ImaginalDisk:
Please wait until the post comes to a complete stop before replying
I did mention a shift to send it into the sun, orbit only being a waystop in that process. Moon storage would work, too.
drkitten:
I was addressing only the radiological hazard rather than toxilogical. Yes, they are heavy metals. But if that's the problem, why aren't the same arguments used against the hundreds and thousands of industrial processes that leave toxic metal waste? Why not the removal of mercury thermometers?
I'm not meaning to minimize the risk of nuclear by-products, but they are most often over-emphasized by those against them. And new long-term solutions are being addressed, including toxicity (the plasterization process I mentioned that locks them into a solid matrix, preventing leakage even if a storage container is broken).
I think that it would be a viable option for replacing some of the current oil and coal burning plants (I'm a bit more lenient on gas, it's appreciably better than coal or oil), and that the waste problems would not be nearly the hassle that many propose. Primairly because although there is a higher danger with the waste, there is much less of it.
A 500MW coial-burning plant produces 10,000 tons of sulfur dioxide, 10,200 tons of nitrogen-oxide, 3.7 million tons of carbon dioxide, 500 tons of particulates, 220 tons of unburned hydrocarbons, 720 tons of carbon monoxide, 125,000 tons of ash and 193,000 tons of sludge from the scrubber, 225 pounds of arsenic, 114 pounds of lead, 4 pounds of cadmium, traces of uranium and mercury per year.
A 1000MW nuclear plant produces twice the energy, and produces about 30 tons of high-level waste and 800 tons of low and intermediate level waste.
THe nuclear industry is also the only power generation that is held fully accountable for all of its waste, as well.
SOurces:
http://www.nci.org/conf/rhodes/index.htm
http://www.ucsusa.org/clean_energy/fossil_fuels/offmen-how-coal-works.html
It's not just about the type of waste, but the amount as well.
Yes, I'd much rather the next 400 generations have to worry about stewarding this waste, than to deal with the aftermath of the billions of tons of waste produced yearly by coal, oil, and gas.