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Thailand Sets Sights on Nuclear Power Integration by 2037


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Posted

The Australian federal opposition (Liberal/National) is taking a plan for SMRs (starting later 2030s) to the federal election due in May. The argument is that modern economies require RELIABLE electricity - and more & more of it (eg AIs), which renewables - wind, batteries & hydro (the latter almost non-existent in Oz) - are incapable of. Gas & coal required for the transition to a nuclear & renewables longterm.

 

It will take a major blackout in NSW or Victoria or Queensland before the election to swing enough voters to the Coalition to change the government. The current Labor government is wedded to renewables-only and getting rid of coal asap. Recently however it has conceded that gas will have to continue longer as widespread blackouts threaten.

 

Interestingly, the polls show that younger voters (say 18-38) are very open to a nuclear future.

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Posted
22 minutes ago, mfd101 said:

The Australian federal opposition (Liberal/National) is taking a plan for SMRs (starting later 2030s) to the federal election due in May. The argument is that modern economies require RELIABLE electricity - and more & more of it (eg AIs), which renewables - wind, batteries & hydro (the latter almost non-existent in Oz) - are incapable of. Gas & coal required for the transition to a nuclear & renewables longterm.

 

It will take a major blackout in NSW or Victoria or Queensland before the election to swing enough voters to the Coalition to change the government. The current Labor government is wedded to renewables-only and getting rid of coal asap. Recently however it has conceded that gas will have to continue longer as widespread blackouts threaten.

 

Interestingly, the polls show that younger voters (say 18-38) are very open to a nuclear future.

And this is to do with Thailand ??

Well,Wa 15yrs ago must have been leading the country as they got rid of coal power then, and installed G7 dual fuel turbines

Posted
1 hour ago, Gottfrid said:

Who pushed the wrong button?

all the buttons are wrong buttons....

  • Haha 2
Posted
7 minutes ago, maddermax said:

Six years ago I gave a five-day training course on LNG to EGAT middle managers. At the end of the course I suggested that they should also be thinking about solar power farms. They would have paid for themselves twice over by now!

Solar power has not taken off in Thailand for some reason ?? "buy back" as used in some countrys is a great scheme,  not only benefits the consumer but also the supplier,

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Posted
27 minutes ago, edwinchester said:

"Interestingly, the polls show that younger voters (say 18-38) are very open to a nuclear future."

 

None of them were around when Chernobyl and Three Mile Island were dominating World Headlines.


Yep, good media scaremongering. 
 

No-one died from Three Mile, great movie though, and a few hundred from Chernobyl according to WHO. Have many tourists going through Chernobyl now, go figure. 
 

Think the tally for Fukushima is two and recall the extreme headlines and panic that ensued. 
 

Emo hype media to the vulnerable 😅


 

 

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Posted
1 hour ago, mfd101 said:

The Australian federal opposition (Liberal/National) is taking a plan for SMRs (starting later 2030s) to the federal election due in May. The argument is that modern economies require RELIABLE electricity - and more & more of it (eg AIs), which renewables - wind, batteries & hydro (the latter almost non-existent in Oz) - are incapable of. Gas & coal required for the transition to a nuclear & renewables longterm.

 

It will take a major blackout in NSW or Victoria or Queensland before the election to swing enough voters to the Coalition to change the government. The current Labor government is wedded to renewables-only and getting rid of coal asap. Recently however it has conceded that gas will have to continue longer as widespread blackouts threaten.

 

Interestingly, the polls show that younger voters (say 18-38) are very open to a nuclear future.

aaah yes, the Morrison faction of " as long as we are making money who gives a <deleted>, god bless"................

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Posted
8 minutes ago, Donga said:


Yep, good media scaremongering. 
 

No-one died from Three Mile, great movie though, and a few hundred from Chernobyl according to WHO. Have many tourists going through Chernobyl now, go figure. 
 

Think the tally for Fukushima is two and recall the extreme headlines and panic that ensued. 
 

Emo hype media to the vulnerable 😅


 

 

hey Trump, what time is it? 1950 and counting backwards?

 

  • Confused 1
Posted

The Thai military through their proxy governments in charge of nuclear reactors that can be used to enrich Uranium and produce Plutonium?

Yeah, go for it! Enrich yourselves!

Posted
2 hours ago, edwinchester said:

The remaining 1% will be provided by nuclear power....."

 

So a huge cost to build these nuclear plants to produce a tiny fraction of Thailand's electricity needs. Factor in the huge costs for the management of nuclear waste for many generations to come and this plan seems madness to me.

But think of the available graft from construction. Maintenance? Not much graft there, so it won’t be done.

  • Agree 1
Posted
23 minutes ago, Donga said:


Yep, good media scaremongering. 
 

No-one died from Three Mile, great movie though, and a few hundred from Chernobyl according to WHO. Have many tourists going through Chernobyl now, go figure. 
 

Think the tally for Fukushima is two and recall the extreme headlines and panic that ensued. 
 

Emo hype media to the vulnerable 😅


 

 

How many tourists went to those places in the ten years after the incidents? Less than one?

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Posted

I hope, no, I pray only international nuclear plant operators and supervisors are allowed inside these Thai plants for the first 75 years!!! 

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Posted

Omg...words I'd never want to see in the same sentence...nuclear & Thailand.

 

One look at any Isaan rocket festival should be enough to ban anything nuclear around these people.

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Posted
4 hours ago, webfact said:

Thailand is gearing up for a transformative shift in its energy landscape with plans to integrate nuclear power by 2037, focusing on the development of small modular reactors (SMRs).

Better than the polluting g factories they have now

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