Submitted by MCgamingMC t3_10m76k1 in dataisbeautiful
fortnitefunnies3 t1_j61p04h wrote
Reply to comment by KittyBizkit in Energy consumption in the US from 1776-2014 by MCgamingMC
It’s not that far fetched of a fear
KittyBizkit t1_j61qbiw wrote
Except when you compare it against coal emissions. Coal kills more people per kilowatt generated by a wide margin.
gabotuit t1_j63t6o1 wrote
Because of the big number bias… wait until you get a couple hundred nuclear reactors and the compounded effects of little accidents and the very long term effects
fortnitefunnies3 t1_j61qdj9 wrote
Well yeah but nuclear fallout is bad
eddy_talon t1_j61wvjw wrote
Nuclear fallout comes from nuclear detonations. Power plants don't have the capacity to make nuclear detonations.
fortnitefunnies3 t1_j61x2ca wrote
I’m a proponent of nuclear power too. I’m just trying to explain the opposition
KittyBizkit t1_j62305m wrote
From the sounds of it, you ARE the opposition.
I think this is kinda like people who are afraid of flying because of plane crashes. But realistically you are far more likely to die in a car crash in the way to the airport than in a plane crash after you get there.
fortnitefunnies3 t1_j623b76 wrote
So I am actively saying I am for nuclear power plants
KittyBizkit t1_j61svgi wrote
This is exactly what I am talking about. People like you vastly overestimate the dangers and probability of them.
crimeo t1_j621w6k wrote
There is no such thing as nuclear fallout from civilian power plants.... so say wha?
crimeo t1_j621r55 wrote
Literally more people per megawatt have died from even SOLAR from things like falling off their roof installing panels than from all non military nuclear damage.
For coal, its orders of magnitude worse
tinainthebar t1_j62y5fh wrote
That's an interesting claim, certainly believable if you look at direct deaths (which globally is probably under 100 - almost entirely from Chernobyl, especially if you count Kyshtym as military).
I'd love to see the source
Estimating, and attributing things like cancer correctly (reduction in life span and life quality) from things like construction and dismantling, uranium mining, etc is trickier.
On the other hand so is the mining for the metals needed for solar, and the construction risk per kWh I would guess are orders of magnitude higher for solar (especially rooftop solar)
I'm sure both are dwarfed by the impact from oil, gas and coal though.
crimeo t1_j64gw0c wrote
I figured it all out on reddit but it seems to be > the max 1,000 comments ago :(
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