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- From: len@math.nwu.edu (Len Evens)
- Subject: Re: Japanese breeder plans
- Message-ID: <1992Dec30.004901.13624@news.acns.nwu.edu>
- Sender: usenet@news.acns.nwu.edu (Usenet on news.acns)
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- Organization: Dept of Math, Northwestern Univ
- References: <JMC.92Dec28095152@SAIL.Stanford.EDU>
- Date: Wed, 30 Dec 1992 00:49:01 GMT
- Lines: 87
-
- In article <JMC.92Dec28095152@SAIL.Stanford.EDU>, jmc@SAIL.Stanford.EDU (John McCarthy) writes:
- > The following is an excerpt from a U.P. story.
- >
- > Despite domestic and international criticism, Japan
- > plans to continue to develop fast breeder reactors.
- > Sources told the newspaper Yomiuri Shimbun that
- > Japan's Atomic Energy Commission decided to build a second
- > prototype fast-breeder reactor.
- > Japan's first prototype fast breeder reactor, Monju,
- > is scheduled to reach its full capacity next October
- > operated by the government-run Power Reactor and Nuclear
- > Fuel Development Corp. The reactor has been the focal point
- > of the country's aggressive program to reduce its dependency
- > on foreign supplies of nuclear fuel.
- > The second reactor will be more advanced than Monju,
- > the sources told Yomiuri, and constructed by the electric
- > power industry with government assistance. This marks a
- > shift from the previous policy of letting the private-sector
- > electric power industry take the initiative in developing
- > fast breeder reactors.
- > Fast breeder reactors contain a type of uranium that
- > does not burn as nuclear fuel but are fueled by the spent
- > material, plutonium, the most dangerous radioactive material
- > according to some scientists and the basis of atomic bomb.
- > Critics maintain there is no way Japan will be able to
- > consume the more than 80 tons of plutonium it plans to
- > create over the next two years.
- >
- > 1. Contrary to the implications of the _New York Times_ "Japan's
- > Nuclear Fiasco" article, the Japanese are going ahead with the
- > breeder program. Good for them. We'll eventually be buying
- > nuclear technology from them.
-
- The N. Y. Times article in fact explicitly stated that the
- Japanese were very likely to go ahead with the program. `Implications'
- may be in the mind of the reader.
-
- >
- > 2. The U.P. writer mixes his anti-nuclear opinions into his news
- > stories on a consistent basis. The A.P. is a little better about
- > not letting writers include editorials in news stories.
-
- This article seems basically a report of a press release by a
- Japanese government source. The reporter doesn't really attempt
- to go much beyond this, and as McCarthy points out, where he does,
- he gets something wrong. The New York Times article was meant to
- be analysis rather than straight reporting. In such an article, one
- would expect a mixture of fact and opinion.
-
- >
- > 3. The writer is consistently confused about what a breeder reactor
- > is. He has not bothered to learn, although he has been writing
- > the same story for many months.
- [Some discussion of what a breeder recator is deleted]
-
- >
- > The main question about breeder reactor development is that of
- > when it will be important to use them. At the present rate of
- > building of reactors, it will be quite some time. However, if
- > the greenhouse effect turns out to be serious, or if pollution
- > from burning coal becomes important in the public mind, then
- > the rate of building reactors will spurt. Then the price of
- > uranium will go up, and those countries that don't have their
- > own breeder reactor programs will end up buying them from Japan
- > and France.
-
- As I indicated in a previous posting, the New York Times article
- made the point explicitly that the Japanese might very well prove
- to be right in the end. One other main point of the article
- is that the program has proved much more involved and expensive
- than originally envisioned. This I think is confirmed by what
- the AP article reports.
-
- Let me add that I am more or less neutral on the issue
- of nuclear power. Like anything else, there are both positive
- and negative features to its use, and, moreover, these depend
- on just what form of nuclear power is envisioned. I think it is quite
- reasonable for proponents of nuclear power, like John McCarthy,
- to educate us about the facts and to try to put things in
- perspective. Likewise, opponents of nuclear power should make
- their case. (That doesn't mean I think the best debater should
- win.) However, to suggest that anyone who makes arguments
- on the other side is guilty of propagandizing, obviously for
- some nefarious purpose, does not add any light to the discussion.
-
- Leonard Evens len@math.nwu.edu 708-491-5537
- Dept. of Mathematics, Northwestern Univ., Evanston, IL 60208
-