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    Australia is in the midst of a very public discussion about the possible use of nuclear power to ease its dependence on coal, which now provides approximately 85% of Australia’s electricity. On the June 30, 2006 episode of The G’day World Podcast Cameron Reilly asked me many of the questions that have been posed by…

  • "Power to Save the World" reviewed by Spencer Reiss for the Wall St. Journal

    Spencer Reiss, who often writes about energy for Wired Magazine, published a review of Gwyneth Cravens’s Power to Save the World: The Truth About Nuclear Energy in the November 20, 2007 edition of the Wall Street Journal. The value of this review has already been demonstrated to me – I have received several emails mentioning…

  • Caveat Emptor – Be Wary of Gas Salesmen Claiming Long Term Low Prices

    My years as an operating engineer has turned me into a contrarian and a pessimist who is constantly looking for signs of trouble, especially as others get excited and focused on temporary good news. My years as a critical consumer of commercially sponsored media has also made wary of sales pitches disguised as news stories….

  • No wonder Utah does not like nuclear power

    The Salt Lake Tribune published a very interesting article on April 18, 2006 titled Coal energy plants face lost sales if they ignore technology advances. I discovered the article by accident; I have a daily Google search that looks for “new nuclear power plants” and all of those words were in the story. When I…

  • Lester Brown's Flawed Economic Logic At Grist

    I just read Lester Brown’s guest post at Grist titled Waste of Energy: The Flawed Economics of Nuclear Power. Considering the fact that one of Lester’s primary sources is Amory Lovins’s “The Nuclear Illusion” (4.2 MB PDF), I was not at all surprised to recognize some substantial holes in Lester’s logic and data. David Bradish…

  • Nuclear Energy Deserves to be On Everyone's List of Clean Energy Alternatives

    Nuclear energy has a fifty year history of safe and reliable operation. Atomic fission, the only new power source developed during the 20th century, produces the energy equivalent of 12 million barrels of oil per day from approximately 440 commercial nuclear power plants. That energy equivalence figure does not include the energy produced on board…