
A NON POLLUTANT SOLUTION TO OUR ENERGY CRISIS.
Your typical city dweller doesnt know just how much coal and uranium he burns each year. On Lake Shore Drive in Chicago where the numbers are fairly representative of urban America as a whole the answer is (roughly): four tons and a few ounces. In round numbers, tons of coal generate about half of the typical city's electric power; ounces of uranium, about 17 percent; natural gas and hydro take care of the rest. New York is a bit different: an apartment dweller on the Upper West Side substitutes two tons of oil (or the equivalent in natural gas) for Chicago's four tons of coal. The oil-tons get burned at plants like the huge oil/gas unit in Astoria, Queens. The uranium ounces get split at Indian Point in Westchester, 35 miles north of the city, as well as at the Ginna, Fitzpatrick, and Nine Mile Point units upstate, and at additional plants in Connecticut, New Jersey, and New Hampshire.
That%u2019s the stunning thing about nuclear power: tiny quantities of raw material can do so much. A bundle of enriched-uranium fuel-rods that could fit into a two-bedroom apartment in Hell's Kitchen would power the city for a year: furnaces, espresso machines, subways, streetlights, stock tickers, Times Square, everything even our cars and taxis, if we could conveniently plug them into the grid. True, you dont want to stack fuel rods in midtown Manhattan; you dont in fact want to stack them casually on top of one another anywhere. But in suitable reactors, situated, say, 50 miles from the city on a few hundred acres of suitably fortified and well-guarded real estate, two rooms worth of fuel could electrify it all.
Think of our solitary New Yorker on the Upper West Side as a 1,400-watt bulb that never sleeps that the national per-capita average demand for electric power from homes, factories, businesses, the lot. Our average citizen burns about twice as bright at 4 pm in August, and a lot dimmer at 4 am in December; grown-ups burn more than kids, the rich more than the poor; but it all averages out: 14 floor lamps per person, lit round the clock. Convert this same number back into a utility supply-side jargon, and a million people need roughly 1.4 gigs of power 20141.4 gigawatts (GW). Running at peak power, Entergy two nuclear units at Indian Point generate just under 2 GW. So just four Indian Points could take care of New York City 7-GW round-the-clock average. Six could handle its peak load of about 11.5 GW. And if we had all-electric engines, machines, and heaters out at the receiving end, another ten or so could power all the cars, ovens, furnaceseverything else in the city that oil or gas currently fuels. THE CHANCES OF A NUCLEAR ACCIDENT IS 1:10000
We the undersigned,
Nuclear Energy is a thing of more inportance in America. The stunning thing about nuclear power: tiny quantities of raw material can do so much. A bundle of enriched-uranium fuel-rods that could fit into a two-bedroom apartment in Hell's Kitchen would power the city for a year: furnaces, espresso machines, subways, streetlights, stock tickers, Times Square, everything even our cars and taxis, if we could conveniently plug them into the grid. True, you dont want to stack fuel rods in midtown Manhattan; you dont in fact want to stack them casually on top of one another anywhere. But in suitable reactors, situated, say, 50 miles from the city on a few hundred acres of suitably fortified and well-guarded real estate, two rooms worth of fuel could electrify it all. Some are scared of them but an accident has about a 1:10000 chance of happening. I know of only one nuclear energy plant in Arkansas in Bentonville and it is safe, and helps energy. They do not pollute the air either. Thanks for reading my leader.
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