A bit late for an answer, sorry.
I was not talking of classical energy productions, fossil or other. I was talking of what is usually considered green energy production. Wind, solar, deep earth warmth (english name escapes me), in some countries also manure (bio-gas) is used, etc. It seemed obvious to me that I am coming from the green side, and therefore mean green energies. Guess not. The dangers Onkko was talking about of *green* energies I will have to reconsider. For example, solar energy in Finland of course has a serious storage, and transportation problem. I guess energy storage has gone a long way, too, since last I studied the implications for the environment of the different means of energy storage, so I am not uptodate there.
anna.g wrote:
So please, before you blame nuclear energy as carcinogenic (therefore inherently evil) do some research in the alternatives.
I am aware of the dangers of fossil energies, since the 60ies, when the first oil crisis happened. And have followed the whole debate about energy sources since then, theoretically and practically. I happen to have completed a scientific study with a rather large part of statistics as a tool, and have published in a couple journals in medical science. Therefore I flatter myself with believing that I do have a certain understanding of how to interpret statistics. I also do have a grasp of the dangers of nuclear energy due to having had a rather large portion of biology, genetics, pathology, cybernetics, etc. in my MSc. Also, my Japanese is not too good by far, but was quite enough to study some implications and long-time issues of contamination of 70 years ago, as well as the more recent disaster.
Nuclear energy is not green, in my book, is what I said. I do not think in categories of "good and evil", but in scope of disaster. There is a relation between what we risk (scope), and the risk (percentage) I am willing to tolerate. And as Alden put way better than I ever could, 99.9% is just not enough for the scope of the disasters. The actually happening ones, as well as the potential ones. My problem is not even mainly that they hire idiots, my problem is, that even genius'es make mistakes. Mistakes are inherently human, and apply to everything and anything human is producing. The idea of an ideal machine that does not make mistakes, belongs to science fiction, not reality.
Not sure where I made the impression I am less informed than most school children in my country before they reach puberty (and Finland has a way higher degree of general knowledge, and information, than Switzerland!). Even what comes out of a well functioning catalyst is a topic there. Maybe one should assume the other person has at least an average IQ, and is at least medium informed, until they prove otherwise. Even if they are somewhat tired of the e-peen game.
Thanks for the article, Onkko. I doubt very much that one can discuss "facts" on such an extremely high level of abstraction. All those multi-national studies, and articles usually compare, and mix totally different things. And short term mortality is just one very narrow indicator. When one messes uncontrollably with the genetical code of each and all living things, and messing up areas for the next 100'000 years, as Alden described, one is playing a rather different game, than with mere short term deathrates.
ps and I totally agree on the evaluation of what is happening in Greece.