tape measure at 6:53.

  • @sdjenkins
    @sdjenkins Před rokem +25

    Hi Fred, another great video. I’d love to see you make a video on the construction of Hinkley point. Massive, and similarly complex to this one

  • @tyroberts2261
    @tyroberts2261 Před rokem +20

    Three Mile Island cost a lot of money, but no one was hurt. The radiation released was equivalent of a few airline trips. Cost over runs come largely from political delays.

  • @emphasisengineering
    @emphasisengineering Před rokem

    This is an excellent video. Perhaps one of the best I have seen on nuclear.
    So apart from Vogtle, which other nuclear power stations have either come online in the US or are nearing completion?

  • @DougGoobanko
    @DougGoobanko Před rokem +1

    7:38 'Well a lot and... no.' Lost it hahaha

    • @textmeontelegrammsapreviou1269
      @textmeontelegrammsapreviou1269 Před rokem

      Thanks for watching and commenting. You have been selected in my draw✨Winners should text on telegram to claim prize. (Only Winners). 🧭🧭

  • @Naultarous
    @Naultarous Před rokem +4

    I appreciate the segway to Nord VPN and way you said it is fine. But the security of VPN is to IT security of a power plant is like a pet door is to home security. I really wish channels stop equating VPN with other topics.

  • @nicolasbertin8552
    @nicolasbertin8552 Před rokem +7

    Big mistake on the Flamanville reactor in France. You said it was going to be 300 million over. That's the latest added cost, but there has been numerous budget corrections since the beginning of the project... In reality, the project was first estimated to cost around 4 billion, and now it's gonna cost 19 billion... Not exactly the same thing...

    • @killingtimeitself
      @killingtimeitself Před rokem

      the flamanville reactor is a fucking shitshow right now, continual building errors and idiotic mistakes that shouldnt be made but keep getting made. Gotta love stagnation in industry.

  • @LeSatan
    @LeSatan Před rokem +4

    OL3 is going start on December here in Finland. The most expensive building in the world.

    • @hurri7720
      @hurri7720 Před rokem +1

      It's up and running but not at full capacity till December.

  • @SparkyFinch
    @SparkyFinch Před rokem +5

    It's almost like the more you learn about it, the less scary and divisive it should be

  • @Watchyn_Yarwood
    @Watchyn_Yarwood Před rokem +30

    Excellent presentation, as always. I would like to see you delve into Liquid fluoride thorium reactor projects going on around the world and give us your unique perspective. Pros, cons? Who is leading research? etc.

    • @altrag
      @altrag Před rokem +3

      Not much for LFTR. Loads of people talking about it, not much actual activity. The only serious player is China who have apparently completed construction on a test reactor. No idea how well their tests are going (or if its even been started up yet) however.
      All of the other potential competitors are either still in R&D phase, still trying to gather funding, or have already folded. I'm not sure anyone aside from China even has a test plant under construction at the moment never mind operating.
      Of course that's just from easily available information. Always possible there's some companies out there operating in dark mode that are way closer than anyone outside of their employees knows. Suppose it still would be nice for an actual investigative journalist to go do a review of the industry as opposed to some rando on a CZcams comment with knowledge gleaned entirely from a few minutes on Google :D.

    • @tonyadler1319
      @tonyadler1319 Před rokem +1

      I read an interesting comment by someone who explained very well why a thorium reactor would never work. I'll see if I can find it.

    • @tonyadler1319
      @tonyadler1319 Před rokem +1

      warning, nuclear physicist talking.
      Anything you watch or read when they talk about Thorium, do the Protactinium test: Ctrl+F "Protactinium".
      If you've heard about Thorium, you might remember that 232Th is not a nuclear fuel per se, it must be turn into the good stuff 233U; thats the one that will fission and give you your energy from fission, to turn into heat, steam, etc. Think of it like a recipe, you have butter and flower, you mix them to get the shortbread that you want. See how easy it is for everybody to get some shortbread?
      Except everybody also like to gloss over that between the "butter/flower" step and the "shortbread" step, there's a "white phosphorous neurotoxic napalm" step that might make things a bit more complicated the kitchen. That's your 233Pa.
      So it goes 232Th+n -> 233Pa -> 233U.
      This is when you say: "but wait 233c, this is just like 239Pu is produced from 238U: 238U+n -> 239Np -> 239Pu, this is happening all the time in normal nuclear power plants. What's the difference?". The difference is the same as between 2 and 27.
      239Np (the step between Uranium 238 and Plutonium 239) has a half life of 2 days, while 233Pa (the thing between Thorium and Uranium 233) has one of 27 days. If you leave 239Np in the core it will quickly turn into 239Pu, but you can't leave 233Pa in the core for a month or it will capture more neutrons and turn into something else than 233U. (there's also a matter of cross section: 233Pa has a much higher probability of capturing neutrons than 239Np). If you leave your butter and flower too long in the over you'll get a brick rather than a shortbread.
      If you want to use Thorium, you must: expose your Th; extract your 233Pu; let it decay into 233U; feed the 233U back to your reactor.
      By now you should understand why liquifying the fuel make so much more sense for Th than for U. It's not "MSR work so well with Thorium", it "if you want to continuously extract your 233Pa, you'd better do it with a liquid fuel".
      this is where you say "Ok, but still don't see the issue, you just pump and filter your fuel to recover the 233Pa, and let it decay in a tank, and pump/filter the 233U back in for it to fission".
      I'm going to assume that you know what a Becquerel and a Sievert are.
      Remember the 27 days? with the density of 233Pa, that translates into 769TBq/g (Tera is for 1012 , that's a lot), and because of the high energy gamma from our friend 233Pa, that also means a dose rate at 1m from a 1g teardrop of 233Pa of 20,800mSv/h. Starting to get a picture?
      Notice how all the numbers I've use are not "engineering limits" that few millions in R&D can bend, those are hardwired physical constants of Nature: half life, density, neutron capture cross section, gamma energy. Good luck changing those by throwing $ at them.
      Now try to imagine technicians working in those plants, like doing some maintenance, replacing a pump (I haven't even touched the complex chemical separation system you need to extract your 233Pa from your fuel or 233U from your 233Pa, which will definitely need maintenance). Let's put it this way: if there is 1mg of 233Pa left in the component they are working on, they'll reach their annual dose limit in 1h.
      Now try to imagine the operating company of those plant, if you have the tiniest leak, like a tiny poodle, you can't send anybody in for months, meaning you are loosing month of revenue because of a tiny leaky seal failure, what would be a trivial event anywhere else (did I mention that molten salts also have corrosion issues).
      When they say "Thorium has been used in research MSR", they mean "we've injected some Thorium and detected 233U" or maybe even just "we've injected 233U in the fuel".
      So my humble opinion is that playing with it in the lab is one thing, turning it into actual power plants is slightly more problematic.
      here are more numbers trying to imagine an industrial scale Thorium reactor.
      TL;DR: Thorium will probably never leave the labs to reach industrial, electricity production scale. The physics is sound, the engineering and actual practical operating constrains just kill the concept.

    • @Watchyn_Yarwood
      @Watchyn_Yarwood Před rokem

      @@tonyadler1319 And I have read many scientific papers on how one does work. So don't waste your time.

    • @tonyadler1319
      @tonyadler1319 Před rokem

      @@Watchyn_Yarwood I was just presenting information not trying to change your mind, something I could care less about.

  • @wdwerker
    @wdwerker Před rokem +7

    I’m still hopeful for the new designs which use higher temperatures and low pressure plus safe shut down if there is a loss of power.

    • @zerotwo_.002
      @zerotwo_.002 Před rokem

      Yes they are molten salt Bois so super safe.

  • @brianswille
    @brianswille Před rokem +2

    Please do a video on CANDU reactors. Super safe and use nuclear material that is usually discarded or not useable( not radio active enough) on conventional reactors so much less waste.

  • @Tgungen
    @Tgungen Před rokem +1

    1:54 Mark Nelson really nails the "Supervillain mugshot" here, amazing mustache & attire

    • @textmeontelegrammsapreviou1269
      @textmeontelegrammsapreviou1269 Před rokem

      Thanks for watching and commenting. You have been selected in my draw✨Winners should text on telegram to claim prize. (Only Winners). 🧭🧭

  • @penguinking4830
    @penguinking4830 Před rokem +4

    How could a country that invented the word "tsunami," not take it into account when building a nuclear reactor by the beach?

    • @nathanwahl9224
      @nathanwahl9224 Před rokem

      What, modifying your plant to current standards (which would have addressed the issues) would be admitting that you had made a mistake in the past!!! Culturally a very bad thing, hari kari and all that fall on your sword crap! So you just ignore all that stuff, recommended improvements are not allowed. Tada, Fukushima, via traditional culture stigma.

  • @johneaston197
    @johneaston197 Před rokem +19

    I've got to think one of the reasons why the projects are behind schedule and have cost overruns is because no reactor has been built in 30 or 40 years. All of the skilled workers have either retired or died. If more of these are built, companies and their workers will have the experience and things will be streamlined.

    • @ffffuchs
      @ffffuchs Před rokem +4

      These delays were also common in the 70s.

    • @keeganbrown9967
      @keeganbrown9967 Před rokem +1

      Exactly. Now that we have a team that has relearned the nuclear power plant construction process use them again and I guarantee they won't make the same mistakes.

    • @1968Christiaan
      @1968Christiaan Před rokem +1

      @@keeganbrown9967 Yeh... tell that to the French and Finns... they thought that and still cannot keep any project to budget.

    • @nathanwahl9224
      @nathanwahl9224 Před rokem

      Hate to tell you, bub, but we're still around and kicking, still know all that stuff, have passed it down, and will gladly consult several hours a week for way too much $$$$. And just why you'd want to build a plant with obsolete methods is beyond me. They're just large amounts of concrete and (special) steel, oh and copper; nothing magic or mysterious about them.

  • @glass9agh
    @glass9agh Před rokem

    can you say "Schedule" again? loved it

  • @Izmael1310
    @Izmael1310 Před rokem +1

    Now I cant get the picture of the mustache and turtleneck out of my head! Damn it!

  • @Rez441
    @Rez441 Před rokem +31

    Americans, now that this project is almost completed, please construct more! You cannot let the nuclear plant building knowhow get forgotten. We have the same problem here in EU. Most of the reactors are decades old... The Olkiluoto 3 reactor which is in it's final testing phase saved our asses here in Finland. If it wasn't completed before winter, we would have been totally fucked with the energy prices and would have had to use rolling blackouts to keep the grid stable.

    • @stroll-and-roll
      @stroll-and-roll Před rokem +4

      In Poland they also construct one. On the other hand france´s NPPs are not running so well, they import lots of power from neighboring countries like germany.

    • @johnl5316
      @johnl5316 Před rokem +1

      see.......The Great Global Warming Swindle - Full Documentary HD....CZcams

    • @ianhomerpura8937
      @ianhomerpura8937 Před rokem +2

      @@johnl5316 which is why it's time to go back to nuclear.

    • @westside213
      @westside213 Před rokem

      ​@@stroll-and-roll France's nuclear plants were a huge success until the environmental extremists predictably started forcing them to shut down or operate under onerous regulations. That led to France planning to decommission ALL of its nuclear plants and letting maintenance slack, which in turn put the French in their current situation. They inexplicably followed Germany's example and made themselves dependent on importing dirty and/or expensive foreign energy over creating the only actual green energy at home.

  • @NiallMcEvoy05
    @NiallMcEvoy05 Před rokem +4

    The B1M has started making some spectacular videos
    well done team

  • @gracehall2897
    @gracehall2897 Před rokem

    The segue into NordVPN commercial was gold XD

  • @bachmannpidu
    @bachmannpidu Před rokem +4

    5:40 Flamanville will not cost 300 million more as mentioned, the costs will be over 10bn instead 3.3bn, with a delay of over 10years! Same problems in Europe as in the US (Hinkley Point C in the UK is the same reactor, also built by EDF, time will show if they can sort out the problems of Flamanville, which was kind of a prototype with a cracy amount of problems and delays, similar than the Vogtle project…)

  • @Nokenify
    @Nokenify Před rokem +5

    But imagine how many jobs this creates as well as how long PROPER power supply will be provided.

  • @TonyAndersonMusic
    @TonyAndersonMusic Před rokem +33

    Loved the video - however you didn’t include SMRs (small modular reactors) which are the future reactor technology not just for the USA, but for the entire world.

    • @TheB1M
      @TheB1M  Před rokem +10

      We did do a dedicated video on them on our sister channel - czcams.com/video/BrN_SRzsEF4/video.html

    • @seankilburn7200
      @seankilburn7200 Před rokem +2

      I suppose the main focus of this video was the current state of the nuclear industry though and SMRs are some way off actually being constructed.

    • @TonyAndersonMusic
      @TonyAndersonMusic Před rokem

      @@TheB1M wow. Beautiful work. I had no idea you had another channel - thanks for all you do.

  • @BangerFleet
    @BangerFleet Před rokem

    Very timely with the sale of Westinghouse!

  • @jeremeyhowlett6773
    @jeremeyhowlett6773 Před rokem +1

    Such a great source of clean energy. Just make sure the plant is right on the water.

  • @ahtcx
    @ahtcx Před rokem +11

    There was a short period where lots of the videos started all feeling like ads for the projects or software used by them and the videos got a bit too forced almost. Happy to say that recently that seems to have mostly disappeared, and the videos feel great and organic - not like there's an ad being forced onto me. Thanks for the good content :)

    • @jhbarringer
      @jhbarringer Před rokem +1

      I noticed that, as well. Felt like I was watching the AutoCAD Teams Collaboration channel there for a while.

  • @killman369547
    @killman369547 Před rokem +9

    One thing the nuclear industry really should do more of is standardizing and modularizing things. Thats why i love small modular reactors (SMR). They are exactly the kind of thing the industry needs. A one size fits all, easy to operate reactor design that you can just plonk down wherever you need.

  • @TehDMBfan
    @TehDMBfan Před rokem +1

    I manage the costs of a 20 million pound full fibre network with all the risks and issues to price and that's difficult enough. I can't imagine the headaches and setbacks and scale of issues involved in a project this size. At the end of the day, one person has to be in charge and this is just too much to keep track of.

  • @Howdy699
    @Howdy699 Před rokem

    Can we get a video on the massive amounts of construction occurring around the world? I've seen stats that humanity builds the equivalent of Paris every 5 days and the equivalent of New York city every month. I think it would be phenomenal to see this data visualized. I love your content.

  • @QiuyuanChenRyan916
    @QiuyuanChenRyan916 Před rokem +6

    Baseload of a city of mega city is really huge. If we are pushing ev charging it will be even more so. There is going to be certain amount of electricity consumption by this area all the time, day and night. Nuclear power is by far the only solution we known that can provide this stability of supply. So it is either we change how we live or we found out solution that are even more stable.

    • @sandal_thong8631
      @sandal_thong8631 Před rokem

      Off-shore wind. Geothermal. Both capable of baseload power. Investments haven't been made in these technologies either in the last 30 years in America.

    • @peterfireflylund
      @peterfireflylund Před rokem

      @@sandal_thong8631 geothermal is great if you live on Iceland. It is next to useless in most places. Moreover, as someone who lives in Denmark: your belief in offshore wind is unwarranted. Sometimes the wind actually doesn’t blow much, even out there on the sea.

    • @sandal_thong8631
      @sandal_thong8631 Před rokem

      @@peterfireflylund I hadn't heard of "wind droughts" before today. But I guess that's another consequence of global warming, likely related to "jetstream stalling".

  • @bignut3557
    @bignut3557 Před rokem +4

    generic villain looking guy advocating for nuclear energy? YES!

  • @masaharumorimoto4761
    @masaharumorimoto4761 Před rokem +1

    I live next to Darlington Nuclear Plant in Canada, it KICKS ASS!!! Our power is always on 24/7, super stable, and when it does go out, the Power crews are lightning fast at restoring service :) Ontario Nuclear Power is the shizznit.

  • @seanmcdonald5859
    @seanmcdonald5859 Před rokem

    Its nice to see that Dr Robotniks assistant found work.

  • @ChaosTheory666
    @ChaosTheory666 Před rokem +11

    May history curse the activists who held back nuclear development when we needed it most.

    • @nathanwahl9224
      @nathanwahl9224 Před rokem +2

      Oh, but it was scary and so easy to convince people of that! (Sarcasm font was on. You're absolutely right.)

    • @dannywilliamson3340
      @dannywilliamson3340 Před rokem

      You mean the activists funded by the oil and gas companies?

  • @MasayaShida
    @MasayaShida Před rokem +7

    I hope they become more successful.

  • @michaelwatson113
    @michaelwatson113 Před rokem

    Nice of your advocate to give nuke such a glowing recommendation.

  • @mikkopulkkinen751
    @mikkopulkkinen751 Před rokem +2

    You should make a video of the nuclear power plant OL3 here in Finland. It's become a common joke to speak from it. It was supposed to finnish in 2009 and cost 3,2 B€ but it's still going through final testing and has cost more than 3x the original budget.

    • @acmefixer1
      @acmefixer1 Před rokem +1

      Those cost overruns and decade long construction delays are such tragedies. They are the reasons why the utilities have made resolutions to never, ever again order a new nuclear power plant to be built. So sad. 😢