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Article:
Published:4/24/2008 by The Nation (Christian Parenti)
Submitted by:Frank K 86 days ago
Categories: Energy & Nuclear Energy
Article Details:   In an effort to jump-start a "nuclear renaissance," the Bush Administration has pushed one package of subsidies after another. A program of federal loan guarantees amounting to $18.5 billion has sat waiting for utilities to build nukes. So why is the much-storied "nuclear renaissance" so slow to get rolling? In a nutshell, blame Warren Buffett, and the banks--they won't put up the cash.
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Article:
Published:4/21/2008
Submitted by:Frank K 134 days ago
Categories: Energy & Nuclear Energy
Article Details:   Patrick Moore, one of the co-founders of Greenpeace, left abruptly, and, in a controversial reversal, has become an outspoken advocate of some of the environmental movement's most detested causes, chief among them nuclear energy. He states that "other than hydroelectric energy nuclear is the only technology besides fossil fuels available as a large-scale continuous power source, and I mean one you can rely on to be running 24 hours a day, seven days a week. Wind and solar energy are intermittent
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Article:
Published:3/19/2008 by Heritage Foundation (Jack Spencer)
Submitted by:Frank K 86 days ago
Categories: Energy & Nuclear Energy
Article Details:   Finland is developing a broad mix of environmentally friendly, economically competitive energy sources. Nuclear energy is an important part of that effort. Not only has Finland begun to construct a new, modern 1,600-megawatt reactor, but it is success­fully executing a cohesive, workable strategy to man­age spent fuel. The United States has done neither.
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Article:
Published:11/26/2007
Submitted by:Frank K 193 days ago
Category: Nuclear Energy
Article Details:   Pro-nuclear groups herald the coming flood of applications to build and operate nuclear power plants as proof that nuclear energy makes economic sense. Nonsense. The only reason investors are interested: government handouts. Absent those subsidies, investor interest would be zero. The total cost of juice from a new nuclear plant today is 4.31 cents per kilowatt-hour. That's far more than electricity from a conventional coal-fired plant (3.53 cents) or "clean coal" plant (3.55 cents). Taking away