dude, you have no ideas!flynfrog wrote: As far as sustainabilityId say that will last longer than any bio resources since as our population grows there is going to be less and less land and the sun just doesn't have that much power on a sq ft basseswikipedia wrote:Breeding
Main article: Breeder reactor
As opposed to current light water reactors which use uranium-235 (0.7% of all natural uranium), fast breeder reactors use uranium-238 (99.3% of all natural uranium). It has been estimated that there is up to five billion years’ worth of uranium-238 for use in these power plants.[33
Bio fuels are neat and all but its not a perment solution plants are just not that effective. Not to mention the water use
breeder technogy always involves plutonium-239. thats considered the most dangerous material on earth with a half life time of more than 25,000 years. we never had the --- in our world but we all got contaminated by the weapon tests of the cold war the risk is inhaling dust that contains plutonium oxide which is deadly by micrograms in a very short time period. there is a reason why they stopped this madness very quickly. the sane conclusion is that this material must never be released to the atmoshere in quantities if the species want to inhibit this planet for some more time. as Murphy goes stuff will always be released if you handle it. read about Sellafield and La Hague if you are familiar with contamination sources in Europe.
the other issue is of course proliferation. with plutonium you can build dirty bombs that do not have high tech or high destruction. but you can make big parts of the planet ininhabitable if you blow up a cheap device in the air or in a major water supply system like the north American lakes.
but is enables relatively simple nuclear bombs as well. today terrorists with a scientific education, a pound of plutonium and half a million $ of cash can probably make a device that blows up NYC or LA.
do I need to translate microgramms as a lethal dose? don't dick around with plutonium!!!!!!Plutonium may be extremely dangerous when handled incorrectly. The alpha radiation it emits does not penetrate the skin, but can irradiate internal organs when plutonium is inhaled or ingested. Particularly at risk are the skeleton, where it is likely to be absorbed by the bone surface, and the liver, where it will likely collect and become concentrated. Approximately 0.008 microcuries absorbed in bone marrow is the maximum withstandable dose. Anything more is considered toxic. Extremely fine particles of plutonium (on the order of micrograms) can cause lung cancer if inhaled