Haunted wrote:Between the lines the Lib Dems have specifically said they do not want to renew Trident.
Yeah. Always better to 'read between the lines' than read what is explicitly written in the manifesto, the policy documents and was a major bone of contention between Clegg and Huhne back in the leadership race. (Remember 'Calamity Clegg'? One of the things Huhne was accusing him there was not wanting to get rid of Trident because he only said he wanted to put it through the defense review process).*
Haunted wrote:You would not consider the MOD experts?
We would. That's why we want Trident to be subject to the defense review.
And since yuor posting greenpeace data have a read of this
http://www.world-nuclear.org/info/inf02.html
The Greenpeace data I posted, reluctantly, because it was a source used in the LibDem policy paper on Trident. I then explained how one might arrive (sensibly) at the Greenpeace figure. The figures I used for nuclear energy costs were from a Friends of the Earth document, an organization which (unlike Greenpeace) I do trust to be accurate when it comes to environmental issues. If you tell me that a nuclear lobbying organisation has different figures all I can say is 'that doesn't surprise me'. I have neither the werewithall nor the expertise to critique the figures, nor I suspect do you.
We've now got both the Friends of the Earth and the 'World Nuclear' papers posted so people can look at both and decide for themselves (perhaps keeping the old principle of argument against interest at the back of their minds). What I will say is I'm pretty unimpressed that you decided to base your argument on the 'cost of the reaction'. Of the top of my head it costs America about $11 billion to build top of the line AP1000 reactors (though the Chinese can do it somehow for about $6billion; probably resource costs). This doesn't include decommissioning estimates (very expensive) or ongoing security costs (very expensive, standards set by international treaty to the best of my knowledge).
Lets also not forget that it is the safest form of power generation in terms of people killed per terawatt hour. Much more so than wind and certainly more so than oil and gas.
Again, we're not luddites. The safety element of nuclear power is part of the cost of construction and the cause of the security costs. I have no doubt that modern nuclear plants are as safe as we can make them; that's why there so expensive.
I said wrote:It makes more sense to pursue renewable energy technologies and work on improving energy efficiencyyou said wrote:No, but it makes sense to pursue them in parallel. This shouldn't be an either or situation.
(my emphasis) Really? I say 'and', you say 'it shouldn't be one or the other'. Seriously? (a) I agree, (b) I agree with Nick, he said the exact same thing in the Second Debate though failed to use the key Thomas Friedman words 'job' and 'weatherise' which Obama had used when saying the same thing so it probably got totally ignored**, (c) ways to promote energy efficiency are mentioned in the manifesto on pages 22-23, 28-29, 52-53, 58-59 and 60-61. We're right there with you. That said the party policy is more 'small government' than the one I was suggesting 'cause market liberals get a bit squeamish about public works schemes. Personally if the government is going to be in the business of creating jobs I'd rather they trained people in 'weatherising' than paid them to take down/falsify crime figures so those same people could then get jobs in Europe doing the same damn thing but... hey.
* http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PjLfTMD_zTw
**Source - http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/shared/bsp/hi/p ... debate.pdf
"All the experts agree that it would take well into the next decade to create new nuclear energy, which would be too late to deal with the energy problems we have now. For a fraction of the money that I think both David Cameron and Gordon Brown want to spend on subsidising the nuclear industry, we could develop mass insulation programmes of our homes, our schools and our hospitals. Remember, 27% of all carbon dioxide emissions in this country go straight out of your window, through the roof of your house. If we only used energy more efficiently and also, of course, invested some of the money which would be wasted on big nuclear projects on wind energy and other renewable energies, I think that is the way towards a sustainable future."

