"A lot of people love to hate Bill Gates.
But he (and Warren Buffet, to add to the potential for incoming hate) are building a nuclear reactor in Wyoming.
A new, very cool, “sodium-cooled fast reactor with a molten salt-based energy storage system” called “Natrium”.
It’s just a pilot project.
But admit it: “sodium-cooled” sounds cool.
And if you’re concerned about GHGs, and even if you’re not, it’s an outstanding example of positive, practical forward thinking
instead of bitter, paranoid demands to change the laws of physics, economics and human nature by 3 p.m.
For good measure, and irresistible symbolism, they’re going to put it in a decommissioned coal-fired plant.
What’s not to love?
OK, Bill Gates isn’t very lovable, philanthropy in sweaters not withstanding.
He’s a nerd who got incredibly rich instead of hanging around looking nerdy and frustrated, which could inspire envy if left untreated.
And possibly he was not the ideal husband.
But no, he’s not planning to sterilize or microchip the human race via vaccines or any of that nonsense,
and we will swaddle you in tinfoil and banish you to Area 51 if you try to claim otherwise.
On the other hand, it is true that he’s been yammering on sanctimoniously about climate change from his
66,000-square-foot,
60-foot swimming pool
with underwater music system,
2500-square-foot gym and one thousand-square-foot dining room:
Not that we’re jealous, but one of us grew up with a cottage that would have fit inside that dining room, and owns one that still would.
And according to a writer in The Atlantic, “the median size of an American single-family home is in the neighborhood of 1,600 or 1,650 square feet.”
So 40 typical American houses would fit into the Gates mansion.
It makes you wonder why he needs a gym.
It would be a serious workout just going around looking at all the rooms you never go into.
Including, one assumes, quite a few of the two dozen bathrooms.
Most of the details above come from the Wikipedia article on the Gates mansion, which includes the preposterous detail that the house “incorporates technology in its design”
as if any house did not incorporate “technology”, starting with bricks and moving on through metallurgy to electricity.
But that article fails to calculate the carbon footprint although it is safe to say that if your house has its own Wikipedia page, and that page says
“Many online news articles call the house Xanadu 2.0”,
that footprint makes a mockery of your concern for climate change.
It gets worse.
The thing that really makes us look at Mr. Gates with horror is his flirtation with the notion of blocking sunlight.
It is very hard to understand the arrogance of the mentality, even in a technological problem-solver as successful as he has been, that we know enough about climate to fine-tune it.
Efforts to deflect sunlight are in the category that we fervently hope will simply fail and at huge cost.
Because if they succeed, the knock-on effects are incalculable and especially if the climate really is as fragile as most alarmists belief, the whole venture is unbearably reckless.
Hang on.
Didn’t you say you weren’t going to hate on Bill Gates?
... And here we go with the love, or at least approval of one initiative.
Nuclear reactors arouse negative emotions nearly as strong as those directed at Gates, often from people who think of them
as a sort of Frankenstein’s monster with the brain of the Chernobyl reactor and the heart of an ICBM.
But while it’s possible to build them badly, and the Soviets did, it’s also possible to build them well.
And the newer types are far more efficient, far safer, far cleaner and in all ways superior. ...
These new sodium-cooled reactors are as cool as they sound.
Not least because they promise smaller, modular construction that can bring reliable, affordable power not just to rich countries where the lights already stay on,
unless they fall into the hands of unicorn-power utopians,
but also to poor countries where the lack of such energy is a crushing burden, blighting and shortening lives tragically.
By the way, this splendid announcement was tarnished by the intrusion of a politician, Wyoming governor Mark Gordon, who apparently wants to have his oil and eat it too.
“Earlier this year, I set a goal for Wyoming to be a carbon negative state and continue to use fossil fuels.”
Evidently “carbon negative” means the state will capture more CO2 than it emits through some sort of magic power, while continuing to spew the stuff out:
“I am not going to abandon any of our fossil fuel industry—it is absolutely essential to our state and one of the things that we believe very strongly is our fastest and clearest course to being carbon negative.”
This statement is a fairly standard mishmash of absurdity and contradiction.
But we will only focus on one point.
Fossil fuels are essential to Wyoming because it has a lot of them and the United States, like Canada and the world, still needs them to avoid a catastrophic collapse in living standards and indeed living at all.
But if some new technology works nearly as well as it seems that, say, sodium-cooled nuclear plants will, fossil fuels will become fossils.
And if they’re no longer competitive, there’s no reason to prop them up.
Nostalgia is not a good basis for industrial strategy.
To be fair even to them, another politician said something more useful on this issue, possibly by mistake. U.S.
Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm chimed in that the project involves a “simpler design that will hopefully result in faster construction at lower cost.”
What’s more, “It’s going to create a smaller footprint.
It’s going to be equipped with next-generation safety measures.”
Now possibly she only meant smaller than older nuclear plants.
But compare this beauty, which fits inside an existing power station and can reliably power 250,000 homes and in a pinch 400,000
with wind and solar that chew up immense quantities of natural space
and in the case of wind its inhabitants (birds and bats) as well,
Go nukes!
Go Gates!
Go Buffet! ... "