UK government planning nuclear site in Scotland

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c9eze1dzy5no

This is pointless: Scotland is already self-sufficient on renewables. What we need is a new grid interconnect between Scotland and England so we can export our surplus energy to the south!

It's all about the lobbyists, of course:

"Its ambitions for up to a quarter of all electricity to come from nuclear power by 2050 are being led by government-backed body Great British Nuclear." (Who?)

UK government planning nuclear site in Scotland - Alister Jack

The SNP government has effectively banned new nuclear developments north of the border.

BBC News

@cstross Nobody is self-sufficient on »renewables« (if by that you mean solar+wind). When the peak of solar+wind generation hits the demand line, the downs and ups mean that they meet only about 40% of live demand. Everything else must come from storage or other »backup«.

And nuclear energy is one of the best backup solutions there is. (So much so that it begs the question why only backup, but that's the fear of the renewables-only lobby.)

@Ardubal @cstross only an idiot would design a renewables-powered network where demand was only just met by nameplate capacity.

Surplus energy is the name of the game. Dump it into batteries, thermal storage, hydrogen electrolysis, or other industrial processes that are flexible in output, and could really benefit from some free (or almost free) electricity.

Nobody serious expects a renewables system to not have periods of surplus generation.

@Bern @cstross

That point of just-met-demand is not an ideal or proposal, but a plausibilization case. It is the point up to which solar+wind scale roughly linear.

Yes, after that point comes overbuild plus storage. Every MW of that overbuild must be matched by storage with the same power output and hours or days of energy capacity. And every MW of that overbuild is diminished by storage and transmission losses. So, this point is like a sound barrier for ROI.

@Ardubal @Bern The ROI on renewables/gridscale storage looks a whole lot better, though, if you first cancel all the subsidies (visible and hidden) for fossil fuels. And better still if you bear in mind that PV prices per kWh are still dropping and battery prices are *also* falling.

Whereas nuclear reactor prices only ever seem to increase (unless like France in the 1970s you build them on a conveyor belt—politically non-feasible today).

@cstross @Bern Not really. The build cost of each model fall build-by-build, even if the FOAKs seem always more expensive (which has reasons).

The biggest hurdle now is restarting the building industry, but that is actually happening. And it's already politically feasible in many european countries.

And these hurdles are all not fate-given, intrinsic, unchangeable. They are challenges to overcome, not /if/ but /how/.

@Ardubal @Bern Build-out of nuclear will take much too long to do any good at this point. Even when France went nuclear, it took a couple of decades to hit 90% (and that didn't include most of the 40-50% of power consumed by transport, i.e. cars/trucks/planes/boats). Whereas we have a renewables industry that's mostly up to speed already.

One problem for nuclear is most of the construction and operator cadre have aged out and retired. What's the lead time on a new nuclear engineer again?

@cstross @Bern Yes, that's all problems that have been deliberately created. They can be deliberately be overcome.

No, solar+wind industry is not up to speed, and it's already running into diminishing returns, as outlined before.

And solar+wind doesn't help with the other energy forms /at all/.

Even Germany's nuclear buildout (1970's and 80's) was faster than its fastest wind+solar buildout (around 2014 iirc).

»It's too late« is the false mantra for decades already.

@Ardubal @Bern Germany does power All Wrong (as witness the huge brown coal sector). Meanwhile, look to China and India for the future.