[citation][nom]demonhorde665[/nom]i dont support current nuclear technology , nuclear fission is dnagerous , expensive , and generally a bad ideal in many ares (don't have to look further than japan for an example). not to forget nuclear fission reactors do create radioactive waste products , spent fuel rods , and irradiated cooling lquid (usualy water). now if we ever got Cold Fussion working that i'd support that. since it produces no waste , and ther is no danger of an atomic blast if it destabilizes. but currently cold fussion is out of our technological grasp , even hot fussion reactors can only be kept stable for about 4 seconds right now so hot fussion is not even an option at this time either.[/citation]
Your rather misinformed... Dangerous? It's remarkably safe
Chernobyl ok not great but not the end of the world.
Three mile island was over hyped actual contamination was essentially 0.
Fukushima still waiting on a lot of information (mis matched data) again certainly not good but world has kept spinning and radiation poisoning epidemic in Japan. But even then c'mon a 9.0 earthquake.. shit happens during that kind of event.
Cant think of any more and there are over 430 active nuclear power stations (there are more if you want to count ships and submarines etc) all over the world.
Compare that damage to this like Exxon Valdez and have a look at places like Azerbaijan after the oil rush, not to mention global warming.
Expensive maybe after de decommissioning etc but not as expensive as solar (and I mean proper solar panels. Not the 10p calculator cells that the news reports about)
Radioactive waste (i.e. the spent fuel rods) is not that hard to store and there is actually very little of for a family of 4 the nuclear wast would equate to 150~ grams for their lifetime.
Spent fuel rods are easy enough to berry in places like yucca mountain. low level wast is pretty much safe after a couple hundred years.
Irradiated cooling liquid??? There is internal water that powers the turbine, it does not need changed and cycles constantly, (turns to steam from the heat of the reaction rotates the turbine flows through a radiator in the cooling tower getting condensed back to water to do it all over again.
And then of course you have water in the cooling tower that is completely inert (except for natural background)