tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4357620132379563790.post5702279945114698876..comments2023-04-13T17:09:27.720+01:00Comments on Englands Freedome, Souldiers Rights: Thorium: the fuel of the future... maybeTrooper Thompsonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01505221473081871071noreply@blogger.comBlogger3125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4357620132379563790.post-80715287150152023582011-03-22T04:51:27.169+00:002011-03-22T04:51:27.169+00:00Yes, and it's one reason (not the only one) I ...Yes, and it's one reason (not the only one) I have a certain amount of sympathy with the anarchist argument that states can't even be trusted in defence matters. Here we have what would have been a straightforward commercial decision - fission power via the uranium fuel cycle or via the thorium fuel cycle - being skewed by uranium interests both in government and out. But mainly in. If there had been a free market would we have thorium power now? Speculation of course, but I think probably we would have.Angry Exilehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02491082312193274360noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4357620132379563790.post-2854275539944463632011-03-21T19:15:20.147+00:002011-03-21T19:15:20.147+00:00Your comment reminds me of something I've read...Your comment reminds me of something I've read about that key tie-in to the manufacture of nuclear weapons, and the vested interests around 'conventional' nuclear power.<br /><br />I believe it's another example of the general good being tossed aside in favour of a very small sectional interest.Trooper Thompsonhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01505221473081871071noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4357620132379563790.post-24759382871963608142011-03-21T07:57:56.558+00:002011-03-21T07:57:56.558+00:00Thorium should have been a no brainer. I can't...Thorium should have been a no brainer. I can't help feeling we'd have been happily blogging on computers powered by and in rooms lit by thorium based fission reactors for most or all of my life had it not been for the bloody Cold War. One of the attractive things about the thorium fuel cycle is apparently that it'd be very hard to use it for weapons production, but of course in the 1960s the powers that be would have thought that was one of the unattractive things about it.<br /><br /><i>Yeah, it can keep the lights on and there's thousands of years of the stuff about, but who cares about that when you can't get a bomb out of it? If we can't blow shit up we're not interested. Now see that reactor over there, the one making all the plutonium, that's what we'll be building.</i><br /><br />Okay, I exaggerate, but the point is that the LFTR was tested successfully in the 60s and then abandoned, and and the only other reason I can think of is that they probably felt the uranium cycle was better understood. Maybe there was an element of the established nuclear orthodoxy as well, I don't know. But the long and the short of it is that what's now an advantage was likely a major drawback 40 years ago.Angry Exilehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02491082312193274360noreply@blogger.com