In the WWII and post era the US developed a nuclear technology capable of producing safe power - a fission reactor that can't overheat and meltdown like Chernobyl of Fukushima.
This technology, a molten salt reactor, sat mothballed for decades...
Oak Ridge developed an MSBR, then wrote a paper on a more advanced version... Yet it was ignored.
Today, China is accelerating their development of MSR technology, see: https://neutronbytes.com/2018/01/07/recent-developments-in-advanced-reactors-in-china-russia/ https://neutronbytes.com/2018/01/07/recent-developments-in-advanced-reactors-in-china-russia/
Canada has it's own stake in this through Terrestrial Energy: https://www.terrestrialenergy.com https://www.terrestrialenergy.com
Two years ago (late 2016) Russia brought online it's BN-800 reactor plant... 880MW of sodium cooled nuclear power and one of the first large-scale Generation IV nuclear plants in the world.
Liquid salt reactors have almost no waste, and inherently stop overheat conditions. The Americans mothballed the technology as they deemed it too expensive / complicated compared to water cooled reactor designs... especially since they were at the time trying to build super compact, high efficiency reactors for submarines and aircraft carriers - simply adapting that technology to land based facilities.
Meanwhile, https://www.extremetech.com/extreme/280265-mit-plans-new-fusion-reactor-that-could-actually-generate-power MiT SPARC is developing a nuclear fusion plant that they expect to have in a power production state by 2025 (6) years from now.
Let's not forget about https://www.iter.org/mach iTer , The world's first high output Tokomak reactor. They are hoping to generate 500MW of energy output, for 50MW of heating input...
China, the European Union, India, Japan, Korea, Russia and the United States are the leaders of that project.
There's also a competing technology called a https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polywell Polywell reactor that shows promise.
So, considering that http://www.industrytap.com/knowledge-doubling-every-12-months-soon-to-be-every-12-hours/3950 total, complete, human knowledge now doubles every 13 months and is on a massive accelerating curve, why aren't we spending the money we're wasting on already obsolete solar and wind farms on technology that can actually power the future.
We're literally a decade or two away from clean, unlimited power.
It is an amazing time to be alive. The technology, science, and abilities we have are amazing.
Would any of our parents have imagined we could build a neutron collector on a 3d printer in our home office...
That we could steer and navigate 3,000 meters under ground with no wires.
That your cell phone has more computing power than a 5 story "super computer" in the 40s...
That we can map and change genomes. We can build anything. The future really is limitless.
This technology, a molten salt reactor, sat mothballed for decades...
Oak Ridge developed an MSBR, then wrote a paper on a more advanced version... Yet it was ignored.
Today, China is accelerating their development of MSR technology, see: https://neutronbytes.com/2018/01/07/recent-developments-in-advanced-reactors-in-china-russia/ https://neutronbytes.com/2018/01/07/recent-developments-in-advanced-reactors-in-china-russia/
Canada has it's own stake in this through Terrestrial Energy: https://www.terrestrialenergy.com https://www.terrestrialenergy.com
Two years ago (late 2016) Russia brought online it's BN-800 reactor plant... 880MW of sodium cooled nuclear power and one of the first large-scale Generation IV nuclear plants in the world.
Liquid salt reactors have almost no waste, and inherently stop overheat conditions. The Americans mothballed the technology as they deemed it too expensive / complicated compared to water cooled reactor designs... especially since they were at the time trying to build super compact, high efficiency reactors for submarines and aircraft carriers - simply adapting that technology to land based facilities.
Meanwhile, https://www.extremetech.com/extreme/280265-mit-plans-new-fusion-reactor-that-could-actually-generate-power MiT SPARC is developing a nuclear fusion plant that they expect to have in a power production state by 2025 (6) years from now.
Let's not forget about https://www.iter.org/mach iTer , The world's first high output Tokomak reactor. They are hoping to generate 500MW of energy output, for 50MW of heating input...
China, the European Union, India, Japan, Korea, Russia and the United States are the leaders of that project.
There's also a competing technology called a https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polywell Polywell reactor that shows promise.
So, considering that http://www.industrytap.com/knowledge-doubling-every-12-months-soon-to-be-every-12-hours/3950 total, complete, human knowledge now doubles every 13 months and is on a massive accelerating curve, why aren't we spending the money we're wasting on already obsolete solar and wind farms on technology that can actually power the future.
We're literally a decade or two away from clean, unlimited power.
It is an amazing time to be alive. The technology, science, and abilities we have are amazing.
Would any of our parents have imagined we could build a neutron collector on a 3d printer in our home office...
That we could steer and navigate 3,000 meters under ground with no wires.
That your cell phone has more computing power than a 5 story "super computer" in the 40s...
That we can map and change genomes. We can build anything. The future really is limitless.
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