Become a fan of Slashdot on Facebook

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Power The Almighty Buck Science

Stung By Scandal, South Korea Weighs Up Cost of Curbing Nuclear Power 200

mdsolar writes in about an ongoing scandal in South Korea that has rocked their nuclear power program. "It started with a few bogus safety certificates for cables shutting a handful of South Korean nuclear reactors. Now, the scandal has snowballed, with 100 people indicted and Seoul under pressure to rethink its reliance on nuclear power. A shift away from nuclear, which generates a third of South Korea's electricity, could cost tens of billions of dollars a year by boosting imports of liquefied natural gas, oil or coal. Although helping calm safety concerns, it would also push the government into a politically sensitive debate over whether state utilities could pass on sharply higher power bills to households and companies. Gas, which makes up half of South Korea's energy bill while accounting for only a fifth of its power, would likely be the main substitute for nuclear, as it is considered cleaner than coal and plants can be built more easily near cities."
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Stung By Scandal, South Korea Weighs Up Cost of Curbing Nuclear Power

Comments Filter:
  • by Fwipp ( 1473271 ) on Monday October 28, 2013 @12:37PM (#45259727)

    As far as I can tell, the problem is that nuclear plants were closed in the interests of safety while they await safety recertification - which seems like the straightforward thing to do in any case where safety requirements are found to be in violation.

    Is it simply a matter of failure modes? That is, because the worst-case scenario for a fission plant is worse than that of a coal plant?

    • by X0563511 ( 793323 ) on Monday October 28, 2013 @01:01PM (#45260043) Homepage Journal

      I don't get it either. This is a problem of corruption, not technology.

      • This is yet another FUD piece on nuclear energy. That's all it is. If it were about gas, coal or so called 'renewable' energy then this would not have be reported at all.
    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      by leuk_he ( 194174 )

      Because ....

      "Politicians at a congressional hearing on Monday estimated the recent nuclear scandals have cost operator KHNP nearly 3 trillion won ($2.8 billion) in cable replacement, loss of power sales and payment to KEPCO to replace nuclear power with electricity from other fuels. "

      In other words: the fuel may be cheap, the total costs of nuclear might be much higher. And you cannot simply solve corruption. If that is possible with a reasonable cost, it would be solved now.

      Simply reducing the problem to o

  • by madhatter256 ( 443326 ) on Monday October 28, 2013 @12:39PM (#45259749)

    Yep.

    I wouldn't be surprised if Russia is wetting themselves as more and more countries are abandoning nuclear power and switching to natural gas, which Russia has a monopoly over in Asia.

  • by Stephen Thomas Kraus Jr ( 3382177 ) on Monday October 28, 2013 @12:39PM (#45259757)
    Seriously, the scandal is less of an issue with nuclear power, it could have happened to ANY of the generating systems they want to switch to as well. Privatizing power generation doesn't work. Its been proven by TEPCO, in the US, and now in South Korea, because the companies will skirt the law anywhere they can as long as they can until they finally get caught. Don't switch to fossil fuels like Gas or Coal, keep the Nuclear and take the plants away from the corporations and put them under strict government control.
    • What evidence do you have that the government will do a better job or be less corrupt than the private companies? Or is government a default solution to every problem regardless of its own (numerous) problems?

      • by Microlith ( 54737 ) on Monday October 28, 2013 @01:06PM (#45260097)

        Publicly owned utilities have no incentive to cut costs in an effort to boost profit margins. They can run with a zero margin and no shareholders exist to whine and bitch.

        Or is government a default solution to every problem regardless of its own (numerous) problems?

        It's a possible course of action when private industry rears its corrupt, incompetent head.

        • They can run with a zero margin

          They can run with huge losses too which is usually the case (see USPS, every form of government run public transport, most public utilities) and no shareholders exist to whine and bitch, only voters who have no direct way to hold the management accountable the way shareholders do and plenty of conflicting interests from industry, unions etc competing for management (i.e. government) favors through "donations, lobbying and election time favors (union busing etc). Euro

          • by Microlith ( 54737 ) on Monday October 28, 2013 @05:23PM (#45262879)

            USPS

            Who are running a loss because they've been forced to via poor legislation. They were running with a surplus until they were forced to fund retirements 75 years into the future.

            only voters who have no direct way to hold the management accountable

            Ah yes, "voting doesn't matter." The cry of the cynic harkens again. Certainly a self-fulfilling prophesy if there ever was one.

            Even very popular government run services like London Underground make huge losses every year and have to be subsidized.

            And yet while the London Underground may run losses, I suspect the overall return in the economy is positive. That's one thing most people who complain about government run things running at a loss virtually always miss.

            I don't see NASA having turned a profit ever yet only the most blind and anti-government can seriously argue that nothing of value has come from it. Same for projects like CERN, which I doubt a corporation would ever undertake.

            It's an interesting psychological phenomenon that people will agree that the government is incredibly corrupt institution in certain areas close to their heart (in case of slashdot, privacy rights, lobbying/bribery by music/movie industries etc) and at the same time want to give government more and more power in areas that they don't understand as well (healthcare, industry regulation, public utilities). Guess what, the government is just as corrupt in those areas too.

            Therefore what? What's the point you're trying to make? You can't seriously say that government is bad and we should privatize it all because it can be easily shown that privatization is no better and potentially even worse.

            • With mail rate trends being what they are, it would be insane not to have the postal service fund it's employee retirements.

          • Yeah, and how much profit does the fire department make?

            They are called PUBLIC utilities because they are there to serve the public. See also: roads, sanitation, education...

            • It's not about turning a profit, it is about efficient operations. In case of private companies there is an obvious incentive to run a tight ship. In public companies the only incentive for the bureaucrat in charge is not to screw up in a particularly public way that might cost him his job, while cashing in his power in a variety of ways through the deals with suppliers, unions, and a million other ways.

        • Publicly owned utilities have no incentive to cut costs in an effort to boost profit margins. They can run with a zero margin and no shareholders exist to whine and bitch.

          Or is government a default solution to every problem regardless of its own (numerous) problems?

          It's a possible course of action when private industry rears its corrupt, incompetent head.

          O,RLY? Well let me introduce you to our local Austin Energy [wikipedia.org], which despite being public utility does not run a "zero" margin. In fact the city of Austin steals $100Mil/year from it to dump into the city's general fund (things absolutely unrelated to power generation - it is effectively taxing people on their utility bills without all the annoyances of passing an actual "tax"). I can guarantee you if our local corrupt, incompetent city leaders could steal anything else out of it they absolutely would. Yo

      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        What evidence do you have that the government will do a better job or be less corrupt than the private companies?

        Chernobyl was government owned and operated, and it worked fine for years before it caught fire and exploded.

      • Uhm, Or is government a default solution to every problem regardless of its own (numerous) problems?

        Fox News has arrived, I see.

      • We can't trust governments to do this as they're proven to be inept and corrupt. We also can not trust private industry to do this because they are inept and corrupt. Basically human beings are right out. So let's get power from the extraterrestrials.

    • by Nemyst ( 1383049 )
      This is Slashdot and you're advocating... big government? *shudders*

      (If it wasn't readily apparent, this comment is entirely sarcastic)
    • by mdsolar ( 1045926 ) on Monday October 28, 2013 @01:13PM (#45260161) Homepage Journal
      There is a big difference between a nuclear accident and other power plant accidents. It puts a huge swath of land into an uninhabitable state for a long period. Think about the property value in the area surrounding the Indian Point plant in NY. A full payout of the Price Anderson Act liability for a large accident there would topple the treasury. An accident at a coal plant isn't likely to put our very government in danger.
      • by Roogna ( 9643 ) on Monday October 28, 2013 @01:27PM (#45260341)

        http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Centralia,_Pennsylvania [wikipedia.org]

        Well coal certainly didn't do anything for their property values...

        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) *

          Why does every debate on energy quickly turn to "which is the worst"?

          Leaving renewables aside modern coal, as a stop-gap measure, isn't actually that bad. Full carbon and emission capture is possible. It costs more, but not as much as nuclear or gas in most countries. Having said that I'd probably still object to building such plants because they are only a stop-gap until we have something better, but would inevitably turn into the long term plan.

          • Problem is, it wouldn't be a "stop-gap" measure. Unless you have a different definition of "stop-gap" from mine.

            Given the costs if construction and maintenance, whatever you built will be used until the cost of maintaining it outstrips the cost of building something else, just like with the nuclear plant now. Better to just transition straight to something that already IS better, even if it costs more now, and be done with it.
            =Smidge=

          • Yeah, let's build more fossil generation "until the current crisis is over."

            Funny how we're always in a crisis...

      • I'd like to point out the land around Three Mile Island, the site of the worst pressurized water reactor accident, is perfectly inhabitable, and the other unit on that site continues to run with an excellent safety record. Having a proper containment building helps a great deal.
      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by Solandri ( 704621 )

        There is a big difference between a nuclear accident and other power plant accidents. It puts a huge swath of land into an uninhabitable state for a long period.

        You mean exactly like hydro does as a matter of design? [wikipedia.org] From the wiki: "However, the dam flooded archaeological and cultural sites and displaced some 1.3 million people, and is causing significant ecological changes, including an increased risk of landslides."

        Just build the nuclear plants in remote locations with an unpopulated safety buffer ar

    • Should we apply this logic to pharmaceutical companies in the US, or even food companies, where failures in maintaining safety standards have actually killed people? The government has a woeful record of maintaining nuclear safety (DOD waste site, for example), while utilities, both privately and publicly owned, have done an excellent job in comparison with most other industries. TVA has done a good job as well. The NRC regulatory structure, while not perfect, is very effective. I think they would be less
    • If you're going to "do" nuclear, at least do it in a sensible way. IE: Do NOT use solid-fuel LWR technology, that is just f**king stupid. If you use a liquid coolant that naturally turns to a gas at BELOW the working temperature of your reactor, you have a stupid f**king design. An "average" LWR has to operate at 100+ atmospheres of pressure, just to keep the coolant (water) in liquid phase. This invites a host of engineering challenges that would be completely unnecessary with a design (such as LFTR [wikipedia.org]) that

    • by mlts ( 1038732 ) *

      Long term, until fusion is sustainable for production energy, the ideal would be a coal/gas plant as the starter (nuclear plants require power on the grind to come online after a grid outage), then have the general power be primarily nuclear.

      With better batteries and solar, that will do a lot to ease peak consumption. If we can get batteries that are within an order of magnitude of gasoline that can store power overnight, this would significantly ease the load from the power grid.

    • The main issue may not be private-owned for-profit vs. government-owned non-profit utilities, but the safety vs. cost tradeoff. We are already operating in a tricky middle ground where the cost is already quite high (other energy sources are already cheaper, at least in the short term), but safety is still somewhat lacking (accidents, like Fukushima, still happen). The best way to solve this problem is probably with new nuclear technology development. Safer and cheaper nuclear reactors should be possible.
      • other energy sources are already cheaper [than nuclear]

        That depends on how you account for the strip mining, fracking, CO2 and things like radiation (from coal plants) spewing into the atmosphere (which we all share). There aren't low carbon sources that are both cheaper than nuclear and suitable for base load.

        safety is still somewhat lacking (accidents, like Fukushima, still happen)

        And for perspective, coal plants emit more radiation when working normally, 24x7.

        Safer and cheaper nuclear reactors should be possible.

        Are possible, and much safer technology (than was in place at any of the high-profile incidents) exists today.

    • Indeed nuclear plants are best left into the hands of Government which has nothing to gain not respecting the letter of the law rules regulations and contracts where private interests will ALWAYS try to shortchange , use sub spec materials , cut here and there till the stations are nothing but ticking time bombs.Nuclear in private hands is nothing but trouble worldwide.

      • by Zordak ( 123132 )

        Indeed nuclear plants are best left into the hands of Government which has nothing to gain not respecting the letter of the law rules regulations and contracts where private interests will ALWAYS try to shortchange , use sub spec materials , cut here and there till the stations are nothing but ticking time bombs.Nuclear in private hands is nothing but trouble worldwide.

        In which we learn that herbertrich has never actually seen a government contract up close.

  • So corruption... (Score:2, Flamebait)

    by Jawnn ( 445279 )
    ...and dangerous corner-cutting in the construction and operation of nuclear power plants is bad? Good thing that only happens in "backwards" little countries like South Korea. Right? I mean that could never happen here in the U.S. Right?
  • by Legion ( 15548 ) on Monday October 28, 2013 @12:53PM (#45259941)

    Or you could, I dunno, provide competent and effective _oversight_ to ensure the nuclear plants are being operated safely? I know - that's just crazy talk.

    • by Kaenneth ( 82978 )

      First we have to solve the revolving door between government and industry...

    • by Zordak ( 123132 )

      Or you could, I dunno, provide competent and effective _oversight_ to ensure the nuclear plants are being operated safely? I know - that's just crazy talk.

      I like that this is modded "Funny." The funny part being that there's such a thing as "competent and effective oversight." In reality, government regulators are usually very cozy in bed with those they are supposedly regulating. Sometimes literally.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Nuclear power and a culture based on money can not work safely.

    Humans are just too shortsighted, greedy, and unwise for nuclear power yet.

    Evolve dammit.

    • I've got some bad news for you about the selection pressure.

      All those ill-gotten gains from graft and corruption only serve to increase the number of reproductive opportunities for the holder. Especially if that person has no inclination toward monogamy.

  • The article never loaded for me. Try this one: Stung by Scandal [voanews.com]

    Also, they aren't eliminating nuclear power. The article says:

    The study recommended nuclear power capacity be kept between 22 and 29 percent of the total by 2035, well below existing plans to grow the sector to 41 percent in less than 20 years.

    Although if they have a scandal going on, don't think that switching the power source will eliminate the underhanded behavior.

  • natural gas, killing people every day
    http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-london-24702806 [bbc.co.uk]
    (and somehow people have the idea that nuclear is dangerous)

  • ... they're doing it on everything.

    It is arguably more dangerous to cut corners on, say, a natural gas pipeline than anything at a nuclear plant, because nuclear facilities have a lot more redundancy in their safety systems.

    Consider that it is debatable whether the events at Fukushima nuclear plants killed anyone at all, whereas natural gas explosions kill and injure people on a regular basis - Google-searching for "natural gas explosion" turns up three distinct events in the US on the first page, one of wh

He has not acquired a fortune; the fortune has acquired him. -- Bion

Working...