Nuclear Physicist Reacts to Sabine Hossenfelder Is Nuclear Power Green?

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  • čas přidán 19. 02. 2023
  • Nuclear Physicist Reacts to Sabine Hossenfelder is nuclear power green?
    Check out Sabine Hossenfelder's Channel - / sabinehossenfelder
    Full Original Video - • Is Nuclear Energy Green?
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    In this video, I react to Sabine Hossenfelder is nuclear power green? video from the perspective of a nuclear physicist. I go through the is nuclear power green? video of Sabine Hossenfelder and look through what is accurate information on Sabine Hossenfelder is nuclear power green? video as a nuclear physicist and react to it.
    Hope you like the video about Nuclear Physicist Reacts to Sabine Hossenfelder is nuclear power green?
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  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 3,4K

  • @SabineHossenfelder
    @SabineHossenfelder Před rokem +187

    Thanks, Elina!

    • @YourFriendlyNuclearPhysicist
      @YourFriendlyNuclearPhysicist  Před rokem +49

      Thank you Sabine for making such great content and for watching my video, much appreciated ☢️👩🏽‍🔬

    • @BasementEngineer
      @BasementEngineer Před rokem

      @@YourFriendlyNuclearPhysicist Except you speak too fast and make nonsensical assertions!

    • @alsmith20000
      @alsmith20000 Před 4 měsíci +4

      @@BasementEngineer I think a statement like your latter one needs some more description.

    • @BasementEngineer
      @BasementEngineer Před 4 měsíci +2

      @@alsmith20000 I stopped watching when the lady began talking about too much dependence on foreign suppliers for required energy and material. WHY???
      Because the entire German economy is dependent on large quantities of imports and exports. Sabine should be able to elaborate on this.
      A recent statistic I recall had it that 85% of what Germany exports is also imported.
      Thus the large imports of natural gas from Russia was not a problem because Russia was a very reliable supplier.
      Having noted that, I am also in favour of nuclear power, having worked in that business.
      I live in Ontario Canada, and we get 65% of our electric power from nuclear power plants. 30% is from hydro-electric power plants (think Niagara Falls), the remaining 5% is generated by natural gas fired generators (peak shaving), and wind & photovoltaics.
      To depend on the latter two with a climate like Canada's is the height of insanity.

    • @user-bm8uw8oj4k
      @user-bm8uw8oj4k Před 4 měsíci +2

      @@BasementEngineer Good observation, thanks.

  • @jansoltan9519
    @jansoltan9519 Před rokem +789

    Nuclear industry: Oh no, we accidentaly killed a couple hundred to a couple thousand people in our entire history! Fossil fuels: Hold my beer for the next 30 minutes or so

    • @ms-jl6dl
      @ms-jl6dl Před rokem +106

      It's far less than that. EU researched the Chernobil disaster for 20 years ( long-term effects of radiation on mothers and newborn babies) but couldn't find anything. There was no difference between general population and groups exposed to the radiation from the accident. The only people who suffered were soldiers and workers there,less than 50 died and in Fukushima one person died. 5 elderly died from stress after ordered evacuation.
      Hydroelectric dams breaking have caused much higher mortality specially 1950 - 1980 China where at least ten dams collapsed killing tens of thousands of people. Dams collapsed in Europe,South America,North America and central Asia too,always with high death toll (higher then Chernobil).
      Hydroelectric dams also cause big ecological and environmental issues by blocking animal life from moving,causing huge changes in local plant and animal life,they cause changes in local weather,changes in local geology and water resources,new roads need to be built and they can be potential terrorist's target.

    • @SunShine-xc6dh
      @SunShine-xc6dh Před rokem

      Lmao fossil fuels increased the world's population by billions...

    • @fungo6631
      @fungo6631 Před rokem +21

      ​@@ms-jl6dl Don't newer hydroelectric dams have some mechanisms to allow movement of wildlife?

    • @justinpalmer5750
      @justinpalmer5750 Před rokem +12

      Add in the species the wind and solar energy have brought to or near to extinction

    • @gregorymalchuk272
      @gregorymalchuk272 Před rokem +46

      @@fungo6631 They hate hydro (and nuclear) because they actually work and don't need artificial scarcity the way wind and solar do.

  • @Caffin8tor
    @Caffin8tor Před rokem +686

    I was in the US Navy for six years as part of the submarine force. I spent months at a time no more than a few hundred feet away from a nuclear reactor and experienced less radiation than if I had been spending my days outdoors. Probably some of the safest reactors in the world on those subs.

    • @ajmgdaj
      @ajmgdaj Před rokem +57

      That may be true. It is also a fact that the radiation exposure in a well maintained modern Power pant is lower than outside. But I would argue that subs or carriers are the best maintained and serviced reactors on the planet no costs spared. Regular measurements, no limits of cooling waters, very encapsulated builds, well instructed personnel sleeping in a bunk right next to them. I am not sure you can compare these to the privately run businesses around the word.

    • @bobdravs6902
      @bobdravs6902 Před rokem +24

      I would argue that Navy Nuclear reactors relatively small size makes it much easier to make them safe in comparison to civilian side reactors that produce power orders of magnitude higher than navy reactors.

    • @holz_name
      @holz_name Před rokem +13

      How is a nuclear sub decommissioned? Of course if you put enough led around it you don't get radiation. But the led casing and the rest will be highly contaminated. My google research shows it takes $100 million to decommission one nuclear sub, it takes $1 billion to decommission one nuclear carrier. Safest reactor, true, but not many people believe that nuclear is unsafe. It's just ridiculously expensive.

    • @doctorlolchicken7478
      @doctorlolchicken7478 Před rokem +34

      How much does it cost to decommission the battery of an electric car? Not radioactive, but still unsafe. Don’t last as long as a nuclear sub, smaller but there are many thousands more of them.

    • @holz_name
      @holz_name Před rokem +8

      @@doctorlolchicken7478 What? You better give me some numbers here. A battery you can probably recycle the whole thing. The only thing you can do with the core and most of the equipment of a nuclear plant is to encase it into concrete and put it in a mine. With a nuclear power plant it's not just the core but all the pipes for water, and the water that are also highly radioactive.

  • @geoffsmith7403
    @geoffsmith7403 Před rokem +21

    Retired Rad Tech here. In Canada we use dirt burners CANDU reactors. Our longest running after 35 years still had not had to find a place for waste off of the property. Our outage time is much less then other styles meaning we have less down town and loss of production.

    • @soundhill1
      @soundhill1 Před 4 měsíci

      But Canada has high quality ore. What is the power cost from the Candu?

    • @chrisjohns38
      @chrisjohns38 Před měsícem

      CANDU is the best, no doubt, especially for Canada which has the ore. Ship some CANDU to Australia please!

  • @53kenner
    @53kenner Před rokem +77

    I learned about radioactivity from coal plants back in 1982. I was serving onboard a nuclear aircraft carrier and one of the instruments that I had to check hourly was called the APD, or Airborne Particulate Detector. This was almost a gag since it always read zero, even though it was positioned between two nuclear power plants. This was true until we approached Naples, Italy -- at which point the APD readout started to climb. It didn't get very high, but it was noticeably elevated compared to normal operation. It turned out that it always did this when approaching Naples because they burned coal and there was a fairly stable inversion layer in that area which kept the pollutants in place. This would be similar to Los Angeles and smog. Anyhow, I found it amusing that naval nuclear power produced far less radiation that coal.

    • @GuinessOriginal
      @GuinessOriginal Před rokem +1

      Until the sub needs decommissioning, then you have a problem. There’s currently four nuclear subs sitting in a river in Portsmouth, England, rotting away, with no long term plans about what to do with them.

    • @kristofferjohansson3768
      @kristofferjohansson3768 Před rokem +12

      @@GuinessOriginal most likely that is a planned action to wait for the most radioactive stage to end. That takes a decade.

    • @GuinessOriginal
      @GuinessOriginal Před rokem +3

      @@kristofferjohansson3768 nope. They’ve been there for over 30 years, despite countless attempts from local population and their political representatives to get them moved. The plans to decommission them were scrapped years ago because they were deemed too expensive.

    • @tr33m00nk
      @tr33m00nk Před rokem

      @@GuinessOriginal So, how much 'radiation' (or other pollution) is being given off by these decommissioned subs? Is anyone measuring it and informing the public? Or doing anything about it besides the usual "not in my backyard" knee-jerk reaction?

    • @koljkimm
      @koljkimm Před rokem +12

      @@GuinessOriginal So it's not because of radioactivity but because some corrupted politicians.

  • @petercoutu4726
    @petercoutu4726 Před rokem +95

    Interesting fact; when I worked at a refuse to fuel power plant AKA municipal waste processed to burn. we had incoming radiation detectors run on all the material that came into the site. With the two most common alarms being from either adult diapers from retirement communities or hospitals contaminated with medical isotopes or large shipments of expired bananas.😅

    • @trevordillon1921
      @trevordillon1921 Před rokem +4

      That’s doubly impressive, given you apparently had sensors good enough to detect the radiation of bananas.

    • @petercoutu4726
      @petercoutu4726 Před rokem +7

      @@trevordillon1921 it required thousands of pounds of bananas in one loaded truck to elicit a significant response from the monitoring system. Ex. A shipment of expired bananas from dole. The average box of bananas wouldn't go high enough to make that particular system alert.

    • @petercoutu4726
      @petercoutu4726 Před rokem +5

      @Trevor Dillon we were a heavily regulated facility and due to the nature of burning the waste it had the potential for release in the environment and we did everything to avoid knowingly releasing it.

    • @TevelDrinkwater
      @TevelDrinkwater Před 10 měsíci +3

      The Banana Dose!

    • @petercoutu4726
      @petercoutu4726 Před 10 měsíci +2

      @@TevelDrinkwater quite literally

  • @nolegskitten6083
    @nolegskitten6083 Před 9 měsíci +9

    I have to say not only hydro is reliable, but it also is a form of storage, one of the most efficient ones we have in fact. It cannot be bunched with wind and solar on that front.

    • @charlesreid9337
      @charlesreid9337 Před 8 měsíci

      the whole "rebewables cant work due to storeage" comes STRAIGHT from carbon fuel lobbyists.
      Wind doesnt just stop producing at 6pm etc. Wind farms are in places strong wind is the norm..like the rural midwest. Solar production only stops in the us for a short time..which hapoens to be the time energy demand is lowest. You can compliment them with 0 carbon or varbon negative power production.

  • @trcnmk42
    @trcnmk42 Před rokem +23

    The biggest problem I see with both the original video and this response is that the expense of each power source per MWhr seems to have been calculated without worrying about whether it supplies base-load or not. Renewable energy only looks cheap when it's intermittency is ignored. Once you need to rely on it for a perpetual source it's true cost must include storage and release mechanisms. And they are horribly expensive even at smaller scale. In other words, I think a fair economic comparison would put nuclear well ahead of solar and wind. Especially since the production costs of renewables are more likely to sky-rocket than continue down as demand for the relevant construction materials increases by more than an order of magnitude under a renewables-focussed transition. Massive demand increase for materials, some rare and hard to extract, virtually guarantees massive cost increases.

    • @nickj1968
      @nickj1968 Před 10 měsíci +1

      Well said

    • @MrGottaQuestion
      @MrGottaQuestion Před 7 měsíci +3

      Absolutely agree. Also comparing old nuclear plant designs to the latest and greatest in solar and wind isn't apples to apples. New nuclear plants (Gen 4), though unproven, hope to use passive safety designs instead of costly active safety systems layered on top a pressurized water reactor which also needs a reactor housing and a containment dome a thousand times bigger than the reactor volume. This is a huge driver in costs.

    • @amosbatto3051
      @amosbatto3051 Před 4 měsíci +1

      Investment bank Lazard (Apr 2023) finds that solar and wind plus storage is now competitive with natural gas for electrical utilities. Lazard calculates the following unsubsidized levelized cost of energy (LCOE) per MWh for new power plants constructed in the US:
      utility-scale PV solar: $24 - $96
      utility-scale PV solar + storage: $46 - $102
      geothermal: $61 - $102
      onshore wind: $24 - $75
      onshore wind + storage: $42 - $114
      offshore wind: $72 - $140
      combined cycle gas: $39 - $101
      combined cycle gas with 20% green hydrogen: $156
      gas peaking: $115 - $221
      coal: $68 - $116
      nuclear: $141 - $221
      The price of LFP grid batteries is dropping like a stone. CATL is currently selling its LFP at US$70 per kWh in China, so companies like Tesla should now be selling their grid batteries in Western countries for around $150/kWh, whereas it was $300/kWh in early 2022. I just read the prediction that CATL will be selling its LFP for $56/kWh by mid-2024. Sodium ion batteries should be 30% cheaper than LFP and Salgenx says that it will be able to produce its salt water flow batteries for $5/kWh when it gets to scale, so grid storage is going to become dirt cheap.

    • @davidaustin6962
      @davidaustin6962 Před 4 měsíci +2

      It's not an either/or calculation. In locations where solar is most justified, it is also most needed when it's at maximum productivity. Ie. Storage isn't a need unless you're over-producing which for solar fields will never happen if done right. It would be foolish to size a nuke plant to cover those conditions entirely on its own, to then over produce the other 70% of the time. Also, your cost of materials argument applies equally to nuclear as it does to solar. In fact the most common type of solar is just silicon and tiny bits of boron and phosphorus, all extremely abundant without any mining, You seem to be cherry picking the solar technology to justify that argument.

    • @gallyalgaliarept410
      @gallyalgaliarept410 Před 4 měsíci

      They are expensive because it hadnt yet propely be invested in yet.... gibe 3 or 4years and it will be a no brainer

  • @bjs301
    @bjs301 Před rokem +788

    I'm a big fan of Sabine. She presents clearly, respects her viewers and always offers valuable information. Her sense of humor just makes her that much better. Not to be a flatterer, but I see those traits in you.

    • @YourFriendlyNuclearPhysicist
      @YourFriendlyNuclearPhysicist  Před rokem +109

      Thank you I appreciate your comment ! I am glad you enjoyed the video ☢️👩🏽‍🔬

    • @Youtube_Stole_My_Handle_Too
      @Youtube_Stole_My_Handle_Too Před rokem +17

      @@YourFriendlyNuclearPhysicist It appears that your argument may have overlooked a crucial point in regards to CO2 emissions. With the implementation of fast reactors, mining needs would be reduced by a factor of 100, making CO2 levels less relevant. Furthermore, as electricity usage continues to grow, power production costs must be reduced, making fast reactors the future of power production. Therefore, discussions surrounding current thermal reactors and their CO2 emissions may be considered irrelevant. Unfortunately, I found this oversight quite frustrating, which led me to only be able to listen for 11 minutes before my patience ran out. I do realize Hossenfelder is as much to blame as you.

    • @wernerviehhauser94
      @wernerviehhauser94 Před rokem +6

      ​@@AJ5 yeah, I've got my problems with her, too. Same with Alexander Unzicker. I have the feeling they are just grumpy that physics doesn't work their way, but both don't really do what a physicist should do in that case - provide a better model thats stands up to experimental data.

    • @wernerviehhauser94
      @wernerviehhauser94 Před rokem +11

      ​@@CZcams_Stole_My_Handle_Too once we have them. The track record of fast reactors is yet nothing to brag about, and most designs are paper-only or low power. We'll see where we get once we have production-level (>1GWe) fast reactors. But I don't see that coming any time soon.

    • @swokatsamsiyu3590
      @swokatsamsiyu3590 Před rokem +5

      @@wernerviehhauser94
      The Russian (yeah, I know) BN-800 (Быстрых Нейтронах = Fast Neutrons) produces commercial power. It's a fast breeder reactor making some 800 MWe. It can, and does, run on MOX-fuel. They're also working on a Thorium cycle. And they're currently building a 1200 MWe, the BN-1200, at that same site. So, there's that.

  • @rickbates9232
    @rickbates9232 Před rokem +21

    Sabine mixed her units she did say 20 feet tall ... but the captions did say 20 meters ... I live near Australia's only nuclear reactor ... it saves thousands of people's lives every year through nuclear medicine.

    • @cameronlapworth2284
      @cameronlapworth2284 Před rokem +1

      Yes it's something people who are completely anti nuclear forget. I'm not for nuclear power in Australia for reasons of cost and water consumption (have issues with coal for same reason) but we need to maintain the industry for this alone.
      I actually think Australia could do a great service and make money offering waste disposal. We exist on a massive tectonic plate so suffer few earthquakes. We profit from selling uranium are great at mining and geology. We should only sell our mined uranium with the proviso it is returned to us for storage in deep underground geologically stable rock. Instead our nuclear waste is stored in a warehouse in industrial Sydney. Imagine the public panic if even low grade facility if say an airplane crashed into it. Storing properly we'd also be decreasing opportunity for nuclear proliferation.
      The niby's will never agree though.

    • @missano3856
      @missano3856 Před rokem

      @@cameronlapworth2284 It may be that you could overcome the water issues, the largest complex of reactors in the U.S. is in Arizona.

    • @cameronlapworth2284
      @cameronlapworth2284 Před rokem +1

      @missano3856 possibly but currently one big issue of our coal use is the water. In any case Australia's role would be best suited to importing back our uranium after use and supplying the world's current reactors. We exist on a massive tectonic plate so very little earthquake issues and tonnes of unused land even many old mines we could potentially use for storage. We can certainly power the whole country easily with RE so we should help support those that otherwise must use nuclear.

    • @MrKu56
      @MrKu56 Před rokem

      Dr Sabine mixed power with energy? Hmm….

    • @soulsurvivor8293
      @soulsurvivor8293 Před 4 měsíci

      Storing waste in a geologically stable area isn't exactly the "Best" solution. Well, it is the best pragmatic and economically viable solution.
      That said, the "Best" solution is storing it in the crust being consumed near a tectonic plate edge would be a proper means of recycling the waste.
      The heat, compression and forced combination with surrounding matter theoretically would cause some degree of Fusion of the waste.
      Depending on how far below the surface it is pushed of course.
      Even partial fusion would likely occur along with a distributed diffusion throughout the surrounding matter, minimising the consentration of dagerous levels with in the contaminated matter.
      It, however, would be prohibitively expensive to do and has a litany of risks and numerous potential issues that would lead it to go horribly wrong.
      It is theoretically the proper/natural way to return the material to the Earth to reuse like it does with all other matter.
      Heck, if Carbon Capture worked then the same method would be the right way to dispose of it. Retuning it deep uner ground to be compressed, heated and fused to form all forms of Cabides and Oxgides.
      But yes. Storage in deep and remote locations that are geologically stable is the the best Practical and cost-effective option.
      It's sadly just not a very practical extreme long-term solution, its kicking the can down the road for someone else to fix.
      Which, realistically, is the best we can do right now.

  • @adamkerin4130
    @adamkerin4130 Před 10 měsíci +7

    Your reviews of other review videos like this are brilliant. Catching up on yr channel now that I have come across it. Man we need so many more out there like you and this channel.

  • @ntmoucn
    @ntmoucn Před 3 měsíci +4

    Two brilliant videos combined into one, thanks for making this!

  • @bobloblaw9679
    @bobloblaw9679 Před rokem +7

    when chimneys first became popular, they caused all sorts of fires because people didn't understand how to take care of them. we didn't stop starting fires; we learned how to construct and maintain chimneys that worked so as not to cause (uncontrolled) fires.
    instead of running away from nuclear, we should be moving forward with improved designs.

  • @jimcabezola3051
    @jimcabezola3051 Před rokem +99

    Ah! Elina Charatsidou and Sabine Hossenfelder…united to inform the world about nuclear power! Excellent! I’ve been subscribed to you both since a long time and enjoy watching all of your videos!

    • @YourFriendlyNuclearPhysicist
      @YourFriendlyNuclearPhysicist  Před rokem +5

      This is very nice of your thank you ☢️👩🏽‍🔬

    • @lorenzoblum868
      @lorenzoblum868 Před rokem +4

      @@YourFriendlyNuclearPhysicist I'm not so sure that technology is the solution when greed is the problem. Anyway kudos to all those mad scientists out there.... And remember : "science sans conscience n'est que perte de l'âme ~ Rabelais (and our ecosystem ~ me).

    • @GarrettMoffitt
      @GarrettMoffitt Před rokem

      And the thousands of people Dying from nuclear waste? Should they be happy?

    • @jussiollila7714
      @jussiollila7714 Před rokem +2

      @@GarrettMoffitt Tell me you're a bot without saying me you're a bot.

    • @spaceman081447
      @spaceman081447 Před rokem +3

      @@GarrettMoffitt
      RE: "And the thousands of people Dying from nuclear waste? Should they be happy?"
      Exactly who is "dying from nuclear waste?"

  • @copperknight4788
    @copperknight4788 Před 11 měsíci +3

    The reason why Fokushima made Germany rethink its stance on Nuclear again is not it voulnerability to Tsunami's, but the fact that an obvious error was made in the safety system on a Western Reactor. One major excuse given for Chenopbyl was that it was a soviet reactor operated by the soviet union, the presence of the accident in Japan demonstrated that a Western nation that Germany thinks very highly of. Was capable of making these kinds of mistakes, and thus Germany concluded that it isn't impossible to have made a similar mistake that we simply don't know of.

  • @TwitchRadio
    @TwitchRadio Před 9 měsíci +7

    Videos really do help me understand what's going on especially in the uranium markets, so just wanted to say thanks for your time and the videos 😎👍

  • @bazoo513
    @bazoo513 Před rokem +10

    Nuclear power is safer than _residential solar!_ Apparently, climbing roofs is dangerous.

    • @davidaustin6962
      @davidaustin6962 Před 4 měsíci

      They're both extremely safe. It's arguments like this that single out those who are scraping the barrel looking to trash what they perceive to be the competition.

    • @CodyBunker
      @CodyBunker Před měsícem

      The chemicals they're made of are extremely toxic

    • @davidaustin6962
      @davidaustin6962 Před měsícem

      @CodyBunker there are no modern energy technologies that don't involve toxic chemicals. The problem are those that end up polluting the environment. Done right, nuclear and solar pv, simply don't.

  • @martinmchugh001
    @martinmchugh001 Před rokem +84

    Hey there, Elina.
    During my uni days, we used to work summers in our Swedish nuclear plants. Mostly maintenance inside the plants, but not inside active areas. I remember the environment inside the building always had lower background radiation than outdoors.

    • @Shreendg
      @Shreendg Před rokem

      Probably because some sort of double barrier to prevent radiation leakage and you were between those barriers?

    • @taxa1569
      @taxa1569 Před rokem +7

      ​@@Shreendg what... Hold on... If I say... The sun. What do you think it emits?

    • @miker953
      @miker953 Před rokem +2

      Did you bring your own readers or trust the ones "they" had there?

    • @martinmchugh001
      @martinmchugh001 Před rokem +5

      @@miker953 Like a proper conspiracy theorist, you mean?

    • @miker953
      @miker953 Před rokem +1

      @@martinmchugh001 well yeah. I thought the dramatic music sold the point.

  • @garysnewjob
    @garysnewjob Před rokem +149

    I'm a big fan of Sabine. But I'm always a little concerned that she does so many topics outside her expertise. I'm glad to hear your enthusiastic endorsement of her video on Nuclear Power. Thank you. You verified for me that Sabine does a comprehensive and balanced job on a wide range of topics.

    • @ajollyoldben
      @ajollyoldben Před 11 měsíci +11

      @@JohnSmith-hn1qj But garysnewjob can't?

    • @martijndevries8074
      @martijndevries8074 Před 10 měsíci +13

      There is a team behind her videos so she is not the only one doing the research.

    • @off6848
      @off6848 Před 10 měsíci +3

      @@ajollyoldben No. Because he believes you can only talk about what you know and apparently he doesn't know much.

    • @VirtuousSaint
      @VirtuousSaint Před 10 měsíci +5

      if you pick the right methodology you will almost always arrive at correct conclusions even if you're not a subject matter expert. that's why there was so much emphasis on dialectical logic among researchers in the 20th century.

    • @Alexander-dt2eq
      @Alexander-dt2eq Před 10 měsíci +3

      thats unfortunately true. i had a discussion with her via email on the climate crisis and she did not even know about basic statistical challenges in agricultural models

  • @ChefboyRD253
    @ChefboyRD253 Před 10 měsíci +4

    This was extremely educational. Thank you very much for taking the time to produce this

  • @kakarikiIck
    @kakarikiIck Před rokem +98

    Sabine got a friendly nuclear physicist seal of approval. Well deserved. I’ve been subbed to Sabine’s channel and yourselves for a while now. Good reaction video.

    • @C_R_O_M________
      @C_R_O_M________ Před rokem

      Sabine is a stuck up "greenhouse gas" supporter when in fact there's no experiment proving the application of greenhouse gas theory for the planet's atmosphere. If you didn't know it, the whole shebang, is a SIMULATION and it's done by computing models. P.S. Her voice and tone is also believably irritating to me but that's just the cherry on top.

    • @ToxicGamer86454
      @ToxicGamer86454 Před rokem

      Sabine is a disgusting human.

  • @dreadpirate8697
    @dreadpirate8697 Před rokem +34

    I love how you explain things clearly and easy to understand. You don't make me feel dumb about the subject like I sometimes do in other subjects I have learned a lot from watching your videos. Take care. 🙂

    • @YourFriendlyNuclearPhysicist
      @YourFriendlyNuclearPhysicist  Před rokem +14

      Thank you so much ! That’s why I do this. To make nuclear physics accessible to everyone and show that you don’t need to be a physicist to understand it.☢️👩🏽‍🔬

    • @GuinessOriginal
      @GuinessOriginal Před rokem +1

      @@YourFriendlyNuclearPhysicist you don’t need to be a nuclear physicist to understand it, you just need to know one 😊

  • @saulorocha3755
    @saulorocha3755 Před 10 měsíci +1

    Just found this channel, I'm loving it! Thanks, Elina.

  • @BetaD_
    @BetaD_ Před rokem +71

    Very nice video!
    As a German I'm still very frustrated about our decision to leave nuclear energy (Sadly our last power plants closed a few weeks ago :( )
    Also sadly the public sentiment here is still very very much anti nuclear, even all the new climate activists groups are anti nuclear, which frustrates me even more. I'm extremley pro Co2 neutrality, but how on earth should we manage to do that without nuclear energy? Why are there so few reasonable activists, who are not delsuioned by anti nuclear idealogy....
    Now it's impossible for Germany to reach their CO2 neutarality goals in the furture, instead we actually have to expand our brown coal open mining pits , which are destroying vast parts of our landscape and emit tons of CO2....
    Therfore thank you for the video, it may help at least a bit to educate some people, who aren't completley closed off by ideology

    • @klaushoegerl1187
      @klaushoegerl1187 Před 10 měsíci +7

      Replacing all worldwide existing nuclear power plants with new gas power plants (including increasing output of existing gas power plants if possible) will increase CO2 emissions by only 2.7% (based on 2022)

    • @brazensmusings2738
      @brazensmusings2738 Před 10 měsíci

      @@klaushoegerl1187 You cannot trust studies blindly especially those after this largely manufactured green revolution which in essence is no longer very green. Every organization responsible in the area of study is pushing green agendas. The days of seeing a study and quoting its numbers as facts are long gone.
      You have to work very hard to determine whether green agenda is behind the study or not, how the study is credible or not for your frame of mind with its assumptions and conditions. Most studies are limited and shaped in ways normal people can't even begin to understand. There is another predicament of Journals caught in selling out science in controversial topics like this.

    • @Berend-ov8of
      @Berend-ov8of Před 10 měsíci +1

      Maybe it has something to do with the ugly "R" word that this video is so fanaticly trying to avoid using.
      This is a promotion video.
      Do you realize that?

    • @wasdwasdedsf
      @wasdwasdedsf Před 9 měsíci

      the earth was a much healthier place for every lifeform when co2 levels werent near starvation levels of today, but 10 to 20x current levels... yet globalist types wants us to spend 265 TRILLION to get us to neutral, and evn at the cost when that would be achieved we would be way behind economically than where we would have been otherwise.
      and EVEN after all of this, how do you propose to make the rest of the nonwestern world listen to you and go net zero? especially as youve decided to make russia out to be the next third R because they had a reaction after the west broke every deal we set up with them, installed a western dictator puppet in ukraine and started installing top secret biolabs and missile sites near their border?
      conquer the countries?
      we have spent tens of trillions for a couple decades and managed to reduce power coming from nonrenewables from 83% to 82%.
      what part of all this is making sense to you people?

    • @wasdwasdedsf
      @wasdwasdedsf Před 9 měsíci +5

      "Why are there so few reasonable activists, who are not delsuioned by anti nuclear idealogy...."
      because they are some of the most clueless types of people youve ever seen in your life?

  • @connecticutaggie
    @connecticutaggie Před rokem +287

    Sabine is a great communicator. All the videos I have watched are very well researched, are balanced/objective, and she is very good at communicating them. I find myself wanting to hear what she says, especially on subjects where she is challenging my (or the popular) view. She does a such a great job teaching me without pissing me off - an art that so few people seem to value any more.

    • @msxcytb
      @msxcytb Před rokem +9

      Sabine is great communicator indeed. She can bring complex topic much closer to understanding. In the few videos relating to Nuclear Power the "German" bias is visible though, few choices of references were rather controversial and coming from anti-nuclear authors. And in this world anti-nuclear is in practice pro-coal, and pro natural gas, because renewable energy is just expensive icing on the cake, doing fairly little to reduce emissions. If the number of 520GigaEuro spend by Germany on energy transition is correct then there is very little good to show for that spending in terms of CO2/kWh real output(that money could decarbonize big part of EU with smartly deployed Nuclear power).

    • @9WEAVER9
      @9WEAVER9 Před rokem +1

      Compared to stinky Unzicker, Sabine is way more reasonable and practical in her assessment and skepticism.

    • @gJonii
      @gJonii Před rokem +10

      Sabine seems to me like she's going down the usual physicists path of slowly talking with authority about everything under the sun. First, about physics. Then, about philosophy and sociology of science. Ehh, well, she has first-hand experience. Now, about nuclear energy, politics+engineering related to that...
      Neil Degrasse Tyson started out similar for example.

    • @connecticutaggie
      @connecticutaggie Před rokem +4

      @@gJonii Sabine mentioned on one of her videos that she reads A LOT of academic papers

    • @dr4d1s
      @dr4d1s Před rokem +1

      @@gJonii I find her much less grating than NdT. I swear NdT could simply be telling me the Sun shines in the sky and he magically sounds like he is being condescending. I don't know how he does it or has managed to get this far in his career; the dude has absolutely no tact whatsoever.

  • @ElladaEllada
    @ElladaEllada Před rokem +12

    Elina making the same reaction with Ms Sabine was hilarious hahahaahaj

    • @YourFriendlyNuclearPhysicist
      @YourFriendlyNuclearPhysicist  Před rokem +5

      Ahahaha yes I was surprised too ☢️👩🏽‍🔬 it seems many ppl share the same opinion about Germany’s decision 😅

  • @XMarkxyz
    @XMarkxyz Před rokem +5

    11:10 Hydro is energy storage by itself, even if it is not pumped, because you have valves you can control the flow with and a dam and a basin that can take the water in excess

  • @proosee
    @proosee Před rokem +3

    One small inaccuracy at 11:10: hydropower doesn't need energy storage - the whole idea behind it is having water reservoir as an energy storage (in fact, this idea is sometimes used as energy storage supporting other power sources). Although, I would argue that hydropower's impact on local environment is considerably bigger than any other kind of energy production.
    IDK, maybe I'm getting old, because I starts to ask myself the question "is this world going crazy or it's just me?" more often recently. The numbers are there and you hear something totally different in mass media... That's why I would like to thank you and Sabine for pursuing the truth.

  • @keithwinget6521
    @keithwinget6521 Před rokem +32

    At 6:45 you perfectly describe for this a process called "bootstrapping". In this case, it's the secondary definition "carried out with minimum resources or advantages," but within the context of building a system that eventually produces the things it needs to keep running. I think I was first introduced to its use from watching videos of content creators playing Factorio.

    • @sabinrawr
      @sabinrawr Před rokem +3

      I know the pain of needing inserters to make inserters, and needing more chips to make chip production faster.
      You need bullets to kill biters to get resources to make bullets to kill biters...

  • @JetDom767
    @JetDom767 Před rokem +3

    Awesome video Elina both you and Sabine have my utmost respect for your videos and love both of your humor!

  • @bumbixp
    @bumbixp Před rokem +21

    @11:08 I've never heard that hydro power would require storage. There's water in a reservoir at higer elevation, this is itself energy stored as potential energy.

    • @rruysch
      @rruysch Před 4 měsíci +1

      all energy production requires storage when that energy isn't used or its wasted. not sure why you're asking about storing whatever produces the energy. the energy isn't turned back into water... we know how to store water. if we all powered everything with water mills we wouldnt need to talk about storing the energy water produces...

    • @lu-uf8zj
      @lu-uf8zj Před 4 měsíci +1

      @@rruysch - with hydro power you don't have to generate any that you can't use right now. You just open the tap for the amount you need.

    • @test5854
      @test5854 Před 4 měsíci +3

      @@rruysch What he refers to is not hydro in general but hydro dams. And in case of dams it is a fair point to make because if there is an excess often some of the water is pumped back up to try an balance it out. I do however agree it would be better to store it in batteries and the likes but well CO2 and al.

    • @dh2032
      @dh2032 Před 4 měsíci

      @@rruysch is the loses in the system, the big push for electric at the moment? use a simple electric car as model, petrel/dev/gas, (coal,cock,wood,- makes stream) there media stored energy, and only used as and when needed, where as electric, got to be made some how first, and mechanism to even make electric needs to be made? and this back office that not really talked about, and one of the biggest problem this system still relies on the old oil, gas, to keep it going? but where all told it a replacement for that system, but will not work the older system, being hidden behind curtain somewhere out of site

  • @cannibalskitchen8421
    @cannibalskitchen8421 Před 6 měsíci +7

    Watch Sabine's stuff with caution. She's branched out from physics into fields like medicine and economics, and these videos have been panned by actual professionals in those fields.

    • @Mcfreddo
      @Mcfreddo Před 4 měsíci

      Mmm about what exactly?

    • @okj4521
      @okj4521 Před 4 měsíci

      I hope I can give some insight,because I had the same question. I stumpled upon a presentation/talk on youtube where Sabine Hossenfelder stated that scientists in the field of physics are biased. She claims scientists disregard results from their own experiments and studies when they don't suit their theoretical basis. I.E.: you run an experiment and expect result A but get B then you disregard the result and run it again until it results in A. She claims this is the reason why scientists have not made any groundbreaking progress in the last 100 yrs or so.
      I asked a friend of mine who did his phD in physics for some time but stopped it and instead now does a master degree in Machine Learning. He despises the scientists in physics, as he sees it as an industry of egomaniacs where everybody just wants to get his papers published. Still he thinks of Sabine Hossenfelder as somebody you have to listen to with a grain of salt. He thinks she is driven by a lot of spite, because she feels being treated wrong by her colleagues and thus wants to proof them wrong. This got her into a viscious cycle. She *needs* to be right, she urges to proof a point, not for science sake but to satisfy her own ego. I forgot the exact example he gave, but some of the things she states seem to be way out there.
      That's my friend's take on her. And he is not somebody who looks to kindly on physicists and careerwise turned his back on it.

    • @tomjohnson8900
      @tomjohnson8900 Před 3 měsíci

      Thanks Elina,Sabine the analysis is somewhat positive for nuclear power, I guess. Anyway have either of you heard of Kirk Sorenson? He has done considerable work with thorium liftr breeder nuclear reactors. Anyway he has done most of theoretical work for molten salts since operation of other reactors being used for nuclear power. Oak Ridge 1960s I believe?

  • @BertNielson
    @BertNielson Před rokem +4

    I have been watching Sabine for some time now and have learned a lot. When CZcams recommended your video review, I'll admit that I was nervous about having what I remembered as being a very well researched video called out. Still, by being uncomfortable and willing to listen, I opened myself up to finding a new content creator and also learning a bit more about nuclear energy.

  • @spaceman081447
    @spaceman081447 Před rokem +28

    This is the first time that I have viewed one of Elina Charatsidou's videos and I immediately subscribed to her channel. I did so not only because she agreed with Sabine Hossenfelder's presentation on nuclear power, but that she has an impressive set of credentials in her own right.

    • @davidbeal6925
      @davidbeal6925 Před rokem +3

      I've seen a handful of Elina's videos and have enjoyed them but had not yet subscribed. This is my second one of her videos I've watched today. I'm following now. Like you I love Sabina's style and content. I just have to respect them both. I do hope Elina does more. I've suggested she look at Sabina's video on fusion.

    • @hughgreentree
      @hughgreentree Před rokem +1

      This is not the first time I have watched one of her videos, but I am subscribing today. I like sites that give you info and let you decide.

  • @michaelblacktree
    @michaelblacktree Před 11 měsíci +3

    I've been following Sabine's channel for a couple years. It's cool to see a nuclear physicist's opinion on her video.

  • @marcariotto1709
    @marcariotto1709 Před 10 měsíci +2

    Great vid! Sabine does good objective work, and you seem straightforward and objective also. Thanks.

  • @MikkoRantalainen
    @MikkoRantalainen Před rokem +57

    This was definitely a good reaction video. I found Sabine's channel less than half a year ago and I've watched many videos already and even though I personally might put different weights for some details, I haven't found a single factual error in any of her videos. I definitely recommend her channel to anybody interested in science in general.
    And yes, I'd like to see more reactions to her videos by you on the field of your expertice. The more "fact checking" or validation we can have from experts, the better.

  • @mmdoof
    @mmdoof Před 11 měsíci +4

    @17:15 What I think is the biggest omission in regards to the economics of nuclear power is that the rising price of construction is a direct consequence of the shutdown of the nuclear industry. If/once the renaissance of nuclear power occurs, the economics of scale will almost inevitably reverse the trend.
    Also heightened regulatory burden has steered the industry towards larger facilities with greater economic risks, something that the SMR technology is specifically addressing.

  • @davidkanimation
    @davidkanimation Před rokem

    Sincere appreciation for your analysis and additional information on the findings.

  • @old486whizz
    @old486whizz Před rokem +5

    For both nuclear and renewables, really the best way of storing energy right now is hydro (pumping water up into dams) which can also go into water supply storage too.

  • @paulsmith1519
    @paulsmith1519 Před rokem +5

    Nice video! Sabine's channel is really great for explaining science clearly.

  • @bhobba
    @bhobba Před 10 měsíci +14

    Very nice, balanced view. My father was an electrical estimator who worked a lot on costing power plants. I remember once asking him what the best energy source was. He laughed and said there is no best - only the best for the conditions. Another interesting thing was his view on the safety of electricity generation. He mentioned he would not like to be in the path of one of the turbines if the bearing it spun on failed.

  • @user-tr4ej8mw4s
    @user-tr4ej8mw4s Před rokem +6

    Glad, that I have discovered another healthy channel. Thank you very much for your immense input into creating a fine society.

  • @akpanekpo6025
    @akpanekpo6025 Před rokem +43

    Two of the most eye-opening science programs that I've ever watched - by two absolute masters of their discipline.

  • @ericpol2711
    @ericpol2711 Před rokem +6

    I've been watching Sabine's video's for years now and are a important source forming my opinions on things science related. I love how she balances different viewpoints in a scientific way that are pretty well understandable for people without a scientific background like myself. Great to see you reacting and confirming her views on Nuclear.

    • @joesutherland225
      @joesutherland225 Před rokem

      All the political parties viewing for the anti nuke vote or virtue signaling take your pick

  • @selianboy8508
    @selianboy8508 Před rokem +8

    The greatest problem for this sort of subject, and indeed most other subjects, is that people simply do not THINK! They follow and do not open their eyes to the principle of unintended consequences.
    Great video, and it is a must to watch Sabine's and your video. Each is exceptional in their content.
    ... now I must go try to find the opposite argument for the balance and so that I can THINK!

    • @GeorgeTsiros
      @GeorgeTsiros Před 8 měsíci

      "thinking" is a lie. There is no such thing as "thinking". _Then what is my brain doing when I am trying to solve a problem?_ I hear you ask. Simple: same thing it always does, repeat what it knows and see what sticks. That is all. You are either learning or repeating what you already know. That is why you need to do multiplication on paper for hundreds of times: your brain learns, you learn, how to do it. After that, you repeat the steps. Same thing with your multiplication tables. Same with writing letters.
      You either _learn_ or _repeat_
      That is why you can not consciously walk. You've learned it once, now it is completely out of your control. You do not even know _why_ 7x7 is 49, you just remembered it.
      There's more, but I'm bored and it's youtube...

    • @selianboy8508
      @selianboy8508 Před 8 měsíci

      @@GeorgeTsiros um... I guess you must once have been Plato in another life, but then I suppose he was a thinker!
      I honestly haven't got a scoobie doo what you are on about or what your point is.
      You are correct... I got bored too reading your thoughts... I think!

    • @GeorgeTsiros
      @GeorgeTsiros Před 8 měsíci

      @@selianboy8508 okay, how about this: people repeat what they've learned, been taught or gotten used to. There is no "thinking" involved.

    • @selianboy8508
      @selianboy8508 Před 8 měsíci

      @@GeorgeTsiros ?que? I have no idea as to your argument...

    • @GeorgeTsiros
      @GeorgeTsiros Před 8 měsíci

      @@selianboy8508 Would you prefer if I made one last attempt, or if I just stopped? (honest question. I wish to explain but I also would like to avoid annoying you)

  • @Vidar2032
    @Vidar2032 Před 8 měsíci

    Brilliant reaction video. Keep up the good work!

  • @Protofall
    @Protofall Před rokem +94

    Big respect to both you and Sabine, we've been avoiding Nuclear due to the big incidents so its good to see the discussion is still going on. I'm hopeful for this tech in the future.
    Haven't watched either of you two before but I'm glad this appeared in my recommended.

    • @rayw3294
      @rayw3294 Před rokem +2

      Solar and raptor masters are far more dangerous.

    • @takanara7
      @takanara7 Před rokem +2

      @@rayw3294 Not if you include property damage.

    • @0011peace
      @0011peace Před rokem

      @@takanara7 roof solar can cause property damage if improperply installed on rpooofft top and if insteall ed on groiun they have damage tree and other plabnmts in high qanity to place them Solar has to have unonbstructucted veiw of the sun as much of the time as poassible And, trees obstruct the / Same with wind power trees reue wind power. A radiated t
      ee that is still alive still catpures carbon. There have been 2s uch accidents in 70 years. Every other form of power has had larger number of disasters than nuclear. Alot of people died in guild granhydrodans in colorado and people and animals were displaced on a grand scale. Nuclear power has lowest land foot print per kilowatt hour. Relating nuclear power to another example for saftety. Airtravel is the safest form of travel. But from news reports you would think is the most dangerous. But, the reason we hear of is because its so rare. One plane crash every year maybe but some car has fatal crash every day so whie plane crash may kill 50 people a year 1 daily car chash will kill at least 365 people maybe more as cars aren't always one person. Same with nuclear power. While a nuke may kill maue kill large number once fossile Fuel is killing people continously. Also, hydro as hproven tonot be as renewble as some beleive as look how the colorado river level has dropped to dangerous level in part due to the dams. No naigra is be4tter as it uses the falls instead of creating a falls. BUt even that river is lowering in prt tdue the hydro plants. The biggest fear is people wronlgly think nuclear power equates to weapons. But teh more of the material used for plants the less aaible for weapons.

    • @RM-yk1oi
      @RM-yk1oi Před rokem +2

      it's not just the big indicents. it's the transport, the waste, the cost, the environmental destruction of areas around uranium mine sites and of course mr burns

    • @yt.damian
      @yt.damian Před 10 měsíci

      Almost all of the damage from Fukushima was from the tsunami and from the evacuation - not from the nuclear accident. Statistically the deaths from nuclear power is so low as to be almost zero.

  • @RobinDeCraecker
    @RobinDeCraecker Před rokem +35

    Hi Elina, your video's are a perfect combination of knowledge and humour they always put a smile on my face while I learn something. Thank you for doing what you do best!

    • @YourFriendlyNuclearPhysicist
      @YourFriendlyNuclearPhysicist  Před rokem +2

      I'm so glad! Thank you for your comment 👩🏽‍🔬☢️

    • @mikeet69
      @mikeet69 Před rokem

      Elina I agree Sabine using a mix of SI units and US Customary for 2 separate dimensions is unusual. Just a quick estimate that 20 feet is around 6 meters. So SMR of 3 meters by 6 meters.

    • @cactustactics
      @cactustactics Před rokem

      @@mikeet69 the subtitles actually said 20 metres, I think she probably just misspoke. If you look at the diagram it's definitely closer to 7x as tall as it is wide than 2x!

    • @mikeet69
      @mikeet69 Před rokem

      @@cactustactics Okay. I did not have subtitles turned on so I did not know. I was just surprised to hear the mixed units.

    • @cactustactics
      @cactustactics Před rokem

      @@mikeet69 oh I mean the subs that were visible on Sabine's vid - I'm guessing she changed the units instead of matching what she said as a way to correct it. In the UK it's pretty typical to mix metric and imperial units in general conversation, maybe she picked up a bit of that!

  • @andrewbako9494
    @andrewbako9494 Před rokem +33

    Huge fan of Sabine. Recently found your channel loving the content so far! Absolutely agree that we should be using all technologies available together to continue to improve and iterate upon energy technologies.

    • @C_R_O_M________
      @C_R_O_M________ Před rokem +5

      Sabine is supporting mainstream nonsense!

    • @shoujahatsumetsu
      @shoujahatsumetsu Před rokem +3

      @@C_R_O_M________ That doesn't invalidate the proper information she puts out though. Never go looking for unicorns, and always keep a pinch of salt around even when you seem to agree with someone on most points they have.

    • @grahambennett8151
      @grahambennett8151 Před 4 měsíci

      Except the ones that contaminate hundreds of square miles with radioactive reactor fuel when they are attacked with a cruise missile, or someone does not run them properly. Except nuclear, in short.

  • @olivierbossel
    @olivierbossel Před měsícem

    As usual, nice reaction. Normal you would say as Sabine’s videos are always very well documented, but you rocks it even more!
    Thanks for your commitment in this cause, it’s nice to see and hear friendly thoughts about a soooooooo controverses topic 😊
    Best regards Elina!

  • @petermargie
    @petermargie Před rokem +13

    It’s green,....and natural! Do an episode on the naturally occurring fission reactor found in the Oklo mine in West Africa

    • @jasonrichardson1999
      @jasonrichardson1999 Před rokem +3

      Naturally occurring yes but it's not fissioning rn so yeah but I get what you meant

    • @danielch6662
      @danielch6662 Před rokem

      Nuclear power is not green. It's fuel is relatively compact, but you have to transport it hundreds of times, for thousands of km each time, back and forth.
      What am I talking about? Reprocessing. Iran wanted to reprocess, and Trump lost his mind. The solution? Fly it to Russia, have them reprocess it, and fly it back. Except that now, Russia is under sanctions.
      Don't reprocess is not a solution. That means using 1% of the fuel, then bury the other 99% as high intensity radioactive waste, for tens of thousands of years.

    • @jasonrichardson1999
      @jasonrichardson1999 Před rokem

      @@danielch6662 it's called a breeder reactor and also nuclear power is green

    • @petermargie
      @petermargie Před rokem

      @@danielch6662 I burn ultra low sulfur high quality anthracite coal mined almost literally outside my back door. I pick it up in a rented truck at the mine. No drilling, pumping, transporting, refining, distributing, then delivering of oil. I figure that fact makes burning anthracite coal relatively green,.....in my specific situation. No natural gas available in my area. Saving up for a geothermal heat pump. Unfortunately, installing one is prohibitively expensive. One ton of coal is less than $300 ( that’s high for coal at the mine) and has the same amount of “heat” as a standard 275 gallon tank of fuel oil.....which costs almost $1000 to fill these days. 😳

    • @CrniWuk
      @CrniWuk Před rokem

      @@jasonrichardson1999 Nuclear power isn't exactly "green". It's definetly better than most fossil fuels. But green? It's not a renewable energy source.

  • @edreusser4741
    @edreusser4741 Před rokem +3

    Normally, hydro comes with its own storage. That is its primary advantage, but this source is also almost 100% maximized.

    • @nathanwahl9224
      @nathanwahl9224 Před rokem

      Yep, at today's prices, all of the resources that can be utilized to pay back their costs are already pretty much in use. If something costs more to make and run than it returns there is no sense investing in it. In theory there is more available, but not practically.

  • @StephGV2
    @StephGV2 Před 10 měsíci +2

    The big problem is the one that Elina brought up with the Lia Radiological Accident video: the handling and tracking of radiological materials when the governments of the world are not exerting sufficient monitoring, regulation, control and punishment of violators who allow radiological materials to be "lost".

  • @lu-uf8zj
    @lu-uf8zj Před 4 měsíci

    I've been following Sabine for some time as I really appreciate her insights, but I equally appreciate your discussion of it.

  • @MikkoRantalainen
    @MikkoRantalainen Před rokem +3

    Fukushima changed the risk analysis of Nuclear Power plants even in Finland. The the risk evaluation used to be that e.g. flooding must be designed for natural events that happen randomly once in 10000 years. Since the Fukushima that number is now 100000 years for most parts of the design. As a result, they built yet another backup power station for emergency cooling for very very rare events. (If I remember correctly, they previously had 4 backup power stations with full flood protection and they built 5th backup station on a nearby hill make sure it can never flood.)
    And as a Finn, I have to add that in my opinion, burying the spent fuel from light water reactors into the ground is simply stupid. I agree that some spent fuel is good to bury but the stuff that could be still used in everything else but light water reactors seems silly for me. It's like drilling oil, manufacturing jet fuel and burying diesel and gasoline into the ground because those are waste side-products.

  • @nirbhayatiwari5425
    @nirbhayatiwari5425 Před rokem +23

    Elina keep up the hard work ..
    Your explanation of complex topic in very easily understandable language is just awesome ....
    Keep it up .. 👍👍❤❤

  • @daithi1966
    @daithi1966 Před 10 měsíci +11

    When I was a teen in the late 1970s, I had a science teacher that absolutely condemned nuclear power and ridiculed anyone who even questioned the thought that nuclear energy wasn't evil. It took me a few years to get past this dogma.

    • @grahambennett8151
      @grahambennett8151 Před 4 měsíci

      Nuclear is not evil. Nuclear weapons protect us in the short term, and I have had nuclear medical treatment. Nuclear power, however is a bit different. What is evil, is to license out volatile weapons technology to power companies, and to allow anyone to use it to compete in the cut-throat energy market when there are cheaper, cleaner and safer alternatives. Your teacher's mistake was to think that all nuclear is the same. You are making the same fundamental mistake, and the people of Three Mile Island, Pripyat (Chernobyl) and Futaba (Fukushima) might disagree with you.

  • @erinatornow
    @erinatornow Před rokem +2

    Hydropower usually doesn't need electricity storage (11:17) because it either generates a constant stream of electricity (as baseload) or can store the water before and produce electricity as needed.

  • @JohnDoe-nq4du
    @JohnDoe-nq4du Před rokem +3

    4:45
    This bit reminded me of a (possibly apocryphal) story about the time that Denver, Colorado had a tsunami warning. Apparently, when they installed their new Emergency Alert System, some technician accidentally connected one wire in the wrong spot, but it wasn't caught until after every television in a city famous for being an entire mile above sea level interrupted peoples' shows to tell them they were about to get hit with a giant wave of seawater.

  • @StereoSpace
    @StereoSpace Před rokem +4

    32:30 I think Sabine misspoke here. The nuscale reactors are 3 meters in diameter and 20 meters tall (9x60 feet), not twenty feet tall.

  • @fredd841
    @fredd841 Před rokem +5

    I follow Sabina and it is nice to get a second take to her breakdown of a subject, please continue to do reactions of her videos. I will definitely watch them and like them.😊

  • @CuriousCyclist
    @CuriousCyclist Před rokem

    I've just discovered your channel. Love the videos.

  • @cmilkau
    @cmilkau Před rokem +5

    Energy storage is a fascinating topic, probably worth revisiting again in 5y. Right now there are lots of claims and products just entering the stage, and it's impossible to tell whether they will hold their promises.

    • @vibratingstring
      @vibratingstring Před rokem

      iron batteries. Exide has been making them for many years.
      idiots all over the US are using lithium! What a bunch of putzes! For fixed battery installations!

    • @Adeleisha
      @Adeleisha Před rokem

      If you’re talking about large capacity battery storage, then they’ve been mainstream for over 10 years now, and still going strong. Google Renault Z0E and Nissan Leaf for evidence of their battery longevity (early Leafs excluded, as they didn’t have effective heating/cooling which has since been addressed).

  • @zadrik1337
    @zadrik1337 Před rokem +56

    Sabine's videos are fantastic. They are smart, funny, and she has super-villan levels of sarcasm when pointing out stupid things.

    • @C_R_O_M________
      @C_R_O_M________ Před rokem +1

      She is irritating, with a Western European elitist tone in her voice and she just supports mainstream narratives. Show me ONE instance where she disagrees with mainstream narratives. She's a parrot in that respect. Greenhouse effect parrot without acknowledging the fact that the greenhouse theory was NEVER proven experimentally, it is ASSUMED and incorporated in models. NEVER proven!

    • @nestorv7627
      @nestorv7627 Před rokem

      "They measured death rates in.. deaths per kilowatt-hour" killed me 😂

    • @DefaultProphet
      @DefaultProphet Před rokem +3

      She’s also somewhat terfy

    • @nestorv7627
      @nestorv7627 Před rokem

      @Shawn Morris she isnt, and it shouldnt be a big deal if she was. Women deserve to have women-only spaces

    • @DefaultProphet
      @DefaultProphet Před rokem +3

      @@nestorv7627 sup terf

  • @patrickbuick5459
    @patrickbuick5459 Před 10 měsíci +1

    Very interesting to get your perspective. Where I live (New Brunswick, Canada), the power company just did a big publicity release for their small (modular?) reactor initiative. I believe we already use wind (there are relatively reliable winds at the head of the Bay of Fundy), but not as much solar that I know of.
    I agree that each area and situation is unique and that, in general, a mix of sources (and storage) is the best strategy.

  • @kettelbe
    @kettelbe Před rokem

    Loving this video

  • @0-by-1_Publishing_LLC
    @0-by-1_Publishing_LLC Před rokem +22

    Sabine cuts through the crap and isn't afraid to be opinionated. ... Respect!

  • @haroldfernandez3317
    @haroldfernandez3317 Před rokem +3

    In fact is 3 m diameter and 20 m tall (20 feet was just a misspoke from Sabine)

  • @WoodM3chanic
    @WoodM3chanic Před rokem +2

    On the dependency take: Germany was/would be dependent on nuclear fuels from other countries aswell and the biggest issue is: Germany struggles to find a Storage for the waste, and doesn't even make a realistic price per kWh since the storage is still unclear

    • @meganoob12
      @meganoob12 Před 4 měsíci

      yes, but we would be dependent on allied nations, mainly: Canada. Now we're highly dependent on Russia and the middle east... Not the best of company is it?
      The struggle for storage is more of a political issue, than one of physical facts.
      price for renewables is also unclear because they cannot provide the basic load which in return means we need loads of storage for nights and less windy days. How much do these cost? Well no body seems to give a shit but these are going to be really expensive and are not factored into the current price.

  • @ilyafilru
    @ilyafilru Před 10 měsíci +1

    Keep up the good work, I love your channel. I've always been fascinated by nuclear energy. I even snuck into the Chernobyl zone alone once.

  • @thearisen7301
    @thearisen7301 Před rokem +8

    Elina I'd love to see you evaluate various reactor designs.
    One I'm quite interested in is Westinghouse's 450MWe Lead Fast Reactor. It will be able to be used as a waste burner & includes supercritical CO2 thermal storage.

  • @dactylntrochee
    @dactylntrochee Před rokem +3

    I just came across Sabine yesterday, and am delighted with her sensible way of thinking things through, not to mention her presentation. Elina came up in the sidebar, so I clicked, and was similarly impressed with well-organized and well-researched work (and equally good presentation). I look forward to more of both of them.
    While today's video indeed put a new perspective on waste for me (which was always my biggest issue), my fears have now shifted to the number of steps in the supply chain that will be distorted and abused in the arenas of business and politics. Democracy provides for the spread of ignorance and abuse, especially when the matters at hand are beyond the grasp of the voting public. Those things are outside of the scope of discussion in both channels, but they do play a part in the biggest picture. Enlightened autocracy is really the best form of governance -- until power is assumed by the heir or next apparatchik in line, at which point tragedy ensues -- so I remain cautiously democratic, with the understanding that it must always yield results reflecting a low common denominator. (I'm in the US, so that might color my point of view. Some other countries might be different, but I've never lived anywhere else.)

    • @klauskarpfen9039
      @klauskarpfen9039 Před rokem +1

      Please tell Mr. Biden not to send any more weapons to Ukraine where they are used to shell the nuclear power plant in Zaporizhzhia. Maybe tell him stop regime change, medding in other countries's affairs and wars altogether? Thank you!

    • @danadurnfordkevinblanchdebunk
      @danadurnfordkevinblanchdebunk Před rokem

      @@klauskarpfen9039 I doubt Biden knows what day of the week it is, so it needs to be told to his puppet masters.

  • @cloobs1
    @cloobs1 Před rokem +2

    I remember publications 20 years ago predicting we'd run out of oil and gas by now

    • @davidaustin6962
      @davidaustin6962 Před 4 měsíci +1

      They'd have been right were it not for fracking. Fracking bought us another 30-40 years.

  • @verdedoodleduck
    @verdedoodleduck Před 11 měsíci +37

    Thanks for doing this. Sabine is always excellent and educational. She also has a puckish sense of humor. :) I would be interested in seeing more of your comments on her videos if not only because you can provide additional context that could be quite informative.

    • @gmaacentralfounder
      @gmaacentralfounder Před 10 měsíci +1

      But Elina posited a very interesting problem (and I paraphrase): "do the calculations of costs include the fact that life time of a nuclear plant is double that of solar or wind"? Depending on the answer Sabine may have produced a fairy tale, and not an educational video.
      So...
      Average nuclear power plant (NPP) is calculated to last 40 years (some sources say 60 years), but when built properly and modernized (which is not as bad as it sounds) are good for at least twice that. So NPP is at least FOUR TO SIX TIMES longer in operation (wind and solar are now rated for 20-25 years, and by end of the life cycle their output is somewhere between 20 to 50 PERCENT LOWER THAN WHEN NEW. There are new tech coming, true, but barring real new materials this will be not that big of an improvement...
      Second point is that solar and wind depend heavily on geography. In some places (i.e. Sahara or Texas - both are at similar latitude) they work fantastically well, in others (i.e. central or Northern Europe)... not so much. Also is there heavy subsidization of solar and wind included in price?
      This is a very important question because France - with majority of it's energy coming from nuclear - has electricity prices much lower than Germany (which effectively is running on solar/wind and coal)... This is very, very important question to answer, because if this is the case of fudged numbers - because the whole comparison does not add up (especially when storage of energy is getting cheaper, too) - then what is going on?

    • @masterlee9822
      @masterlee9822 Před 10 měsíci +1

      Nuclear weapons should be legal to own by private citizens.

    • @mayanktripathi8726
      @mayanktripathi8726 Před 10 měsíci +1

      @@masterlee9822 why?

    • @masterlee9822
      @masterlee9822 Před 10 měsíci

      @@mayanktripathi8726 Its awesome to own your own nuclear missile. Not what I want, but it could be used by the government to help pay for their missiles. You get your own name on the missile, pictures and videos of its upbringing.

    • @wasdwasdedsf
      @wasdwasdedsf Před 9 měsíci

      " "do the calculations of costs include the fact that life time of a nuclear plant is double that of solar or wind"? Depending on the answer Sabine may have produced a fairy tale, and not an educational video."
      the answer is likely no, along with juist about thousands of other diferent metrics that socalled climate scientists conveniently try to pretend away when they dont fit into their narrative across the board. theres too many examples of that to count.
      you would think it would render their whole thesis null until they can argue like scientists and not like kindergarten children, yet here we are@@gmaacentralfounder

  • @michaelperrone3867
    @michaelperrone3867 Před rokem +6

    Thanks for doing this! Sabine has done well in the past but I feel like her quality is slipping as she tries to produce more frequent content; good to have people to check her work.

    • @GuinessOriginal
      @GuinessOriginal Před rokem +1

      She spans across a lot of industries and technical disciplines, not every video can be a deep dive like this one. I know what you mean though.

  • @mythosboy
    @mythosboy Před rokem +11

    I give the video two thumbs up, if I had the option. Thorough breakdown, and great additional commentary.

  • @tobyw9573
    @tobyw9573 Před 10 měsíci +1

    The metal corrosion in molten salt reactors would appear to be containable with ceramic linings in affected areas of the plant.

  • @KdUqPdI
    @KdUqPdI Před 10 měsíci

    Hi Elina. Love your t-shirt. Great vid.

  • @bazoo513
    @bazoo513 Před rokem +3

    We were advised in Zagreb, Croatia to stay indoors, close windows etc. I was (not very) young physicist then, and the chance had it that we just completed a study of radon concentrations in basements and buildings made of locally sourced concrete or brick in Zagreb area. To make long story short, increased radiation exposure from radon accumulating in poorly ventilated rooms, especially in basements or ground floors of buildings without basement was _much_ higher (but still tiny) compared to radiation from Chernobyl, at least if you refrained from rolling in the grass after rain.

    • @peterang6912
      @peterang6912 Před rokem +1

      We ware not even aloud in the Netherlands to drink milk for 2 months...or eat fresh vegetables only frozen or out a glass jar..

    • @bazoo513
      @bazoo513 Před rokem

      @@peterang6912 Another overreaction. Has anyone even bothered to even measure supposed added activity in milk? I guess they were primarily concerned about strontium-90 which, to be fair, _is_ chemically somewhat similar to calcium (so it can, conceivably, be extracted into milk and then incorporated into bones), has long-ish half-life of about 29 years (compared to 8 days for iodine-131), and releases 546 keV beta particles (electrons) which are strongly ionizing.
      I read somewhere that there is still a measurable (but not dangerous - physicists are good at measuring tiny amounts of anything) amount of Sr-90 in fish in the Baltic Sea.

    • @peterang6912
      @peterang6912 Před rokem +1

      @@bazoo513 i understand that some government guys in white suits walking around the cows with those geiger counters, they calculated true the wind direction where the nuclear fallout fall on the ground in the Netherlands... And those farms were visited by government employees...They had to destroy all the crops on the land and all the milk that was milked in the last 48 hours..

    • @bazoo513
      @bazoo513 Před rokem

      @@peterang6912 Hmmm.... then probably not ever-reaction, after all.

  • @davidh.4649
    @davidh.4649 Před rokem +55

    Elina, this was a very good video. I watch a lot of Sabine, I typically agree with most of what she says. She offers well researched, reasoned, and logical arguments in her videos. The information is usually presented in a very organized and straightforward way and Sabine's opinions are not "knee jerk" but are well thought out and scientifically informed. I think your videos are, in this way, similar to Sabine's. Well reasoned and thought out and always informed by science. I'm a physicist and an electrical engineer so this of course appeals to me. Sabine covers a broader range of topics from the realm of physics than you do but then Sabine doesn't bill herself as our "friendly physicist" either. 😁 I very much enjoy your videos as well and I believe you fill a very valuable niche. As Sabine pointed out, people are in many ways irrationally afraid of anything nuclear and your videos do a lot to combat that irrational fear by replacing it with knowledge. In a friendly nuclear physicist way. 😊

  • @RB-bd5tz
    @RB-bd5tz Před rokem +3

    This channel's great! You're an excellent nuclear reactor!

  • @TheBrainlessSteel
    @TheBrainlessSteel Před 10 měsíci

    liked a few of your videos. so i hit that subscribe button! your video's are very interesting

  • @blueckaym
    @blueckaym Před rokem +27

    Sabine is probably the best scientific communicator I follow. She's the most objective, rational (even when irrational subjects are involved), and has a laser focus when explaining a subject (so far everything I've seen of hers). This laser-focus is actually extremely important, because for regular people like me - we don't have high capacity of understanding complex scientific subjects anyway (yes some people might have some more knowledge in a subject or two, but another will have in different subjects - the average isn't as high as an expert in the field would be). So far even difficult subjects have been clearly explained, and what I really appreciate - there's no speculation or unfound assumptions (like for example many Standard QM videos are).
    It's nice to see to have such overlap of views with Elina.
    This is the first video of your I'm watching but I'm interested to see more.
    However in the beginning, when you said that currently there's no technology to store the energy from renewables (Solar, Wind ...) and to smoothen the Duck curve (ie to cover the periods when energy demand exceeds the energy supply). Besides batteries actually there are several technologies. Li-ion batteries are actually one of the more polluting energy storage techs.
    That and the current cost of Li-ion is what limits it to become the main solution.
    One that's older than li-ion batteries is pumped-hydro. But since pumped-hydro requires specific terrain and it affects wider areas there are solutions on the same principle but more adaptable. One is to drill deep vertical shafts and use materials much heavier than water as ballast. The advantage is it's still low tech (or operation; perhaps a little more mid-tech level of drilling), easier to scale as long as you don't have many restrictions in drilling in the area.
    There's the solution of storing energy in rotating disks/cylinders (aka flywheel energy storage). Historically flywheel-storage had many energy losses and high risk of malfunction on high rpms, but with modern techs controlling friction and precision of the axis of rotation the potential has been increased greatly. Flywheels while currently aren't the most long-term storage they're the biggest "batteries" that can release their energy the soonest.
    But what's one of the most universal techs is heat (& also cryo) storage. Nowadays they can be very well insulated in order to minimize thermal losses, and a temp. difference (in case of hybrid Cryo+Hot storages) of about 600°C can deliver theoretical max. efficiency of ~88% (in case us using liquid air/nitrogen @-196°C & Hot tank @ ~400°C), or real world efficiency of at least 55%.
    Yes most alternative energy storage solutions have considerably lower efficiency than Li-ion batteries. But unlike Li-ion batteries some are really low-tech and have almost zero amortization (while batteries have rather limited lifecycle and their production is both relatively expensive & polluting). Heat can be stored easily in sand or rocks, and insulation is also cheap and low-tech (like Starlite clones made from household ingredients. Nasa uses very similar solution as heat shield on the Parker Solar Probe - carbon foam, which happens to be the product of burning Starlite-like materials). Of course the best solutions as temp. insulators are air-gels but they're still tricky to produce and not very strong for long term use.
    Also using concentrated solar power (CSP) is much cheaper than PV panels and even after collection, storage, regeneration can still reach at least double the efficiency of (single-junction) PV panels. And the lower efficiency (compared to Li-ion batteries) can be easily compensated by harvesting more sunlight.
    Of course that would take much more surface than a nuclear power plant, but the only losses of these surfaces are that the area below them would have very little light left.
    Real-world efficiency of that cycle CSP-HeatStorage-ReGeneration could even increase with tech improvements as they're currently not mass produced and only designed case by case.
    Low-tech solutions that have little restriction to place is also more competitive than highly safe modern nuclear power plant.

    • @autohmae
      @autohmae Před rokem +5

      CSP with molten salt allows for 24 hours of power generation by a plant. And already doing so since 2011 I believe.

    • @blackstream2572
      @blackstream2572 Před rokem +2

      She's also the only source I've found with an actual explanation for the quantum eraser double slit experiment

    • @blueckaym
      @blueckaym Před rokem

      @@blackstream2572 , I don't think she's the only one - I've seen the same explanation (which finally make sense) from others too, but she definitely is one of the most rational ones.

    • @outerspaceisalie
      @outerspaceisalie Před rokem +4

      i was on board with this video until she said this, this is a very bad take on her part, renewable storage is highly competitive and there are many options that are good at the moment, the jury is merely out on which one is best and people are stalling on investing into them because they're all expecting a big breakthrough soon so wanna save their investment for that, but renewable storage is a solved problem in many and/or most cases (it of course varies by many factors such as regional resources and type of renewable, while hydro and air compression storage work great in some regions, they work terribly in others as an example). Batteries help to fill the gap of the hardest regions/circumstances to store energy in, but energy storage is one of those fields where there is no single answer. The answer is 400 types of energy storage each being used in different regions and conditions.

  • @akernis3193
    @akernis3193 Před rokem +8

    Sabine is probably my favourite science communicator. And I very much enjoyed your reaction and the input you gave. It's always gives a lot of confidence when I hear two competent people agree on the topic like this.

  • @TroyYounts
    @TroyYounts Před rokem

    Subbed to your channel immediately on this video -also you are very kind on an old man's eyes 😁

  • @maxxie84
    @maxxie84 Před 4 měsíci

    Great video :) thanks :)

  • @authorotar
    @authorotar Před rokem +6

    I really wish that whenever the Chernobyl accident is mentioned, people would also take the time to point out that the reason for that accident was purely political. The Soviet leadership decided to run an experiment where they first disabled all safety mechanisms, and then initiated an unsafe startup of the reactor. They also ignored all the power plant experts that wanted to abort the startup for safety reasons. If you really want to blow things up, you can always do so.

    • @nathanwahl9224
      @nathanwahl9224 Před rokem +3

      Both Chernobyl and Fukushima were cultural failures. The Japanese hadn't followed industry recommendations for safety system updates and changes, because doing so would have meant that they made an error beforehand, and as such would "lose face."

    • @Prometheus4096
      @Prometheus4096 Před 11 měsíci

      Good thing we don't have this dangerous thing called 'politics' in the west. Remember when France had no power because half their nuclear power plants had to be shut down because they violated safety considerations?

  • @JonLusk
    @JonLusk Před rokem +6

    Great video as always! Could we get you and Sabine in a video reacting to....well, just about anything?

  • @LyleAshbaugh
    @LyleAshbaugh Před rokem

    You giving Sabine a seal of approval earned a sub from me. Well, that plus you have an excellent delivery.

  • @l.m.892
    @l.m.892 Před 7 měsíci

    I like how the background music started when discussing nuclear safety, then stopped after the safety class was over. Great job Elina. I'm impressed and my concerns are comforted.

  • @mina_en_suiza
    @mina_en_suiza Před rokem +165

    Sabine's weekly Science News is the best overview there is, about what's currently going on in science, and it is also extremely entertaining, without being superficial. She's one of the best science communicators of our time.

    • @joewiddup9753
      @joewiddup9753 Před rokem +4

      She fills a bit of the void left by the end of Discovery's Daily Planet. I remember how they would interview all of these scientists that were blown away by the idea that television wanted to long form interviews with them. Sabine could easily evolve into a longer format.

    • @Jivifair
      @Jivifair Před rokem +1

      It's decently fine, only...

    • @99EKjohn
      @99EKjohn Před rokem +1

      @@Jivifair she really likes to straw man Avi Loeb, and others who disagree with her. It's kinda annoying. It's also expecially funny when she doesn't think free will exists, so according to her own viewpoint Avi doesn't have a choice about his views and neither does she.

    • @GuinessOriginal
      @GuinessOriginal Před rokem

      @@99EKjohn debate is part of the process. No one is right about everything. It’s easy to claim your right about sensational ideas that can’t be proven.

    • @99EKjohn
      @99EKjohn Před rokem

      @@GuinessOriginal Debate is part of the process, but you have to understand the argument to debate it. Free will axiomatically exists, you have to use it to argue against it. Avi just says we should check better for the possibility of finding life outside earth, and has come up with some good experiments for doing that.

  • @Electrowave
    @Electrowave Před rokem +9

    I have already seen Sabine's video, and it's great to see you approve 🙂 This is one of the most interesting videos I have seen in a while, and both you and Sabine have turned me towards a more positive view of nuclear power. I imagine the smaller units would be less dangerous in the case of an earth quake? I'm thinking like boats. Little boats get tossed about in big or freak waves but are far less likely to break in half and sink than the very much larger tankers and cargo ships.

  • @BlergleslinkVettermoo
    @BlergleslinkVettermoo Před 10 měsíci +1

    Excellent presentation. Well done.

  • @markopolo1271
    @markopolo1271 Před rokem

    Honestly glad I stumbled on this video seems like it'll be an interesting watch

  • @rgco2266
    @rgco2266 Před rokem +3

    Excellent video (both Sabine and you). Maybe one day you could crack the numbers on the cost? Why did they go up so much? Did the cost of steel and concrete go up, are the safety requirements higher now than in the past or is there a corrupt monopoly driving up the cost?

    • @fnors2
      @fnors2 Před rokem +1

      I think some factors for price going up would be inflation, all the carbon taxes type of policies, and globalization.
      Inflation is an obvious one. Things got a lot more expensive in the last few years. Like a lot.
      The carbon taxes didn't help, as they make fuel more expensive. Which drives the cost of transportation, which also makes the prices of everything go up.
      So you get that all the base material cost more. Skilled workers cost more. Etc.
      Nuclear isn't as well established or "simple" like coal or gas. So you already had to pay a premium, it's just that this premium has been inflated even more by everything happening in the last decade.
      And then you get globalism.
      Nuclear tends to be a more "local" or "strategic" thing. Politically speaking. Nuclear proliferation and all.
      Like, the US and the EU definitely don't want to have to depend on, say, Russia or China for their nuclear needs. The reverse is also true.
      So you have to deal in your market, with all the regulations and higher costs.
      Compare that to solar or wind or coal. With globalization, the factories/mines can be set up in countries with little to no regulations to absorb the costs.
      It's not as big an issue if international relations break down in those cases. It just boils down to finding a new supplier. Nuclear needs _expertise_ to run properly and not just resources.
      Plus, I think a _lot_ of solar panels are manufactured in China. With ressources mined in Africa. And let's be real, those areas don't have the best workers rights, or ecological policies.
      So costs can stay low, if you are willing to close your eyes to whatever happens over there.
      TL;DR: Inflation and policies definitely played a role (indirectly, at least) in making nuclear more expensive.
      And those cost increase can't be sidestepped by moving manufacturing to less regulated countries outside of North America or the EU.

  • @EShirako
    @EShirako Před rokem +4

    One of the hardest lessons I have ever learned was "The biggest problem with Statistics is "Knowing what question is worth asking", and/or "Deciding on what you actually need to ask". Less hard, but almost more enlightening, was "There are lies, damned lies, and Statistics."

    • @GermanTaffer
      @GermanTaffer Před rokem

      Top comment! I fear most people don't recognize the profound knowledge, the beauty of your comment.
      Comparable to me, as I ignored for decades the meaning of the question of Einstein, what differs an astronaut and a man, who is falling from a roof (the answer is nothing, they are floating without force).
      As you already wrote, the second phrase is more easily understandable, but not more correct.

    • @Buglin_Burger7878
      @Buglin_Burger7878 Před rokem

      The biggest problem is actually people not understanding the difference between correlation and causation.
      It isn't that statistics lie, rather people are too stupid to use them, too stupid to understand them, and too stupid to use enough variables in relation to the subject. Especially when it comes to likely hood of events.

  • @jmachorrov
    @jmachorrov Před měsícem

    great Sabine Hossenfelder's video. Your work too Elina , thanks

  • @IngVasiu
    @IngVasiu Před rokem +2

    Two of my favourite physicists in a single video.

  • @ThePixel1983
    @ThePixel1983 Před rokem +7

    Small modular reactors: Great idea if you want to worsen the surface to volume ratio (more irradiated reactor hull material per kWh, yay!) and want to require more personnel, probably meaning less qualified personnel...

    • @davidbarry6900
      @davidbarry6900 Před rokem

      The personnel issue is going to be a factor anyway, if there is any expansion of nuclear power.

    • @bencoad8492
      @bencoad8492 Před rokem

      then if thats your concern instead of factories you build them in shipyards...and make bigger ones, like a 500MW barge type reactor that ThorCon is planning heh, this still has the benefit of reducing the cost to build and build time.

    • @user-pd5ot4zd4b
      @user-pd5ot4zd4b Před rokem +1

      True that. But I see it as a trade off of efficiency for flexibility, which seems to be a real issue for the big traditional plants. It drive's me nuts when perfectly good nuke plants are decommissioned, like the one in Kewanee Wi recently (Dominion Energy). Could have setup a water splitting plant right there on the shore of the lake and had bulk shipping by water available. However, all those infrastructure projects are expensive, and since the real cost of "cheap" fraked gas isn't included in the up-front price (yet), no one want's to pay to keep the plant in service. Hopefully the small modular designs could lower the thresholds to deploy, decom or maybe even relocate power?

    • @davidbarry6900
      @davidbarry6900 Před rokem +1

      @@user-pd5ot4zd4b SMRs also offer the CHANCE of starting a cycle of improvement through constant iteration of designs, which has been a big driver in the technical improvement of solar panels over the past 2 decades. You just can't do that with traditional nuclear plants - they are all big, one-off projects.

    • @pip0109
      @pip0109 Před rokem

      you completely missed one of the benefits of modular reactors: they will be moved to and from service centers where robots will do the bulk of the work