Power to Save the World: The Truth About Nuclear Energy
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| Power to Save the World: The Truth About Nuclear Energy | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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In this timely book, Gwyneth Cravens takes an informed and clarifying look at the myths, the fears, and the truth about nuclear energy. |
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Gwyneth Cravens on Why Going Green Means Going Nuclear "Most of us were taught that the goal of science is power over nature, as if science and power were one thing and nature quite another. Niels Bohr observed to the contrary that the more modest but relentless goal of science is, in his words, 'the gradual removal of prejudice.' By 'prejudice,' Bohr meant belief unsupported by evidence."
--Pulitzer Prize-winner Richard Rhodes, author of the introduction to Power to Save the World: The Truth About Nuclear Energy by Gwyneth Cravens "Nothing in life is to be feared, it is only to be understood. Now is the time to understand more, so that we may fear less." --Marie Curie My book is fundamentally about prejudice based on wrong information. I used to oppose nuclear power, even though the Sierra Club supported it. By the mid-1970s the Sierra Club turned against nuclear power too. However, as we witness the catastrophic consequences of accelerated global temperature increase, prominent environmentalists as well as skeptics like me have started taking a fresh look at nuclear energy. A large percentage of the heat-trapping greenhouse gases, especially carbon dioxide, that thaw Arctic ice and glaciers comes from making electricity, and we rely upon it every second of our lives. There are three ways to provide large-scale electricity?the kind that reliably meets the demands of our civilization around the clock. In the United States:
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| 08-15-08 | 4 | (NA) |
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I have read through half of the book and find it fascinating. I am confident that based upon what I have read that I can provide an honest assessment of the book.
Before continuing, let me explain my rating logic. I give the book five stars on the information presented as it relates to the nuclear industry. I give it three stars for the endless Global Warming propaganda (IMHO) carried through out the book. Therefore, the average rating ends up as four stars. The negative. From the tone of the book it is very obvious that the author wrote the book for her fellow leftists and environmentalists. For example, throughout the book you will hear the author make snide comments and sneeringly mention President Bush and the Iraqi war. Additionally, you will hear the oft repeated worries of the "proven" man-made Global Warming. But if you ignore these you will find a book worth its weight in gold. The positive. The author does an excellent job in walking the reader through the science, history and future of nuclear engineering as applied to humanity's desire for a clean unlimited fuel source. Some of the things you will learn when you finish the books are: - What different levels of radiation mean and their impact on the environment? - The expended in the design and testing of reactors to ensure safety and security. - Comparisons of the relative efficiencies as well as the environmental impact of wind, solar, fossil fuel, hydroelectric and nuclear power generation. - What happened at Three Mile Island and Chernobyl and the impact on the environment? - I cannot forget to mention the detailed explanation of risk analysis and how it applies to the nuclear industry and in everyday life. Did you know that the background radiation given off by the natural environment is higher in Finland than in the contaminated zone of Chernobyl? See page 103 of the book. Or did you know that there is radiation emitted by coal fired plants? Or in smoking cigarettes? If you want to know the science behind nuclear energy without all the fluff and propaganda of the anti-nuclear fanatics then this is the book for you. (Review Data Last Updated: 2008-10-11 03:21:08 EST)
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| 07-05-08 | 1 | 0\18 |
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Another book from a writer who says "I was anti-nuclear but I think different now". What sort of message can we expect from somebody who says "In 50 years of operation, they have caused no deaths to the public"? Obviously she has never heard about Chernobyl, or the cancer clusters near Sellafield and La Hague. And still she does not answer the questions that environmentalists raise about nuclear power: What are we going to use when we run out of uranium? what do we do about people living near nuclear power stations who get sick and die? What are we going to do with nuclear waste? Not to mention all the "what-if's" about accidents and possible terrorist attacks. This book shows you one side of the story, and hides the other one.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-08-18 03:10:25 EST)
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| 05-27-08 | 5 | 1\1 |
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Ms. Cravens has written a very good book discussing the complete nuclear power cycle from a lay person's perspective. Her discussions concerning power baseloading and comparing nuclear sources to coal sources for powering the national power grid are narratives that are rarely, if ever, discussed outside of the power industry due to the emotional issues that nuclear power brings forth in people.
As a non-technical author and former protester against nuclear power, Ms. Cravens tackles the subject material of nuclear power, the security issues, health issues and comparisons to other major power sources with a thoroughness not usually seen at this level. Her approach to "tag along" with noted retired DOE scientist, Rip Anderson and his openness and patience towards teaching a non-technically trained person the ins and outs of the nuclear power cycle add to the narrative. The unique approach she takes to treat her investigation of nuclear power as a personal journey leads to Ms. Cravens' ultimate understanding that nuclear power must be one of the power sources we rely on for our power needs as we go into the 21st century. The book provides an excellent overview partly due to the length of time it takes for Ms. Craven's accounts of her travels and interviews to be written. Ms. Cravens does not try to write this book in 3 or 6 months just to ride the coattails of the latest nuclear headlines. Instead she took the time she needed to fully understand nuclear power, other sources of electrical power and the subject of baseloading before finalizing her book. The time was well spent as she is able to competently write about the use of nuclear power in today's world of shrinking inventory of carbon based fuels, greenhouse effects and increasing international tensions. I highly recommend this book for anyone who is truly interested in the discussion and future of nuclear power. It does not answer every technical question but that was never the goal of the book. What Ms. Cravens' book does is address the necessary critical technical and nontechnical questions about the nuclear power cycle and the power needs of the United States from a layperson's level. This book should be used as reference material for any critical discussions or debates concerning the pros and cons of nuclear power. (Review Data Last Updated: 2008-07-07 00:12:33 EST)
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| 05-25-08 | 4 | 1\1 |
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It's thorough and thought provoking -- enough to motivate me to look up parallel information as I read through the book.
I really like how the author balances risk and benefit throughout, and gets her readers to think in those terms. There seemed to be little glossing over hard facts. Overall, the book takes away my concerns about the risks of nuclear, especially as compared to other sources - like the filthy coal industry. I love the idea of solar, but her perspective on the toxic manufacturing and disposal process for solar cells helps answers questions I've long wondered about. She isn't against other forms of energy generation - just puts them in perspective. Nothing is free, easy, or perfect. It was amazing to learn about the incredible advances in reactor technology and how it can be done with a tiny fraction of the waste now generated. Her dissection of the disposal issue takes away the scare factor. The book informs a highly emotional discussion in a rational, reasonable way and demolishes a lot of mythology. There are parts I had to re-read to digest, but it's written about as easy to understand as it could be to cover the subject with the depth it does for a layperson. (Review Data Last Updated: 2008-05-28 02:57:04 EST)
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| 05-13-08 | 4 | 1\1 |
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The good sides of this book are manifold. First of all, probably due to the fact that the author is a professional novelist, one has to say that "it reads like a book": it is difficult to put it down, and the fourhundred something pages are read with ease and fun. The second good side of this book is that it is full of very interesting, and not always well-known information, even to people in the field. It is a mixture of technical issues and human relationships.
However, there were two points that irritated me somewhat. First of all is the somewhat naive attempt at "showing that we are environmental activists too". The arguments put forward should stand by themselves, and not because the authority in the book (Rip Anderson) and his wife are also local concerned activists for one or other ecological cause. The other point I found disappointing was the somewhat simplistic technical treatment of several key aspects in the nuclear power happening. The main point I found disappointing was the missing of a clear discussion of fuel reprocessing, fast breeders, thermal reactors and so on. These subjects are touched upon, but they are very vaguely treated ; nevertheless, this is an essential part in the future of nuclear power if it is to have a future. In other words, at the end of the day, you have to take some expert's word for it, as the book doesn't give you the means to verify some aspects yourself in a logical derivation, even though most of the information in the book is factually correct. That said, this book is a very good read for people who have been fed on the vocal absurdities spread around by anti-nuclear activists such as Helen Caldicott. A read of both is probably a good thing, but one should start with "Power to save the world", as it gets most of its facts right. (Review Data Last Updated: 2008-05-26 01:36:39 EST)
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| 05-08-08 | 2 | 2\2 |
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If you like your science with endless, irrelevant narrative concerning facts arbitrarily selected by the author based on their romantic attachment to whatever, then this book is for you. I bought this book for some meat-on-bone reading. What I got was tedium ad nauseam. "The driveway and an area around a garage were occupied by an ancient wooden hay wagon with iron-bound wheels from the Idaho ranch, a battered van, an antique school bus Rip had turned into a camping vehicle, various tools and farm equipment, and a metal-working shop with sheets of corrugated metal, lengths of pipe, and coils of wire". (p.22) Oh PUH-lease. Let's get on with it. The book reads like a kindergartener's first reader, and the name of the scientist involved adds to this feel. "See Rip run. See Rip exhale carbon dioxide. See Rip's exhaled carbon dioxide contribute global climate catastrophe."
The chapters on WIPP and subsea were the best, and are the sole reason for my giving this book two stars. As a degreed engineer, I could seriously have done without the grandma-knows-best, romantic visions of the environment discourse. (Review Data Last Updated: 2008-05-20 03:15:06 EST)
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| 05-03-08 | 5 | (NA) |
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This was a superbly written, informative book by a one-time anti-nuclear activist who worked on the successful effort to close the nuclear plant near her house on Long Island. She provides extensive information she learns on her 10 year long journey to learn about all aspects of nuclear power. I thought she did a great job communicating the real but very low risks of nuclear power and the great benefits compared to other forms of electricity production. I highly recommend this book.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-05-20 03:15:06 EST)
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| 05-03-08 | 3 | 1\1 |
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Power to Save the World clearly raises some interesting points and attempts to debunk myths about nuclear power and its place in our current energy situation. Does Cravens completely make her case? Not in my opinion, although there certainly is much to consider after reading the book, and I've recommended it to several other people.
The main issues with the book is that the structure does get to be a bit tedious (as other reviewers have mentioned) and Cravens relies primarily on of Rip Anderson, a scientist with Sandia National Laboratory, to support her assertions about the benevolence of nuclear power. There's also a fair bit of cheer leading for energy suppliers who run nuclear plants. She also tends to dismiss off-handedly the dangers of nuclear waste, and as others have pointed out, also tends to be dismissive of renewable power sources. These criticisms aside, she raises intriguing questions about where we will get our energy as demand continues to grow. Her central thesis seems to be that while nuclear power may not be perfect, it's a damn sight better than burning coal, since we're pretty certain of the damage it's doing to the environment. Is the book a bit of a slog? Yes. Do I totally agree with all of Cravens's points? No. Does the book have me thinking? Yes indeed. (Review Data Last Updated: 2008-05-20 03:15:06 EST)
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| 05-02-08 | 2 | 2\2 |
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For intentions, this impassioned plea for more nuclear power, so far as it was made to limit the USA dependence on petroleum, is excellent. With her background as a novelist, Cravens has written an easy-to-read, not-too-technical 373 pp of text with plenty of technical backup. Many descriptions are beautiful. There is a good index, a glossary, citations by page number (but these are few in number and mostly cite websites, newspapers and magazines).
Cravens interviewed several experts who should have given accurate information, including Theodore Rockwell, whose 2004 book "Creating the New World" seems to me much more accurate than "Power ...", but too many readers would consider it too technical and dry. Cravens toured coal and nuclear electric power plants with expert guides, changing her mind about the relative merits of each. She found that the coal plant was the nightmare she expected the nuclear plant to be, but was not. She went to the Yucca Mountain Project in Nevada, which was supposed to become the USA's national nuclear waste repository, and reported its flaws in stability of its geology. She went to the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant (WIPP) near Carlsbad, NM, and realized it was an ideal nuclear waste site, not just for the military waste that was supposed to be stored there. She visited the experimental reactors in Idaho. Overall, she became convinced that nuclear power is safe, and that long-term disposal can be accomplished at WIPP and similar locations. After all this, she had her body examined for excess radioactivity; none was found. She became convinced that low-level radioactivity was not harmful at all. Her vision about one major use of nuclear power is the same as mine: use it as a major source of electricity to charge batteries for electric vehicles. She also found that reprocessing spent nuclear fuel for re-use cuts down the need for uranium by maybe 90%, and the amount of waste for disposal by about 90%. France does this. She also recognized that claims by enviros of uranium reserves in the USA of 40 or 65 years duration are based on refined uranium stocks only, not the millions of tons in the ground. Had there not been problems affecting her credibility, this beautifully written and edited book would have been worth 5 stars. The first problem was promoting nuclear power as a way to limit global warming by stopping emission of carbon dioxide (CO2) from power plants dependent on combustion. She failed to note that CO2 rises after a warming rather than causing it; that there was as much warming in the 19th century as in the 20th century with very little CO2 emission [...]; that CO2 was rising during the 1940-1978 and 1998-2008 global coolings; thus there is no "ongoing global warming" mentioned perhaps 100 times. [...] Cravens seemed unaware that the CO2 hypothesis of global warming is based on a fraudulent temperature vs. time graph made to look like a fraudulent CO2 vs. time graph. See: Kauffman JM (2007). Climate Change Reexamined. Journal of Scientific Exploration 21(4): 723-750. PDF on request to kauffman37@yahoo.com. Sooner or later the CO2 hypothesis of global warming will be recognized for the fraud that it is. People who supported nuclear power to lower CO2 emissions will feel tricked and might withdraw all support for nuclear electicity generation, which must succeed on cost and safety. The second problem was not recognizing the phenomenon of radiation hormesis, the beneficial effects of xrays and gamma rays at doses up to 20 rads per year for adults (TD Luckey says 60 rads). This was mentioned as a "possibility" despite reams of evidence. See: Radiation Hormesis by TD Luckey, 1990; Joel M. Kauffman, "Radiation Hormesis: Demonstrated, Deconstructed, Denied, Dismissed, and Some Implications for Public Policy", J. Scientific Exploration , 17(3), 389-407 (2003);[...]. The main benefit is lower cancer rates from 2-20 rad of xrays, and this was the only benefit from the "dozens of mammograms" Cravens had (p353); see: Joel M. Kauffman, Charles T. McGee, Are the biopositive effects of Xrays the only benefits of repetitive mammograms? Medical Hypotheses, 62(5), 674-678 (2004). Furthermore, Cravens could not explain the disconnect that doses as low as 0.015 rad are to be avoided at any cost, according to the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, while 6000 rad of cobalt-60 gammas are perfectly OK to treat cancer. Cravens does recognize that excessive cost to meet ridiculously low radiation levels, often below natural ones, subtracts resources from all else. She did not see that claims of no hormesis were often based on dose ranges chosen to conceal the effect. The third problem was no mention of the CANDU reactor type, which does not require "enrichment" to 3-5% of uranium-235, but operates on the natural 0.7%. All that regimes wanting nuclear power (not bombs) have to do is adopt this type of reactor. The fourth problem was not verifying that France's nuclear waste has been safely dealt with. If it has, there is no reason for the USA to delay and waffle further on nuclear power. If not, WIPP-like stable dry sites may still be the answer. Beyond these two big and two smaller issues, there were about 74 questionable statements. An example is given below. The rest may be obtained by request from me at kauffman37@yahoo.com. It is often said that a few errors made by an author will seriously damage the credibility of the whole work. And that is the problem here. True, Cravens was often misinformed, but an author is supposed to sort out the conflicts and be accurate. Has she been misled on nuclear power safety and disposal? Error example #39. On p177: "Pure sodium isn't toxic, but if it combines with certain other elements it can be poisonous." My Merck Index 11th ed., ¶8512 says of sodium: "Human Toxicity: Extremely caustic to all tissue." I wonder which combined element makes it worse, chlorine perhaps, to form sodium choride? (Review Data Last Updated: 2008-05-20 03:15:06 EST)
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| 04-29-08 | 5 | 1\1 |
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This is a great book, written by a former skeptic, about our dependence upon energy and our choices for the future. After learning the facts about all the energy sources on the table, the author finally decided that nuclear is a necessary part of the world's energy mix for the near future. She actually travelled to the sites where this source of energy was researched and developed and where the waste would be stored, spoke with the top scientists in the field, asked the difficult questions, and received studied, reasonable, expert answers.
If your mind is made up on this issue and you refuse to read the facts, you will hate this book. If you are ready for a reasoned appraisal of our various energy choices, you will learn a lot from this book. I recommend it for anyone who is really interested in our energy future, as opposed to those who have already set their minds in concrete. (Review Data Last Updated: 2008-05-03 01:47:10 EST)
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| 04-29-08 | 1 | 0\1 |
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This writer is basically working for the nuclear power industry. The one-sidedness of her work is extreme. This is nothing more than an attempt to divert money away from wind and solar into nuclear energy. The comparisons made are ridiculous. She is no scientist. She is not once admitting anything that has been found negative about nuclear power. Nuclear energy is not all bad but there are serious flaws which she does not admit or ignores. Something is fishy about that!
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-05-03 01:47:10 EST)
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| 04-21-08 | 5 | (NA) |
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Whether you are left-wing or right wing, a global warming skeptic or rabid believer, this book is a must-read. Every consumer of energy (i.e. everyone) will benefit from this thoughtful and thorough discussion of nuclear energy. Like the author, I went into this book a nuclear energy skeptic and have come away a convert. I suspect the few highly negative reviewers of this book may not have even read it as their objections are addressed (to my satisfaction at least) at several points. Ms. Cravens is not anti-solar, anti hydrogen or anti wind power. They all have serious current limitations. The reviewer who states that solar energy can be somehow transported or transmitted from the Sahara clearly has no idea of what he is talking about as electric lines that long would barely deliver enough electricity to power an MP3 player by the time they reached the continental U.S. (I exaggerate, but the point remains). In any case, read this book with an open mind but be prepared to be astounded.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-04-30 02:18:20 EST)
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| 03-28-08 | 5 | (NA) |
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An informative read about power sources and why nuclear is the best. Enjoyed it very much
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-04-21 02:50:52 EST)
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| 03-22-08 | 5 | 1\1 |
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Being a teacher in Nuclear Engineering related matters at the University of Pisa, Italy, I really appreciated the effort of Mrs. Cravens, in explaining in a very clearminded way basic concepts about the real nuclear world. I can join Richard Rhodes in saying that I also learnt more on nuclear energy from it.
After so many dark years in relation to the imagine of nuclear energy in the media, it is now quite reassuring to see that people who care about the environment are in favour of this power source. (Review Data Last Updated: 2008-03-28 02:57:42 EST)
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| 02-24-08 | 5 | (NA) |
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Well-written, plenty of detail, lots of perspective. Also cites both sides of controversy. As an admirer of Richard Rhode's book, The Making of the Atomic Bomb, I will put this book alongside his book on my library shelf.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-02-28 05:30:21 EST)
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| 02-24-08 | 5 | 1\2 |
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Well-written, plenty of detail, lots of perspective. Also cites both sides of controversy. As an admirer of Richard Rhode's book, The Making of the Atomic Bomb, I will put this book alongside his book on my library shelf.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-03-23 16:13:03 EST)
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| 02-14-08 | 5 | (NA) |
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EXCELLENT, excellent work. Thankyou Gwenyth for your clear and enquiring mind, one of the most important books of our time. (Review Data Last Updated: 2008-02-25 19:45:05 EST)
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| 02-09-08 | 5 | (NA) |
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Nuclear energy is explored and data provided so a reader obtains an understanding based on fact rather than emotion. This is a must read for those on either side of the nuclear energy discussion. To discuss the merits of nuclear energy both sides must be informed and have that information supported by FACTS developed by the international science, engineering, and medical community. This book is one tool to establish common understanding of nuclear energy.
The book is well written and really engages the reader. The author frames her discussion to assist readers in understanding the specifics and significance of the data presented but the book does not read like a college engineering text - thank heavens. She also demystifies the science of nuclear energy as she takes you along on her personal journey to explore the potential of nuclear energy as part of a balanced national and international energy portfolio. She starts her journey with many fears, half-truths, and misunderstandings about nuclear energy. As she explores all the major facets from uranium mining to power generation, you gain essential knowledge, vocabulary, and facts about nuclear energy to participate in an informed debate on the merits of nuclear power to address global warming. (Review Data Last Updated: 2008-02-14 02:58:35 EST)
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| 02-08-08 | 5 | 1\1 |
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I learned so much by reading Mrs. Craven's book, Power to Save the World: Truth About Nuclear Energy and I highly recommend this book to others. You will come away with lots of knowledge of a complicated subject. I wish every high school student could read this book in a science class. Americans generally have little understanding of the topic, nuclear energy.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-02-14 02:58:35 EST)
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| 02-08-08 | 5 | (NA) |
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This is an important read for people that care about global warming. The world simply won't accept a solution that means we consume substantially less energy that we do today. We can continue to pretend that a carbon free mass energy source will magically appear, or we can use the safe nuclear alternative we have today. Hopefully, this book will help people see the light. Where are you Al Gore on this matter?
(Note: Last time I checked, this book was not available at Borders. I sense a political agenda) (Review Data Last Updated: 2008-02-14 02:58:35 EST)
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| 01-28-08 | 4 | (NA) |
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For years the author Gwyneth Cravens (who I gather is about 60) opposed virtually everything nuclear, even being somewhat of an activist. It was apparently some time in the 1990s that she began to question her stance, in part through conversations with Rip Anderson, a scientist with Sandia National Laboratory who has worked on several major projects for storing nuclear waste. Anderson ended up as the author's guru and guide through the world of nuclear energy (one can't help but think authorship of the book should be joint). Her tour ended up converting her to the view that not only is nuclear power safe according to any informed cost/benefit analysis, but that it is absolutely imperative if humanity and the United States in particular are to curtail their use of fossil fuels and spare the biosphere from staggering damage.
POWER TO SAVE THE WORLD contains a veritable plethora of factoids and arguments for nuclear power vis-a-vis our current (and increasing) reliance on fossil fuels or the wistful, wishful visions of a world powered by renewable energy sources. As is probably evident, I was a very receptive audience for the author's message (the cliche "preaching to the choir" leaps to mind). But I cannot give the book a rave review. Unfortunately, the book suffers from undue repetition and rather pedestrian writing. With a strong edit, it could have been reduced to two-thirds its present length without any signficant loss of material and with a significant gain in readability. Still, the book undoubtedly is of major value, especially for those who are, like the author once was, adamantly opposed to nuclear energy. I beseech any and every green-minded person who rejects or doubts the merits of nuclear power for whatever reason to read POWER TO SAVE THE WORLD. Surely our obligations to planet earth as temporary residents require all of us to approach with an open mind any alternative to our current energy policy. (Review Data Last Updated: 2008-02-09 13:53:53 EST)
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| 01-28-08 | 3 | (NA) |
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"Power to Save the World: the Truth about Nuclear Energy," by Gwyneth Cravens, Alfred A. Knopf, New York, 2007. For those who would like to know more about nuclear energy, this 439 page hardback is an excellent introduction to the subject. Written by a novelist, it is not overly technical. But it does a good job of covering most aspects of nuclear energy. The book is decidedly pro-nuclear. It includes detailed notes, a glossary of technical terms, and is thoroughly indexed.
You will not find much new thinking here on the subject, but you will find a reasonable overview of the important topics. It covers the topic quite well. (Review Data Last Updated: 2008-02-09 13:53:53 EST)
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| 01-25-08 | 5 | (NA) |
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I work in the nuclear power field, and I learned something new on every page. This book is great for anyone wanting to learn more about nuclear power and for those who have misconceptions about nuclear power and nuclear weapons. The author was once a anti-nuclear energy activist. With the energy crisis we are now facing, everyone should read this book.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-01-29 07:18:51 EST)
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| 01-01-08 | 5 | 2\4 |
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Gwyneth Cravens' book on nuclear energy is a superb job of investigative reporting. Ms. Cravens covers all aspects of nuclear energy from the mining of the uranium ore, the uranium enrichment process, the operation and safety of the nuclear reactor power plants and the reprocessing and disposal of the nuclear wastes. The book is crammed with a wealth of information and references. In fact it would take a reader a long time to adequately cover each issue along with its references. Throughout the entire work Ms. Cravens demonstrates the inherent reliability, economy, and relative safety of properly designed nuclear energy.
The fact that Ms. Cravens started out as opposed to nuclear power but changes her mind after she learns the facts adds to the power of this work. To this reviewer two discussions in particular stand out as new learning experiences. One was the effects of a terrorist airplane trying to crash into nuclear waste materials in pools near the nuclear power plant. The ill effects of such terrorism would not be nearly as great as sometimes assumed. The other discussion was of the possible seabed disposal of nuclear waste. Before this book I knew nothing about such disposal. This book along with Ed Hiserodt's Underexposed: What If Radiation Is Actually Good for You? can greatly add to the education of the general reader on nuclear energy. There are a few gliches. One is the tacit assumption of the anthropogenic global warming theory. This theory is rebutted in Dennis Avery and S. Fred Singer Unstoppable Global Warming: Every 1,500 Years and H. Svensmark The Chilling Stars: The New Theory of Climate Change. Another is the nonconsideration of the abiotic (non fossil created) oil hypothesis. This hypothesis has been demonstrated by the works of Thomas Gold (The Deep Hot Biosphere : The Myth of Fossil Fuels )and other researchers. Yet this book remains an excellent work. (Review Data Last Updated: 2008-01-26 11:16:30 EST)
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| 01-01-08 | 5 | (NA) |
| Reviewer | Permalink | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Gwyneth Cravens' book on nuclear energy is a superb job of investigative reporting. Ms. Cravens covers all aspects of nuclear energy from the mining of the uranium ore, the uranium enrichment process, the operation and safety of the nuclear reactor power plants and the reprocessing and disposal of the nuclear wastes. The book is crammed with a wealth of information and references. In fact it would take a reader a long time to adequately cover each issue along its references. Throughout the entire work Ms. Cravens demonstrates the inherent reliability, economy, and relative safety of properly designed nuclear energy.
The fact that Ms. Cravens started out as opposed to nuclear power but changes her mind after she learns the facts adds to the power of this work. To this reviewer two discussions in particular stand out as new learning experiences. One was the effects of a terrorist airplane trying to crash into nuclear waste materials in pools near the nuclear power plant. The ill effects of such terrorism would not be nearly as great as sometimes assumed. The other discussion was of the possible seabed disposal of nuclear waste. Before this book I knew nothing about such disposal. This book along with Ed Hiserodt's Underexposed can greatly add to the education of the general reader on nuclear energy. There are a few gliches. One is the tacit assumption of the anthropogenic global warming theory. This theory is rebutted in Dennis Avery and S. Fred Singer Unstoppable Global Warming. Another is the nonconsideration of the abiotic (non fossil created) oil hypothesis. This hypothesis has been demonstrated by the works of Thomas Gold and other researchers. Yet this book remains an excellent work. (Review Data Last Updated: 2008-01-02 03:27:36 EST)
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| 12-28-07 | 3 | 0\2 |
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This book contains important facts relevant to today's debate on global warming. I learned a lot about the nuclear power industry, the issues involved with the use of nuclear power, and answers to the hard questions associated with nuclear power, such as safety, environmental impact and waste disposal. After reading the book, I felt like I've been lied to by the environmental movement and the media. It becomes obvious that nuclear power is the answer to a wide range of political, environmental and energy problems that we face today. Alternative technologies, such as wind, solar and hydrogen, may have a place, but will never supply the energy needs of modern society.
My two complaints: (1) the book is too long - what needs to be said could have been written much more concisely; and (2) I didn't like the author's "story-telling" writing style. Still, getting the facts is worth the long, tedious read. A fifty page summary for policy makers detailing the facts would serve an excellent purpose. (Review Data Last Updated: 2008-01-02 03:07:04 EST)
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| 12-28-07 | 5 | 2\2 |
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Rational, basic approach that applies reason to what many believe to be a complex and threatening subject.
Anyone who believes humanity is causing global warming and is not a nuclear energy advocate meets the definition of a hypocrite. (Review Data Last Updated: 2008-01-02 03:07:04 EST)
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| 12-27-07 | 5 | 1\2 |
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A very good book with much factual information on nuclear power. Too bad most enviro socialist will never read it.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-01-02 03:07:04 EST)
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| 12-27-07 | 2 | 0\2 |
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i am not disputing the value of nuclear power in this review. indeed i agree 100% with the premise that cravens presents - that nuclear power is misunderstood and must be embraced. that said, this book is a glorified blog post. my description of this book as a "diatribe" follows from my observation that this book is simply opinioneering with some cherry-picked supporting facts. solar energy in particular is tossed aside without any serious consideration by both cravens and rip anderson. regardless of any expertise anderson may have in solar technologies, he simply doesn't seem to care to even dive into the topic. given the substantial gains in solar cell efficiency during the time this book was being written, that the author chooses to ignore solar reinforces the notion that this book is a rant. eight exajoules of energy hit the earth from the sun per day. compare this to global energy demands and improvements in solar cell efficiency and you may ask why cravens refuses to spend much time at all addressing solar. and contrary to what cravens suggests, other energy technologies such as geothermal are definitely seeing serious research and development. the idea that nuclear is the "only" option is ludicrous. nuclear is a strong choice and a viable option, but current investment and research indicates the the rest of the world sees value in numerous other technologies. but how would we ever know? cravens' fallacious appeals to rip anderson's apparent omniscience apparently negates all other views, and cravens herself only ever doubts him when his responses serve to buttress a point she intends to make in her next paragraph. if this man even exists, he should be ashamed of his role in this sham piece of airport-bookstore energy policy. this is barely science writing at all. is it any wonder america has become science-illiterate?
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-01-02 03:07:04 EST)
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| 12-22-07 | 3 | (NA) |
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All of one's electricity for a lifetime generated from nuclear power would create 2 lbs. of waste, vs. 68.5 tons if generated from coal. Making electricity generates 40% of the world's CO2, and usage is expected to double by 2030.
The book's major value is in credibly dissecting the multiple hysteria associated with nuclear power. Those resisting nuclear energy and the hope it offers vs. global warming should look at its track record. Our nuclear navy has used reactors over 50 years without harmful radioactivity release, and there have been no deaths attributable to nuclear power in the U.S. in over 40 years. Chernobyl failed because of poor design (no containment building) and poor management (safety systems were disconnected during a test). Alternative non-carbon power sources have limited potential. A 1,000 MW nuclear plants takes .3 square miles, an equivalent wind farm requires 200, while a solar array 50. Finally, Cravens points out that existing power sources are far from totally safety. Coal-fired plants create 24,000 premature American deaths/year, while those in China create 400,000 Chinese deaths. Failed dam structures have led to 1,000 American deaths in the last century. (Review Data Last Updated: 2007-12-27 03:08:37 EST)
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| 12-22-07 | 3 | (NA) |
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All of one's electricity for a lifetime generated from nuclear power would create 2 lbs. of waste, vs. 68.5 tons if generated from coal. Making electricity generates 40% of the world's CO2, and usage is expected to double by 2030.
Those resisting nuclear energy and the hope it offers vs. global warming should look at its track record. Our nuclear navy has used reactors over 50 years without harmful radioactivity release, and there have been no deaths attributable to nuclear power in the U.S. in over 40 years. Chernobyl failed because of poor design (no containment building) and poor management (safety systems were disconnected during a test). Alternative non-carbon power sources have limited potential. A 1,000 MW nuclear plants takes .3 square miles, an equivalent wind farm requires 200, while a solar array 50. Finally, Cravens points out that existing power sources are far from totally safety. Coal-fired plants create 24,000 premature American deaths/year, while those in China create 400,000 Chinese deaths. Failed dam structures have led to 1,000 American deaths in the last century. (Review Data Last Updated: 2007-12-23 03:28:03 EST)
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| 12-11-07 | 4 | 3\3 |
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Very interesting book. A liberal environmentalist moved by a fear of global warming discovers nuclear power and does a complete 180 from "Anything nuclear is bad" to "This is an immediate solution to save the world from global warming". No references but an easy read with good index and well written.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2007-12-23 03:07:36 EST)
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| 11-24-07 | 5 | 4\4 |
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This book was more than I thought it would be. The author takes you on a journey, step by step, as she learned real facts about a misunderstood subject. She changed my mind based on facts and logic. She knows what she is talking about - extensive bibliography and documentation.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2007-12-15 11:04:54 EST)
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| 11-20-07 | 5 | 20\20 |
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You'll be surprised what you can learn from this wonderful book. The fact that prize-winning nuclear chronicler Richard Rhodes, well-known as a stickler for historical accuracy, has endorsed it and written the Introduction, tells us we're on solid ground here. Although he is an authority on the nuclear enterprise, Rhodes says he leaned "something new on every page." The environmentalist, Stewart Brand, calls it simply, "The best introduction to the current realities and benefits of nuclear power." And popular story teller Tony Hillerman says, "I'd like to see this on every bookshelf in America and on student reading lists."
So, what makes it so special? First of all, the author herself. Her background makes clear that she is no shill for the nuclear industry. In fact, she was quite an aggressive anti-nuclear activist for many years. So she has a personal, battlefront familiarity with the questions and concerns that bother many people about the technology. Second, she is a highly skilled writer, author of five well-received novels, praised by her fellow writers, winner of many writing awards and fellowships, and Visiting Writer in the Graduate Program in Writing at UC Irvine. As a fiction editor at The New Yorker Magazine (1980-87) under the legendary William Shawn, she worked with such noted writers as Milan Kundera and Susan Sontag. But, most important for this book, is that in addition to having a novelist's easy, graceful writing style, she brings many years' experience as a reporter for some of the world's top publications: The New Yorker, The New York Times (magazine, book review and Op-Ed page), The Washington Post, The Nation, Harpers, The Village Voice and others. Power to Save the World is her first non-fiction book-length opus. The unique way she carried out the eight-year chore of creating it makes it particularly easy to follow, both for nuclear specialists and for those wholly new to the subject (as she was). She used to make off-hand anti-nuclear comments to her friend, Dr. D. Richard ("Rip") Anderson, chemist, oceanographer, and environmental health and nuclear safety analyst, now retired from Sandia National Laboratories. Rip would patiently explain in each case that her concern was based on misinformation. It finally reached the point where he said, "Would you really like to get the facts on this subject?" and she realized that she would. So they started "at the beginning," visiting and learning about uranium mines, milling, and fuel fabrication, and step by step, branching off from time to time to cover it all, finally ending with waste handling and storage. This is certainly the best way for a newcomer to develop an understanding of the subject. The reader learns as the author learned. As each concern is explored and dealt with, the reader comes up with the next question: "Yes, but what about...?" And that is the very moment that the author has already asked the question, and we are listening to the answer as she did. This gives readers who are new to the subject a basis for keeping the overall context continually in view and having a feeling as to where they are at any moment. Nuclear technology is a large, complex enterprise. Its various parts were severely compartmentalized during the War. As a result, very few of us, even the earliest pioneers, are informed as to all the parts. Thus, Cravens' approach, so appropriate for newbies, is also an excellent process for even the most knowledgeable. Although the language is intelligible to lay persons, it is scientifically accurate. Yet at no time does any reader feel condescended to. This is a major accomplishment, and Cravens' great gift to us all. In his Introduction to the book, Richard Rhodes refers to Cravens' text as a Pilgrimage, in the tradition of John Bunyan's seventeenth century classic, Pilgrim's Progress. And that is appropriate. But I am more impressed with the fact that she applied to the task her well-honed skills as investigative reporter. In a constant swirl of rumors, she was determined to learn first-hand what the real facts were. And when she gets a firm grasp on the facts, and a lucid description of them on the page, there is really no room for the unsupported rumor to survive. Without being dogmatic or simplistic, she shows over and over again that many of the "controversial issues" our field is plagued with are not complicated or controversial at all, once the facts are made clear and the fears dispersed. She exposes the sham that supports the notion that low-dose radiation can be harmful. That, in turn, eliminates the possibility of thousands of deaths resulting from a core meltdown. She throws factual light on other supposed nuclear hazards. As each new fear is examined in light of what is physically possible, the dreaded what ifs are shown to be classical bogey men, spooks composed of nothing but fear itself. She shows that nuclear energy is not a Faustian bargain too powerful and mysterious to trust to human hands. Instead, it is providential gift to humankind, born out of our growing understanding of the laws that govern all technology. A gift given just as all other gifts are proving inadequate for our future needs. We can all learn from this book about how controversial and scary subjects can be explained, simply and clearly. You have to wonder why it took us so long to find this out. But you don't have to wonder what to get your friends and colleagues (and adversaries) for Christmas this year. Ms. Cravens has given us the answer to that question too, and just in time. (Review Data Last Updated: 2007-12-15 11:04:54 EST)
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| 11-18-07 | 5 | 12\12 |
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There is no more urgent environmental or geopolitical issue in the world today than clean energy production. While energy sources like wind and solar are appealing, they generate only a small percentage of the power needed to replace CO2 emitting energy sources. Enter (or re-enter) nuclear. France, e.g., a country with few natural energy resources (a condition all countries will be in, sooner or later), adopted an energy policy based on nuclear power in the early seventies; today, nuclear power generates 75% of their electricity, and has turned them into a energy exporter. Many Americans, though, myself included, have had the same reservations about nuclear power as the author says she held before she started her book: skepticism of nuclear plant safety, worry about nuclear waste and about the possibility of terrorist attacks.
Cravens makes a very convincing case that these worries are not well founded. The many facts she presents are the result of her careful sifting - over a period of eight years - of the evidence on both sides, as she addresses her original doubts one by one. It is a bonus that the book is so well written, and has literary value in the way it shows a firmly-held opinion slowly changing to its opposite as the facts are confronted. But it is the urgency of the message that really matters, and that is what the book delivers: a passionate, extremely well-researched wakeup call. The more people on both sides of the nuclear debate read this book and assimilate its implications, the better. (Review Data Last Updated: 2007-12-15 11:04:54 EST)
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| 11-12-07 | 5 | 5\5 |
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Anyone who is interested in the future of our world should read this book. It is filled with useful comparisons of the impacts to the environment made by different types of energy sources. It follows many of these sources from cradle to grave. It is eye-opening to learn about how much difference their is in toxic waste, environmental impact and human safety associated with each type of energy source.
If Mr. Nash had actually read Ms. Cravens book, he would have learned the answers to his accusations against nuclear power. Unfortunately, much of America's knowledge about nuclear energy comes from sound bites like his that are actually hype that is not founded on solid, scientific research. It is only rhetoric used to inflame people, and get them to reject nuclear power without actually learning about it. If you want to learn the truth about energy, this book is an easy to understand, superbly researched, educational jem for anybody who wants to have a well-rounded overview. If you are truly interested in creating a cleaner, more sustainable world, I would strongly recommend that you read this book. Tanya (Review Data Last Updated: 2007-12-15 11:04:54 EST)
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| 11-08-07 | 5 | 14\14 |
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I am quite sure that Gwyneth Cravens's highly readable book will be controversial. I can only hope that it will get the reading it deserves.
Before I read it, I was certain that I knew that nuclear energy was highly risky and a threat to all. I now understand that I actually knew very little. Despite every good intention, I had been pulled into a mindless groupthink about Three Mile Island, Chernobyl and by the very green movement I love. What I learned by reading Cravens, for example, is that as a species we evolved at a time of far greater radiation than now occurs and that one gets more radiation from eating a single banana, or crossing Grand Central Station once, than one gets living next door to a nuclear plant for a year. We are swimming in a sea of radiation, and always have been, but effectively none of it comes from the use of nuclear power plants constructed in the West. And interestingly, radiation turns out to be one of those things for which dosage is crucial. Radiation at certain low doses appears even to produce positive effects. This book is a pleasure to read because it brims not with opinions, hyperbole or hysteria, but refreshingly, with scientific facts. There are no conspiracy theories and no bad guys (except maybe for coal producers). New, fresh, interesting information appears on every page. As Cravens points out, at one time not that long ago, people feared the dangers of bringing electricity into their homes. And they weren't completely wrong. Dangers accompany electricity, fire and other powerful yet beneficial forms of energy. The key to benefitting from them lies in overcoming fear and learning how to use the proper precautions with each. I suppose that much of my own negative reaction to all things nuclear stems from my complete antipathy to nuclear weaponry. What is clear, however, is that if we want to provide electrical energy on the massive scale we consume, we already have the technology to do it cleanly. It turns out that to produce the kind of base load energy we need to have 24/7/365, we really have two choices: coal, on which we primarily rely, and nuclear energy. Cravens makes the irrefutable case that coal is by far the more dangerous, more polluting, more greenhouse-gas-producing choice. And its use is nearly unregulated. Nuclear energy is THE green alternative for producing the quantities of electrical power we need now. No other current alternative produces abundant energy at low cost while producing NO greenhouse gases. The future we must move to if we want to save the planet, is available now. We can act to save the world if we overcome prejudice and fear. Thank you, Gwyneth Cravens for producing such a timely, reasonable and well documented book! (Review Data Last Updated: 2007-12-15 11:04:54 EST)
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| 11-08-07 | 5 | 13\13 |
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In a world threatened by global warming, we need correct information to be able to make the best decisions to provide for our needs and protect the environment. Ms. Cravens makes a journey of discovery into the world of nuclear energy that she generously shares with us. Starting with the usual prejudices about nuclear power, she meets Dr. Rip Anderson and begins to learn the realities about that nearly-carbon-free source of electricity. It's an inspiration to travel with her and share the experience of setting aside ignorant opinion to arrive at a seasoned, informed judgement on the merits of nuclear power. As an example, her description of the heavy security at nuclear power plants should help dispel the myths about terrorists being able to take over the control room. Likewise, her contrasting portraits of clean nuclear power plants and coal-fired electrical generators make it clear where the real dangers are. Finally, her open discussion of the Chernobyl accident and Three Mile Island put matters in perspective. The two accidents are not really comparable, of course, Communist central planning produced an unsafe reactor built without a containment structure that killed about sixty people and scared tens of millions. The core meltdown at TMI, by contrast, killed no one because the reactor was designed for safety.
The issue of nuclear waste is often hauled out as a trump card by ignorant "greens" determined to frighten the public. Ms. Cravens' tour of the Waste Isolation Pilot Project in New Mexico demonstrates that a practical and safe solution already exists. Where are the self-anointed "activists" when there are real problems, like disposing of millions of tons of heavy-metal contaminated fly ash from coal plants? Our environment won't be protected by hand-wavers with Rube Goldberg visions of windmills and solar cells backed up by giant lead batteries, but we can do a lot of good by adopting the proven benefits of safe nuclear power on a bigger scale. I recommend Ms. Cravens' timely book to anyone who has an open mind and a concern about addressing environmental problems in the real world. With her descriptive powers and gentle wit, she makes the journey of discovery interesting and pleasurable, to boot. (Review Data Last Updated: 2007-12-15 11:04:54 EST)
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| 11-08-07 | 5 | 4\4 |
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I am quite sure that Gwyneth Cravens's highly readable book will be controversial. I can only hope that it will get the reading it deserves.
Before I read it, I was certain that I knew that nuclear energy was highly risky and a threat to all. I now understand that I actually knew very little. Despite every good intention, I had been pulled into a mindless groupthink about Three Mile Island, Chernobyl and by the very green movement I love. What I learned by reading, for example, is that as a species we evolved at a time of far greater radiation than now occurs and that one gets more radiation from eating a single banana, or crossing Grand Central Station once, than one gets living next door to a nuclear plant for a year. We are swimming in a sea of radiation, and always have been, but effectively none of it comes from the use of nuclear power plants constructed in the West. And interestingly, radiation turns out to be one of those things for which dosage is crucial. Radiation at certain low doses appears even to produce positive effects. This book is a pleasure to read because it brims not with opinions, hyperbole or hysteria, but refreshingly, with scientific facts. There are no conspiracy theories and no bad guys (except maybe for coal producers). New, interesting information pops out of every page. As Cravens points out, at one time not that long ago, people feared the dangers of bringing electricity into their houses. And they weren't completely wrong. There are dangers with electricity, just as there are with fire and other extremely useful and beneficial forms of energy. The key issue is overcoming fear and learning how to use the proper precautions with each. I suppose that much of my own negative reaction to all things nuclear stemmed from my complete antipathy to their use as weapons. What is clear, however, is that if we want to provide electrical energy on a massive scale, we already have the technology to do it. It turns out that to produce the kind of base load energy we need to have 24/7/365, we really have two choices: coal, on which we primarily rely, and nuclear energy. Cravens makes the irrefutable case that coal is by far the more dangerous, more polluting, more greenhouse-gas-producing choice. And its use is nearly unregulated. Nuclear energy is THE green alternative for producing the quantities of electrical power we now need. Nothing else can produce abundant energy at low cost while producing NO greenhouse gases. The future we msut move to if we want to save the planet, is available now. We can act to save the world if we overcome prejudice. Thank you, Gwyneth Cravens for producing such a timely, reasonable and well documented book! (Review Data Last Updated: 2007-11-11 20:51:26 EST)
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| 11-07-07 | 5 | 28\28 |
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Until I read Gwyneth Cravens' "Power to Save the World", I would have
described myself as an anti-nuke, pro-solar-and-windmills mom and responsible inhabitant of this planet. Now I, and all readers of her timely book, can benefit from Cravens' friendship with Rip Anderson, of Sandia National Laboratories. Ms. Cravens' writing style is as much a pleasure as it is informative. In a personal tone, she invites the reader on her journey and we can't help but recognize our own misconceptions and outdated information about nuclear energy. Cravens tracks the life cycle of uranium, tours nuclear facilities, and asks important questions and presents them in what becomes a page turner. She explains in detail how efficient nuclear power is while she dispels myths and clarifies science. While no industrial power source is trouble-free, it's clear that carbon-free nuclear power is vastly preferable to burning coal. I highly recommend this book to each resident of planet earth. (Review Data Last Updated: 2007-12-15 11:04:54 EST)
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| 11-06-07 | 1 | 0\8 |
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OK, there are a great many reasons why I believe nuclear power to be both dangerous and irresponsible, but I won't go into them. At least, not all of them.
Instead I will simply point out that nuclear power is just a way of generating heat, which in turn creates steam, which turns a turbine. Got it? Nuclear power is just another way to spin a wheel. You cannot weaponize a solar array. Wave power produces no waste. A wind turbine's components cannot be remade into a dirty bomb. That these processes produce so little of the U.S.'s power is beside the point. Put the billions one would waste on nuclear into Solar/Electric options and see the change. When it comes to terrorism: Where there is a will, there is a way. If a group is seriously committed to either hijacking a reactor, or blowing one up, or forcing one to vent radioactive steam into the air, then they will do it. No matter how many locks, or guns, or guards, or security cameras stand in their way. The Titanic was unsinkable until it sank. A reactor is terrorist-proof until a terrorist group infiltrates one. Ms. Cravens arguement is also one that bases its supposition on the continued standing of the United States. After the (unthinkable!) fall of the Soviet Union, a great deal of uranium from shuttered plants found its way onto the black market. Why could the same not happen here? I would hate to see that happen, but one must retain a flexibility of mind when dealing with issues like this one. A solar array on tenth the size of New Mexico would produce all the power the U.S. needs, with little waste, and ZERO radioactive waste. Power from the sun, for free, in perpetuity. Nuclear power is a waste of energy, a monument to centralization, and a disastrous liability. It is the power of the backwards. I hope that Ms. Cravens reads this and responds, as I would love to debate the issue in an open forum. (Review Data Last Updated: 2007-11-08 03:00:02 EST)
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