In God We Trust |
By Bradley Blakeman With regard to our
energy independence, the BP oil disaster should be a call to action.
Everyone knows we are dependent on fossil fuels coming from foreign sources
yet; no one to
date has the will to do anything serious and credible about it.
Nuclear energy is safe. The U.S. Bureau of Labor reports that it is safer to work in a nuclear power plant than in a bank. Nuclear energy is also sustainable: ample uranium supplies exist and the U.S. should begin to recycle used fuel, which can power our nuclear plants for centuries. But we must close the fuel cycle -- the U.S. Department of Energy should comply with the Nuclear Energy Act of 1982 and utilize the more than $24 billion paid by ratepayers to build a secure, national repository like Yucca Mountain. Nuclear energy can be
an economic boon. According to one of the largest U.S. electric utility
companies, building 1,000 megawatts of advanced nuclear energy provides more
than twice the amount of jobs than wind and six times more jobs than solar.
What's more nuclear power plant employees earn high average salaries -- yet
another reason 74 percent of Americans favor nuclear energy. So, not only is France providing adequately for
its own needs but it is also selling excess to other nations in Europe.
France has become an example for the rest of the world for providing clean
and affordable energy. Today, thanks to technology, spent radioactive
fuel can be reprocessed to recover fissile and fertile materials thereby
providing fresh fuel for plants. Sadly, in America today there exists no
civilian reprocessing plants in operation, although three have been built at
great expense. We should also demand
that Yucca Mountain be opened for
storage as well as reprocessing. The average time for the
permitting and construction of a nuclear power plant is between 8-10 years.
The average life span of a nuclear power plant is 30+ years. Think of the
jobs that could be created and the costs that could be amortized over long
periods of time to make nuclear power affordable. It is a win win. Bradley
A. Blakeman served as deputy assistant to President George W. Bush from
2001-04. He is currently a professor of Politics and Public Policy at
Georgetown University and a frequent contributor to the Fox Forum. |
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