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Power to Save the World: The Truth About Nuclear Energy (Vintage) |  | Author: Gwyneth Cravens Creator: Richard Rhodes Publisher: Vintage Category: Book
List Price: $16.95 Buy New: $11.53 as of 11/21/2009 14:43 EST details You Save: $5.42 (32%)
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Seller: Amazon.com Rating: 46 reviews Sales Rank: 156254
Media: Paperback Edition: Reprint Pages: 464 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.9 Dimensions (in): 8 x 5.2 x 1
ISBN: 0307385876 Dewey Decimal Number: 333.7924 EAN: 9780307385871 ASIN: 0307385876
Publication Date: October 14, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
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Product Description An informed look at the myths and fears surrounding nuclear energy, and a practical, politically realistic solution to global warming and our energy needs. Faced by the world's oil shortages and curious about alternative energy sources, Gwyneth Cravens skeptically sets out to find the truth about nuclear energy. Her conclusion: it is a totally viable and practical solution to global warming. In the end, we see that if we are to care for subsequent generations, embracing nuclear energy is an ethical imperative.
Amazon.com Review 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 electricitythe kind that reliably meets the demands of our civilization around the clock. In the United States: - 75% of that baseload electricity comes from power plants that burn fossil fuels, mainly coal, and emit carbon dioxide. Toxic waste from coal-fired plants kills 24,000 Americans annually.
- 5% comes from hydroelectric plants.
- Less than 1% comes from wind and solar power.
- 20% comes from nuclear plants that use low-enriched uranium as fuel, burn nothing, and emit virtually no CO2. In 50 years of operation, they have caused no deaths to the public.
When I began my research eight years ago, I'd assumed that we had many choices in the way we made electricity. But we don't. Nuclear power is the only large-scale, environmentally-benign, time-tested technology currently available to provide clean electricity. Wind and solar power have a role to play, but since theyre diffuse and intermittent, they can't provide baseload, and they always require some form of backup--usually from burning fossil fuels, which have a huge impact on public health. My tour of the nuclear world began with a chance question I asked of Dr. D. Richard ("Rip") Anderson. He and his wife Marcia Fernández work tirelessly to preserve open land, clean air, and the aquifer in the Rio Grande Valley. Rip, a skeptically-minded chemist, oceanographer, and expert on nuclear environmental health and safety, told me that the historical record shows that nuclear power is cleaner, safer, and more environmentally friendly than any other form of large-scale electricity production. I was surprised to learn that: - Nuclear power emits no gases because it does not burn anything; it provides 73% of America's clean-air electricity generation, using fuel that is tiny in volume but steadily provides an immense amount of energy.
- Uranium is more energy-dense than any other fuel. If you got all of your electricity for your lifetime solely from nuclear power, your share of the waste would fit in a single soda can. If you got all your electricity from coal, your share would come to 146 tons: 69 tons of solid waste that would fit into six rail cars and 77 tons of carbon dioxide that would contribute to accelerated global warming.
- A person living within 50 miles of a nuclear plant receives less radiation from it in a year than you get from eating one banana. Someone working in the U.S. Capitol Building is exposed to more radioactivity than a uranium miner.
- Spent nuclear fuel is always shielded and isolated from the public. Annual waste from one typical reactor could fit in the bed of a standard pickup. The retired fuel from 50 years of U.S. reactor operation could fit in a single football field; it amounts to 77,000 tons. A large coal-fired plant produces ten times as much solid waste in one day, much of it hazardous to health. We discard 179,000 tons of batteries annually--they contain toxic heavy metals.
- Nuclear power's carbon dioxide emissions throughout its life-cycle and while producing electricity are about the same as those of wind power.
- Nuclear plants offer a clean alternative to fossil-fuel plants. In the U.S. 104 nuclear reactors annually prevent emissions of 682 million tons of CO2. Worldwide, over 400 power reactors reduce CO2 emissions by 2 billion metric tons a year.
I wanted to know if what Rip was telling me was true. He took me on a tour of the nuclear world so that I could learn firsthand its risks and benefits. I visited many facilities, talked to many scientists in different disciplines, and researched the conclusions of the National Academy of Sciences and various international scientific bodies. As I learned more, I became persuaded that the safety culture that prevails at U.S. nuclear plants and the laws of physics make them a safe and important tool for addressing global warming. Clearly many of my beliefs had originated in misinformation and fear-mongering. I've now met many people dedicated to saving the environment while supporting nuclear power as well as other green resources. This path is only logical. Nuclear power is the only large-scale, non-greenhouse-gas emitting electricity source that can be considerably expanded while maintaining only a small environmental footprint. If as a society we're going to reduce those emissions, we'll need every resource to do so, and we'll have to set aside our ideological blinkers, look at the facts, and unite to meet the greatest challenge humanity has ever faced. The power to change our world does not lie in rocks, rivers, wind, or sunlight. It lies within each of us. --Gwyneth Cravens
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Showing reviews 1-5 of 46
Spot on wrt Nuclear Energy September 20, 2009 Miles Millbach (USA) Gwenyth Cravens has written a very readable account of the impact nuclear energy can have on the future of energy production in the US and the world. For two reasons I don't give the book 5 stars:
First, I kept thinking I was rereading the book "Health Hazards of Not Going Nuclear" by Peter (Petr) Beckmann written I think in 1979 (Has it really been three decades and we are no further along?)
Second, she kept repeating over and over how nuclear energy will solve the global warming problem and will contribute less greenhouse gases to the atmosphere.
I challenge her to write a sequel: Inconvenient Information That Will Save Taxpayers Trillions. In this book she should write how she followed the trail of "global warming" from when she was an alarmist anti-AGW advocate until after she has done the research, studied all the facts and finally discovered how small the problem really is. I will gladly read her new book just as I have read about a dozen other books written by credible scientists(not vice presidents).
Please don't base your opinion of nuclear energy on the need to protect the earth from carbon dioxide. Carbon dioxide makes a very small contribution to the so called "greenhouse effect" and about 97% of carbon dioxide is added by natural sources having nothing to do with power generation.
The green case for nuclear power July 3, 2009 Richard Gibson (Woodland Hills, CA) I have long wondered why, since so many liberals believe that the emission of greenhouse gases is endangering the world, more liberals were not pro-nuclear power. Nuclear power is, after all, the most reliable source of large-scale energy, which produces no carbon dioxide. It has its own issues, of course, but if global warming is going to end the world, then you would expect greens to weigh the costs of nuclear power and to support it. After all, who cares if some people are going to glow in the dark 100,000 years from now, if the alternative is that the oceans will rise 20 feet, there will be 150 killer hurricanes a year and all of the rest of the Al Gore predictions come true?
In this book, liberal novelist Gwyneth Cravens finally follows this logic. She is a liberal. She is a greenie. And she came over time to be an ardent pro-nuclear power advocate. This book chronicles her progression from the typical liberal anti-nuclear person to the most rah-rah-pro-nuc person you could imagine. The book relies heavily upon her friendship with Rip Anderson, a scientist with deep knowledge in the nuclear issue.
I have mixed feelings about the book. On one side, I found her arguments that nuclear power is safe, reliable and ought to be used more to be persuasive. I have not yet read the other side, but I think she is probably right about this. On the other side, the book is too long, it wanders too much and Craven's emotional, liberal, evangelical tone grates on me. I prefer my policy analysis with a lesser dose of moral righteousness. But, maybe that will make the book more palatable to liberals. Cravens really IS a liberal, she thinks like one and she writes like one, so maybe she will persuade some other liberals. Conservatives, however, will basically applaud her logic, but have trouble not gagging on the way she often puts it.
Must read for understanding our energy future June 5, 2009 J. Oliver Well written, in language you can understand. Appears to give you the full story on nuclear energy and the pluses and minuses. It removes the mystery and the fear of nuclear energy. You will ask yourself why not, what are we afraid of. I was on the fence about nuclear energy but she won me over and I am not looking back.
convincing May 12, 2009 S. Kent (Birmingham, AL) Note: I am far from a physicist. I am anti-nuclear and remain so for the US. But this book has opened me to explore other arguments for nuclear power, and especially I see it as a neccesary tool for many developing or resources-poor countries.
Don't be fooled, she is mostly single-minded in her argument, but many points are nevertheless important for anti-nuclear activists to address, for mass-marketing purposes as well as scientific questions.
Facts, not Hype January 31, 2009 Robert L. Loveless (Tucson AZ) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
If you want to learn about Nuclear Power, its creation, protection, and waste disposal, this book is for you. The Author came to the subject as an Anti-Nuke protestor but after learning the truth becomes an advocate of Nuclear Power. If you worry about Climate Change you will also see this is the intelligent choice.
So much of the Nuclear Discussion is based on misconceptions and reading this book will help to erase them and allow an honest discussion.
The undersea disposal and the WIPP are particularly enlighting.
Showing reviews 1-5 of 46
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