Old nemesis
haunts renewed push for nuclear plants
Aug 17, 2006 - McClatchy-Tribune News Service
The following editorial appeared in the Miami Herald on Wednesday,
Aug. 16:
X X X
Nuclear energy is the future. This is the rationalization behind
Energy Secretary Samuel Bodman's decision to provide incentives to
companies willing to build the first nuclear plants in the United States
in 30 years. The government is offering $2 billion in federal insurance
for six new plants. But this initiative also needs more research. There
still are no good answers to the biggest problem that comes with nuclear
energy -- where to dispose of the radioactive waste.
Nuclear energy is crucial for the U.S. economy and environment.
Reinvigorating the industry now would come at a time when energy prices
are escalating. Relatively little fuel is needed to run nuclear-power
plants, and they would generate electricity at cheaper rates. Moreover,
nuclear energy is the most promising long-term approach to reducing U.S.
dependence on fossil fuels.
Some environmentalists believe nuclear energy is a viable strategy to
reduce greenhouse gases that contribute to global warming. Additionally,
these plants do not pollute the air with harmful gases such as carbon
monoxide, aerosols or photochemical smog.
In addition to incentives for nuclear plants, the government should
look for ways to minimize the risk from nuclear waste. Nuclear-plant
construction was halted in this country after the partial meltdown in
1979 at Three Mile Island in Pennsylvania. Yet a bad historical event
should be cause for improvement, not a restraint on beneficial
technology.
The government should proceed with deliberate caution in developing
new nuclear plants as it figures out how to dispose of the waste that
will be generated.
------(c) 2006, The Miami Herald.Visit The Miami Herald Web edition
on the World Wide Web at
http://www.herald.com
Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.
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