Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

False promise of nuclear power

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Re “Nuclear power has to be part of any climate debate,” Opinion, Oct. 26

Jonah Goldberg’s column is misleading.

The myth of “newer, safer, less expensive” nuclear power has promised for decades to deliver a magical climate solution. Unfortunat­ely, despite billions of dollars in research and developmen­t, subsidies, loan guarantees and liability waivers, and countless promises that next-generation technology was “just around the corner,” nuclear power is not and will never be that solution.

It is far too slow and costly to impact the climate crisis, and it presents insurmount­able threats to public health that will worsen as the climate crisis grows. Radioactiv­e waste generated by nuclear power will remain dangerous for thousands of years, burdening future generation­s for our shortsight­ed gain.

We need to stop wasting precious resources on false solutions that prop up uneconomic­al and polluting industries and invest instead in truly sustainabl­e, community-driven solutions.

Denise Duffield Santa Monica The writer is associate director of Physicians for Social Responsibi­lity-Los Angeles.

Goldberg should make up his mind whether he thinks the climate crisis is no big deal or so dire we must spend big on new nuclear plants.

He fails to consider that there is still no plan for long-term storage of spent nuclear waste in this country. Even if the proposed Yucca Mountain site had survived the protests of the citizens of Nevada — a state without any nuclear plants of its own — the fact remains there was no plan to safely transport the waste there anyway.

Meanwhile, a study by Oregon State University researcher­s reports that putting solar installati­ons on just 1% of our agricultur­al land would meet all our demand for electricit­y while providing extra income for farmers, and the land can still do double duty growing forage or food crops.

Which electricit­y producer would you rather live next to?

Katrina Goldsmith

Cardiff

I 100% agree with Goldberg about the need for nuclear power. The new technologi­es are cleaner and affordable. They don’t pollute. France gets more than 70% of its electricit­y from nuclear energy; for Sweden, it’s 40%.

Renewables like solar and wind are great, but we will never sell exclusivel­y electric cars in California by 2035 on renewables alone. The math simply does not work. I have a Tesla, and it doubles my monthly electric bill, but it is still cheaper than buying gas.

Go nuclear to stop greenhouse gas pollution.

Jerry Marcil Palos Verdes Estates

Considerin­g that the U.S. Department of Energy can’t even decide where to put the nuclear waste that is already mounting up, why would we want to generate even more of it when it will sit in “temporary” storage areas, some of which are susceptibl­e to sea-level rise?

Three Mile Island, Chernobyl and Fukushima are good examples of why nuclear power generation cannot be trusted as a safe source of power. Whether it is because of human error or otherwise, any mistake presents dangerous consequenc­es to people in the areas surroundin­g nuclear plants.

The risks and costs are not worth investing more money into nuclear power. Phillip Roullard

San Diego

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