Gina Grad
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
So, for example, there's been a natural experiment over the last 40 years, even more than that, in terms of the deployment of nuclear and the deployment of solar.
You can see that at a little bit higher cost, we got about half as much electricity from solar and wind than we did from nuclear.
Well, what does all this mean for going forward?
I think one of the most significant findings to date is this one.
Had Germany spent $580 billion on nuclear instead of renewables, it would already be getting 100% of its electricity from clean energy sources and all of its transportation energy.
Now, I think you might be wondering, and it's quite reasonable to ask, is nuclear power safe?
And what do you do with the waste?
Well, those are very reasonable questions.
Turns out that there's been scientific studies on this going over 40 years.
This is just the most recent study that was done by the prestigious British medical journal Lancet, finds that nuclear power is the safest.
It's easy to understand why.
According to the World Health Organization, about 7 million people die annually from air pollution, and nuclear plants don't emit that.
As a result, the climate scientist James Hansen looked at it, and he calculated that nuclear power has already saved almost 2 million lives to date.
It turns out that even wind energy is more deadly than nuclear.
This is a photograph taken of two maintenance workers in the Netherlands shortly before one of them fell to his death to avoid the fire, and the other one was engulfed in flames.
Now, what about environmental impact?
Well, I think a really easy way to think about it is that uranium fuel, which is what we use to power nuclear plants, is just really energy dense.
About the same amount of uranium as this Rubik's Cube can power all of the energy that you need in your entire life.
Yeah.
And he had a partner for over 20 years.